RPCookin
Executive Chef
That's one way to do it, Addie, and I'm sure it's delicious. It's just not the only way. One year when I was growing up, we lived on a small farm in Michigan. My mom worked for a small company that had an annual summer company picnic. That summer, they bought a whole pig, from one of our neighbors who raised them, to roast for the party. They buried it in a pit in our backyard and roasted it underground for hours (I'm sure they wrapped it in something but I don't remember). Then they took it out and finished it on a spit over a fire. It was great, with crispy skin and juicy meat.
That's like Hawaiian luau style. When I was in the Army stationed in Colorado Springs, we had a couple of Hawaiian kids in the outfit. We had a unit bash with a truckload of beer (a 2 ton van with 3 spigots on the side of the box and 20 kegs inside). One of those two guys had his mom send a box full of banana leaves from home. They went out to the picnic site about 4 AM with a whole hog, started a hardwood fire in a pit until it was a big pile of coals, wrapped the pig in wet banana leaves, laid it on the coals and buried the whole thing. When that came out of the ground it was fantastic. I don't know how it was seasoned - I was just a dumb kid with no idea what cooking was - but it was good.