This late-July supper is the kind of low-effort roast that earns a permanent place in summer cooking: just a handful of pantry-friendly ingredients, a long oven stretch that does most of the work, and a sticky, deeply caramelized finish that feels far more elaborate than it is. The method leans on slow roasting to turn a humble pork shoulder into tender shreds with dark, glossy edges, making it ideal for days when you want dinner essentially finished before the evening settles in.
Serve this with sweet corn, sliced tomatoes, a simple cucumber salad, or roasted green beans for a classic late-summer plate. It is also excellent piled onto soft rolls, spooned over baked potatoes, or tucked into warm tortillas with crunchy slaw, so you can keep the main dish the same and vary the meal depending on what is freshest and easiest.
5-Ingredient Late July Supper
Servings: 6 to 8
Ingredients
3 1/2 to 4 pounds boneless pork shoulder
Directions
1. Heat the oven to 300°F. Scatter the sliced onion in the bottom of a glass baking pan, set the pork shoulder on top, and season it all over with the kosher salt.
2. In a small bowl, stir together the barbecue sauce and apple cider vinegar, then pour the mixture over the pork, turning once if needed so the top and sides are coated.
3. Cover the pan tightly with foil and roast for 3 1/2 to 4 hours, until the pork is very tender and easily pierced with a fork.
4. Remove the foil and use two forks to pull the pork into large shreds right in the pan, mixing it gently with the onions and juices.
5. Return the uncovered pan to the oven for 20 to 30 minutes, stirring once halfway through, until the edges darken slightly and the pork becomes glossy and caramelized. Serve hot.
Variations & Tips
Make-ahead timing: Roast and shred the pork earlier in the day, then leave it in the pan with its juices. About 30 minutes before dinner, reheat it uncovered so the top can caramelize just before serving.
Sauce balance: If your barbecue sauce runs quite sweet, add an extra teaspoon or two of apple cider vinegar to keep the final dish from tasting heavy. That little bit of acidity makes the pork taste brighter in hot weather.
Different serving style: For sandwiches, let the pork roast uncovered a few extra minutes so more edges crisp and the sauce thickens further. For plates or baked potatoes, keep it slightly juicier by stirring in a spoonful of pan liquid before serving.
Ingredient swap: If you prefer, you can make the same recipe with bone-in pork shoulder; simply allow a bit more cooking time and cook until the meat pulls away effortlessly. The bone often adds a little extra richness to the pan juices.