It's blasphemy, but I've been smoking pork butts and brisket on high heat (around 350 degrees) for a total of about 5 - 6 hours and the results are basically the same. The trick is sealing it in foil the last couple hours with a cup or so of apple juice or your preferred liquid and it's just as tender as smoking for 15 hours. No more starting a smoke at 3am so it will be done for dinner. For an example of what I'm talking about - see the 'high heat cook' section of this page:
http://virtualweberbullet.com/pork4.html
well, the woman does prefer the pork shoulder to be closer to roasted: tender slices as opposed to real pulled pork, so I have done that a few times. Honestly, it's just as delicious, but you do end up with less food, in some sort of blasphemy towards the laws of entropy...but I swear it's true! Do you get it to pulled form at 350 for ~6 hours?
Either way, both are delicious. I am going to try brisket soon, but I have no experience with brisket, plus all of the easily available cuts I am seeing around here are horrifyingly thin and mal-formed. I need to find a real butcher...because there is also no pork belly to be found in the DC area.
None. Not a fucking one. It's driving me nuts (I've contacted 4 local farmers, as well, and they only sell the bacon. They won't sell you slab, the assholes. One will sell belly, but it's stupid expensive and involves a month wait. I'm trying to make pancetta, jerks!)
BTW, I have no idea why people inject things into the meat. That is the dumbest, most useless enterprise when smoking meat. Lookit: that dude in the link is also covering it with another layer (of equally useless) thick barbecue sauce when it is served. SO like, what is the point of the injection, all of the rub, the smoking, and then the sauce at the end which masks every single flavor that has, supposedly, been added already? I think one of the issues with the bbq world is that a lot of people don't stop to consider what they are actually doing at each step, right? I mean, brine and rub and all that, absolutely. But why add sauce at the end? was the smoking such a failure? Or, go ahead and add sauce, but why not skip the brining and injecting if that is your plan all along?