Easy Slow Cooker Pulled Pork (without BBQ Sauce)

This easy slow cooker pulled pork is made without BBQ sauce to provide the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! It’s cooked with a simple spice blend and tenderized with root beer to yield a juicy and flavorful fall-apart result. The best part? It only takes 5 minutes to prep.

Check out my collection of leftover pulled pork recipes for ideas of how to use this versatile meat!

Slow cooker root beer pulled pork is juicy, flavorful, and provides the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! Takes only 5 minutes to prep.

Being a South Carolinian, there is a 100% chance I will smother this stuff with my favorite Carolina Gold sauce recipe. But I decided to share this recipe for slow cooker root beer pulled pork NAKED *gasp!* so you can put whatever sauce you want on it! 

If you’re wondering, the root beer in this recipe doesn’t actually make the pulled pork taste like the soda. In fact, adding cola tenderizes meat because of the acidity of the soda, while lending a bit of subtle flavor. And boy is it tender!!! But if nobody told you there was root beer in the pork, you’d never guess it. It just helps make it fall-apart tender and absolutely amazing. 

Throw in a little salt, some pepper blend (I use Jane’s Krazy Mixed-up Pepper), ground mustard, and sage, and it is ON POINT!

The result is a tender, juicy, and flavorful meat that’s a perfect blank slate to do with whatever you’d like. Look at how it just falls apart!

Slow cooker root beer pulled pork is juicy, flavorful, and provides the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! Takes only 5 minutes to prep.

How long does this slow cooker root beer pulled pork take to prepare and make?

I’m very much not a morning person, which is why this recipe is perfect for me. This takes 5 minutes or less to assemble and then you can be out the door for work. Some recipes have you sear the meat before putting it in the slow cooker, but to me that defeats the purpose of the crock pot. 

Cooking time will vary depending on the slow cooker you have, but regardless of what kind you have, you should be safe (and still juicy) with a 6-8 hour cooking time.

Closer to 10 hours between when you leave for work and when you get home, like me? I wouldn’t worry about it. The cook time on this is very forgiving, especially if you have an older slow cooker.

I love my vintage orange Rival Crock Pot because not only is it adorable, but it was also made before the FDA made everyone raise their slow cooker temperatures. Vintage slow cookers will never boil if they’re on the low setting, while newer ones will boil even on low, it will just take a long time. This is unfortunate for meats like chicken breasts which will dry out after 8 hours in a modern slow cooker. You can read more about this phenomenon here and here.

Fortunately, pork butt/pork shoulder (the meat you’ll be looking for for this recipe) is fairly unaffected whether you use a vintage or newer model. 

If you have an older crockpot made before about 2005 (or in the 60s, like mine), you can probably leave it a couple extra hours without it drying out. I usually put the pork shoulder in before work (7:30 a.m.-ish) and take it out when I get home (usually, around 5:30 p.m.) and it’s just fine. But I’ve gone to the farmer’s market after work instead of straight home and the pulled pork is still juicy. I’ve also forgotten about it and taken it out 12 hours later and it’s still fine. If you have a newer slow cooker, I’d try to stick closer to the 6-8 hours listed in the recipe, but if you can’t make it home for 10 hours, I wouldn’t fret.

Slow cooker root beer pulled pork is juicy, flavorful, and provides the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! Takes only 5 minutes to prep.

How much pork should I make?

For this slow cooker root beer pulled pork, plan about a pound of meat per person. Because there is so much fat on the meat you’ll discard, and preferably, a bone in it, you won’t actually be feeding each person an entire pound when all is said and done. But if you have four people, get a 4-lb pork butt.

I had a chunk of meat just over 4 lbs and it made 6 cups of shredded meat.

Is it really the pig’s butt?

No, pork butt and pork shoulder are interchangeable terms, and the cut of meat comes from the pig’s shoulder area. Boston Butt is another name for the same cut.

Why the funny name, then, if it’s not from the pig’s derrière? 

Apparently, in pre-Revolutionary New England, less desirable cuts of meat like the pork shoulder were packed into barrels or casks, also known as butts, for storage and shipment. The way the pork shoulder was cut in Boston and shipped became known in other regions (but not Boston) as the Boston Butt. 

While the cut was “less desirable” because it’s tougher, it’s just the right thing for cooking low and slow until it falls apart. I don’t know about you, but it wouldn’t be the same to have barbecue sauce over a pork chop or tenderloin.

Interestingly, something labeled “pork butt” or “Boston butt” is more likely to still have a shoulder blade bone in the meat, while “pork shoulder” tends to have the bone removed. If possible, you’ll want the bone in for this recipe to add a little extra flavor, but if you can’t find one with the bone, a boneless cut will work just fine. 

