This smoked pork tenderloin recipe was inspired by my stovetop steak and smoked cured pork chop recipes. In both of those recipes, I salt and season the meat well in advance. This helps the lean tenderloin meat come out juicier, smokier and more flavorful that ever. I like this method a lot!
Salt tenderizes and amps up the flavor of the meat over time. When you put salt on the meat, it draws water to the surface through the osmosis process. This makes the surface wet, which is not good for smoking. However, over time, the salt will get diluted in the released water and will get re-absorbed back into the meat along with most of the water. This flavors the meat inside out. Lean and bland cut like tenderloin greatly benefits from this.
I find that 24 to 48 hours is sufficient for getting pork tenderloins properly flavored. You can go a little longer if you want but its not necessary. If you don't have the luxury of a full day, try 8 to 12 hours and you will still notice a difference.
Another benefit to this is that a day or two in the fridge will help the formation of a pellicle on the surface of the meat. The pellicle is a dry sticky layer that makes the smoke stick to the meat. You get better color and better smoky flavor, and you get it faster.
This is especially beneficial for thin cuts like tenderloin as they cook quite fast. It's hard to put a good smoky flavor on meat in just 90- minutes, but if the meat goes in the smoker with a dry, sticky surface, you will get a much better color in that short time.
The pellicle will also help seal in the juices, making the meat retain more water during smoking. This makes smoked tenderloins remain moist and succulent.
So, if you have the time, I highly recommend seasoning the meat beforehand. If you can't afford a day or two, do it overnight, or even a few hours beforehand. Just make sure that the surface of the meat is dry before sending it to the smoker. It also helps to let the meat sit at room temperature for about an hour. This will warm up the meat's surface which will prevent condensation once the tenderloins get into the pre-heated smoker.
Ingredients
- 3 lb pork tenderloin Two 1.5-lb pieces
Dry rub
- 2 tsp kosher salt or to taste
- 2 tsp black pepper coarsley ground
- 2 tsp ancho chile powder
- 1 tsp garlic powder or granulated garlic
- 1 tsp onion powder or granulated onion
- 1 tsp coriander powder
Instructions
- Mix the dry rub ingredients in a small bowl and set aside.
- Apply the rub evenly, patting down to make it stick to the meat.
- Place the seasoned tenderloins on a baking sheet fitted with a cooling rack. Refrigerate for 24 to 48 hours, uncovered.
- Preheat the smoker to 225F - 250F. Smoke the tenderloins over cherrywood smoke until the internal temperature reaches 145F, about 1.5 hours.
- Remove the cooked tenderlions from the smoker, wrap in butcher paper and let rest for at least 10 minutes before slicing and serving.
Tibbs says
As with the other 99% of the recipe posters like you, fail miserably when posting the nutritional data of the recipe with useless information. With that said, just stating the number of servings is useless and servers no purpose. Not knowing the actual serving portion/measured volume amount, does the reader no practical service. Those readers who must know actual serving portion size for health concerns , needs the information you failed to provide, with just a number of servings. Why bother at all including the nutritional data you provided, if you're not willing to do it with consideration to your readers.
Victor @ Taste of Artisan says
It's not as simple as it looks. We all are limited by the software available to us, and by the process of cooking food. One person's 3-pounder may come out as 2 lbs and 12 ounces after cooking, and another persons'
s meat will dry out and weigh only 2.2 lbs. So how do you correctly provide nutritional value based on, say, 3 ounces of the final product? That said, the software does provide meaningful information if you are willing to work with it. The recipe calls for very specific amounts of meat and seasonings, and provides the exact calorie calculations for the 1/8th (8 servings) of the entire recipe. All you have to do is weigh out 1/8th of the total to get the exact nutritional value. From there, you can calculate 1/4th, 1/16th, or whatever. All the best. Enjoy tasty food!
Debbie says
Making this on Sunday. Do you recommend a sauce or it it fine without?
Victor @ Taste of Artisan says
Debbie, if you want to serve it with a side dish, gravy or some sauce would definitely be nice. I also like it chilled and sliced on sandwiches.
Anna says
Do you put them straight on then smoker racks or do you wrap them or put them in a pan yet??
Victor @ Taste of Artisan says
I put them straight on the smoker rack over indirect heat.
James says
Astonishingly good recipe! You must let tenderloins chill overnight before slicing, that's when they taste their best. I love the texture, so moist and tender.
Jon says
My smoked tenderloins turned out amazing!
It was my 1st time curing meat in a fridge before smoking and I have to say I am impressed. I used a gas smoker with wood chips in a SS box to generate smoke. I had no problem maintaining the low temperature and the smoke was good. The meat was very tender and moist with plenty of smoke flavor. Thanks for sharing your recipe!
Victor @ Taste of Artisan says
You are very welcome. You should try my smoked cured pork chop recipe.