Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders for Game Day

Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders for Game Day - Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders
Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders for Game Day
  • Focus: Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders
  • Category: Dinner
  • Prep Time: 30 min
  • Cook Time: 1 min
  • Servings: 5

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Why This Recipe Works

  • Hands-off method: The slow cooker does 90 % of the work while you watch the pre-game show.
  • Double cider punch: Fresh cider in the braising liquid plus a splash at the end for bright, apple-forward flavor.
  • Built-in sauce: The cooking liquid reduces into a glossy, sticky glaze—no extra BBQ sauce needed.
  • Feed-a-crowd size: One 4-lb shoulder yields 20–24 sliders, perfect for hungry fans.
  • Make-ahead friendly: Tastes even better the next day; rewarm on low in the same slow cooker.
  • Customizable heat: Adjust chipotle or cayenne to please spice lovers or keep it kid-mild.

Ingredients You'll Need

Ingredients

I always start at the orchard stand for the cider—look for cloudy, unpasteurized juice sold in half-gallon jugs. It’s more perishable but delivers a tannic, orchard-fresh flavor that shelf-stable brands can’t match. For the pork, choose a bone-in Boston butt; the bone acts as a built-in thermometer—when it wiggles free with zero resistance, you’re at pull-apart perfection. Dark brown sugar adds molasses depth to balance the apple sweetness, while smoked paprika and a whisper of chipotle powder echo the smoke you’d get from a pit. Don’t skip the fish sauce; it disappears into the background but amplifies the pork’s savoriness in a way salt alone can’t. Finally, stock up on butter brioche slider buns—they’re plush enough to absorb juices without falling apart yet sturdy enough for handheld tailgating.

How to Make Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders for Game Day

1
Pat, Trim, and Season

Remove the pork shoulder from packaging and pat very dry with paper towels; moisture is the enemy of a good sear. Using a sharp boning knife, trim the fat cap to ¼-inch thickness—enough to self-baste, but not so much that you end up with greasy shreds. Mix dark brown sugar, kosher salt, smoked paprika, mustard powder, chipotle powder, black pepper, and onion powder in a small bowl. Massage this spice blend into every crevice, including folds where the bone meets the meat. Let the seasoned shoulder rest on a wire rack set inside a rimmed sheet pan, uncovered, in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours or up to 24. This dry-brine window is your make-ahead friend: deeper seasoning and better bark.

2
Sear for Flavor Foundation

Heat 2 Tbsp canola oil in a 12-inch heavy skillet over medium-high until shimmering. Sear the pork on the top and bottom (the widest surfaces) for 3–4 minutes per side until a deep mahogany crust forms. Don’t rush—leave the meat undisturbed so the Maillard reaction can work its magic. Transfer to the slow cooker insert. (No insert? Use a 6-qt programmable slow-cooker crock.)

3
Build the Cider Braising Liquid

In the same skillet, reduce heat to medium and add sliced onions. Cook 4 minutes until edges soften and pick up the fond. Add minced garlic for 30 seconds, then pour in 2 cups fresh apple cider, scraping the browned bits. Stir in apple cider vinegar, Dijon mustard, Worcestershire, fish sauce, and bay leaves. Bring to a simmer for 2 minutes to meld flavors.

4
Low and Slow Magic

Pour the hot cider mixture around (not over) the pork so you don’t wash off the spice crust. Add the cinnamon stick and tuck thyme sprigs along the sides. Cover and cook on LOW for 8–9 hours or until the bone spins freely. If your slow cooker runs hot, check at 7 hours; you want an internal temp of 205 °F for effortless shredding.

5
Reduce the Sauce

Transfer the pork to a rimmed baking sheet and tent loosely with foil. Strain the cooking liquid through a fine-mesh sieve into a fat separator; discard solids. Allow fat to rise, then pour off ¾ of it (save for roasted potatoes). Return defatted liquid to a saucepan and simmer over medium-high for 15 minutes until reduced to 1½ cups glossy glaze that coats a spoon. Whisk in ¼ cup additional cider for fresh brightness and 1 Tbsp honey for sheen.

6
Shred and Gloss

Remove any large fat pockets and bones. Using two forks or bear claws, shred the meat into bite-size strands. Transfer to a large bowl and ladle the warm cider glaze over top, tossing until every fiber glistens. Taste and adjust with salt or a splash of cider vinegar for zip.

7
Toast and Assemble

Split slider buns and brush cut sides with melted butter. Toast on a griddle or under the broiler for 1–2 minutes until golden edges form. Pile ¼ cup pulled pork onto each bun bottom, add a quick-pickle apple slice (see variations) or creamy coleslaw, and crown with the top bun. Skewer with festive toothpicks if transporting to the tailgate.

8
Keep Warm for Serving

Return assembled sliders to the slow cooker (lined with parchment) set on WARM for up to 2 hours. Add a small heat-safe ramekin with water to maintain moisture. Serve straight from the crock—no cold burgers on this team!