What is the cut from the pig’s actual rear end called, then? The ham!

Slow cooker root beer pulled pork is juicy, flavorful, and provides the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! Takes only 5 minutes to prep.

What should I do once I’ve made the pulled pork?

  • Mix in your favorite BBQ sauce and serve it on a sandwich, on sliders, or in a heap on your plate.
  • Use it in tacos!
  • For a more “carnitas” flavor, you can mix in some orange and lime juice along with seasonings like oregano, cumin, and garlic. Throw it on a cookie sheet under the broiler for a couple minutes after it’s pulled to crisp up the edges a bit!
  • Mix in buffalo sauce (a mixture of melted butter and Frank’s Red Hot) and make nachos with it!
  • Use it as an empanada filling!
  • Check out my collection of leftover pulled pork recipes for even more ideas!
Slow cooker root beer pulled pork is juicy, flavorful, and provides the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! Takes only 5 minutes to prep.
3.67 from 3 votes

Slow Cooker Root Beer Pulled Pork

Slow cooker root beer pulled pork is juicy, flavorful, and provides the perfect base for mixing in your favorite barbecue sauce or using in other recipes! Takes only 5 minutes to prep.
Print Recipe Save Recipe
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: American, Southern
Yield: 4 people
Calories: 461kcal
Prep Time:5 minutes
Cook Time:6 hours
Total Time:6 hours 5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4-6 lb pork shoulder, pork butt, or Boston butt preferably bone-in
  • 2 cups root beer
  • 1 heaping tsp kosher salt
  • 1 heaping tsp pepper blend (I use Jane’s Krazy Mixed-Up Pepper)
  • 1 heaping tsp ground dry mustard
  • 1 heaping tsp dried sage
  • 8-18 oz your favorite BBQ sauce optional
  • Cooking spray

Instructions

  • Spray slow cooker with cooking spray. Add pork, fat-side (white-side) up. Add root beer, spices, and enough water to cover the roast.
  • Cook on high for 30-60 minutes, then cook on low for another 5-8 hours. Alternately, skip the high temp and just cook on low for 8-10 hours (that’s what I usually do, as I’m running out the door to work as soon as I put the roast in).
  • Carefully remove pork (tends to fall apart and splash hot liquid). Let cool enough to touch, then separate meat from fat using two forks with help from your bare hands. (To be honest, I mostly use my bare hands if it’s just me and my husband eating it.) Shred the pork with the forks and/or your clean hands. Discard fat and cooking liquid. Use immediately or freeze.

If using with BBQ sauce

  • Rinse out the slow cooker. Put pulled pork back in the pot and add 1/4 cup to 1/2 cup of water to ensure moistness. If you’re using BBQ sauce, add it to the pork and mix to combine. Don’t be stingy!
  • Cover slow cooker and cook on low for about an hour. Uncover and continue cooking for an additional 30-60 minutes to thicken as needed. Turn off slow cooker and allow to rest, covered, until it’s time to eat.

Notes

Try not to take too many tastes of the pork or you won’t end up with any left for dinner!
Nutrition info does not include barbecue sauce, since it will vary depending on the one you use.
Tried this recipe?Mention @pinchmeimeating or tag #pinchmeimeating on Instagram!

Nutrition

Calories: 461kcal | Carbohydrates: 13g | Protein: 54g | Fat: 20g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 185mg | Sodium: 323mg | Potassium: 953mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 13g | Vitamin A: 33IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 51mg | Iron: 4mg

Want to enjoy the things you love about dining out — while you’re eating in?

Join my newsletter to receive

5 Secrets for Restaurant-style Eating at Home!

9 Comments

  1. Can this recipe be made with sugar-free root beer? I accidentally grabbed the wrong kind when I was at the store. Thanks!

  2. Perfect every single time. One of my family’s favorites. Always so tender it falls apart and melts in your mouth!

  3. 1 star
    Terrible… Didn’t cook right, ended up being a 4 pound pork roast, didn’t pull like pulled pork. Sucks because we waited all that time and now we’re hungry 🙁

    1. Hi Brandon, I’m so sorry to hear this didn’t work out for you! I’d love to help you troubleshoot since I’ve made this many times and it always pulls beautifully for me. What cut of pork did you use?

  4. 5 stars
    We already made this once when we had company, and we’re making it again for Labor Day because we love it so much! Philip loves root beer and BBQ pulled pork, and I love 5-minute preps and all-day slow cooking so I’m not living in the kitchen. We’re doing BBQ tonight, nachos tomorrow, and basically eating off of it (with your BBQ sauce, by the way!) for…however long it lasts!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating