Whenever my brother comes to dinner, I prepare a list of kitchen standards that I know he loves. It’s almost a ritual at this point, because the menu almost never changes! I cook deviled eggs and macaroni and cheese, and then I send Bryce to the grill with a plate of chicken breasts and a big bowl of homemade barbecue sauce (there’s a story behind the recipe, but I’ll save that for another time). When David arrives, I’m usually working on dessert, which is the only real variable in this otherwise predictable equation.
David’s recent visit to Charleston, though, coincided with that of my parents and younger sister. While they love barbecue and mac ‘n cheese as much as the next family, I wasn’t sure they’d enjoy a sauce whose distinguishing feature is an entire bottle of Texas Pete. So I decided to change things up a bit for the occasion by making Gourmet’s recipe for North Carolina-style barbecue. Cooked indoors on the stove and in the oven, the chopped and sauced pork is a great match for coleslaw on a fluffy bun.
Pork shoulder is an amazingly inexpensive cut of meat, but it needs lots of cooking to ensure its tenderness. I started its transformation in a pot of simmering water, where the meat absorbed flavor from chopped onions, carrots, celery, garlic, peppercorns, and vinegar.

The nice thing about cooking an entree that requires so much stove time is that it leaves plenty of opportunity to make sides to go with it. In lieu of the usual baked pasta, I decided to serve a gratin with potatoes and herbed Boursin cheese, a bowlful of coleslaw, and some buttered shoepeg corn.
I used my fancy slicer to cut the potatoes uniformly thick. Because of its ridged edge, though, it also made them look like uncooked potato chips! I think Allison was mildly disappointed when she realized they weren’t destined for hot oil.

Following a recipe from the Bon Appetit cookbook, I warmed Boursin cheese with cream to create a sauce for the potatoes. The Boursin is already flavored with herbs, so I only added salt and pepper to the potatoes for seasoning.

While the potatoes baked, I cut cabbage, green pepper, and onion for the coleslaw. With a bag of matchstick carrots (there are a few tasks I’m too lazy to tackle!), they were ready to toss with whisked mayonnaise, sour cream, and vinegar.


Soon, I transferred the pork shoulder to a roasting pan, where it cooked with even more vinegar for another hour. It grew tender and crisp in the oven while I stirred together a tomato-based barbecue sauce on the stove. With only small quantities of Tabasco and ground cayenne for heat, I knew the sauce would be milder than my fiery standard.
Chopped and reheated with ladles of sauce, the barbecue looked great! Allison still found the sauce a bit spicy, but overall, it was a big hit. My favorite part of the meal was the potatoes, because they were creamy, evenly cooked, and ridiculously easy to make.


With a hungry family in my tiny apartment, I decided to forgo the usual plating pictures and just leave you with the finished dishes of barbecue and potato gratin. We assembled sandwiches packed with coleslaw and meat, then balanced their heat with bites of potatoes and corn. It was, I think, a great start to our visit.