Expert Tips

Temperature Trumps Time

Every slow cooker behaves differently. Invest in an instant-read probe and pull the pork at 203–205 °F for the juiciest strands.

Overnight Brine Bonus

Season the shoulder the night before. The salt penetrates deeper, seasoning from the inside out and buying you extra sleep on game day.

Fat-Separator Hack

No gadget? Chill the liquid in a metal bowl over an ice bath; fat solidifies on top and lifts off in sheets.

Crisp Under the Broiler

For bark-like edges, spread shredded pork on a sheet tray and broil 2 minutes before tossing with glaze.

Apple Pickle Pop

Quick-pickle thin apple slices in cider vinegar, salt, and a pinch of sugar for 15 minutes for a bright, crunchy contrast.

Stretch with Black Beans

Stir in 1 can drained black beans for the last hour of warming to feed extra guests without buying more pork.

Variations to Try

  • 1
    Smoky Maple Bourbon

    Replace ½ cup cider with bourbon and swap honey for maple syrup. Add 1 tsp liquid smoke for campfire vibes.

  • 2
    Carolina Vinegar Pepper

    Omit brown sugar and chipotle; finish with ¼ cup apple-cider vinegar, 1 tsp red-pepper flakes, and lemon zest for tangy heat.

  • 3
    Asian-Inspired Twist

    Sub 2 Tbsp soy for Worcestershire, add 1 Tbsp grated ginger and star anise. Serve on steamed bao with kimchi.

  • 4
    Pumpkin Spice Game Changer

    Stir 1 tsp pumpkin-pie spice into the rub and garnish with crispy sage leaves for October harvest flair.

Storage Tips

Refrigerate: Store cooled pulled pork with a splash of reserved glaze in an airtight container up to 4 days. Reheat gently with a few tablespoons of broth or cider in a covered skillet over low heat, stirring occasionally.

Freeze: Portion pork into freezer zip bags, press out air, and freeze up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then reheat as above. Freeze slider buns separately; thaw at room temp and refresh in a 300 °F oven for 5 minutes.

Make-Ahead: Complete through shredding and glazing. Refrigerate pork and sauce separately. On game day, combine in the slow cooker on LOW 2 hours before kickoff, stirring once halfway.

Frequently Asked Questions

You can, but the result will be drier. Loin lacks intramuscular fat; if you must, cut it into 2-inch chunks, reduce cook time to 5 hours on LOW, and store submerged in extra glaze to mitigate dryness.

Use an unfiltered apple juice labeled “not from concentrate” and add 1 Tbsp lemon juice to mimic cider’s acidity. Avoid clear shelf-stable “apple drink”—it’s too sweet and one-dimensional.

Yes, but use two slow cookers or a 10-qt model. Overcrowding one unit prevents proper reduction and even cooking. Rotate crocks halfway if your appliances heat unevenly.

Pack pork in a preheated thermos, buns in a separate zip-top bag, and assemble on site. Alternatively, line a casserole carrier with a thin kitchen towel to absorb steam.

Jackfruit works! Use two 20-oz cans young green jackfruit in brine, drained and shredded. Cook on HIGH for 3 hours with the same cider glaze, then broil 5 minutes for texture.

High heat yields tougher shreds and less flavor development. If you’re in a pinch, cook 5 hours on HIGH, but add 1 extra Tbsp brown sugar and an extra bay leaf to compensate.
Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders for Game Day
pork
Pin Recipe

Slow Cooker Apple Cider Pulled Pork Sliders for Game Day

(4.9 from 127 reviews)
Prep
20 min
Cook
9 hr
Servings
22 sliders

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Pat, Trim, Season: Dry pork, trim fat to ¼-inch, coat with spice mix, refrigerate uncovered 2–24 h.
  2. Sear: Heat oil in skillet; brown pork 3–4 min per side. Transfer to slow cooker.
  3. Build Liquid: Sauté onion & garlic in same skillet, deglaze with 2 cups cider, vinegar, mustards, sauces, bay, cinnamon, thyme; simmer 2 min.
  4. Slow Cook: Pour liquid around pork. Cover; cook LOW 8–9 h to 205 °F.
  5. Reduce: Strain liquid, defat, simmer 15 min to 1½ cups. Stir in remaining ¼ cup cider and honey.
  6. Shred & Gloss: Pull pork, discard bone/fat, toss with hot glaze.
  7. Assemble: Butter-toast buns, pile on pork, add toppings, skewer, and keep warm on WARM setting up to 2 h.

Recipe Notes

For extra bark, broil shredded pork 2 minutes before glazing. Make-ahead: pork keeps 4 days refrigerated or 3 months frozen; reheat gently with a splash of cider.

Nutrition (per slider with bun)

218
Calories
18g
Protein
19g
Carbs
8g
Fat

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