Thursday, February 2, 2012

Maple Roasted Pork Belly

On a cold afternoon when you have nothing planned for the rest of the night and the warmth of your couch blanket beckons you to do nothing but stay in and enjoy a book or movie, you need a slow cooking rich meal to go along with it. In this situation, pork belly is perfection.

Ingredients:

1 lb pork belly
4 heirloom carrots
1 medium onion (1/2 large onion)
1 cup dark beer
4 tablespoons maple syrup
2 teaspoons soy sauce
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon butter
salt & pepper

Directions:

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

Score the skin of the pork with deep slits, cutting through the fat but not into the meat. Sprinkle both sides of the belly with liberal amounts of salt and pepper. Peel the carrots and cut into chunks. Larger pieces are better because they need to withstand hours of cooking; smaller pieces would fall apart. Cut the onion into large chunks as well.

Place carrots and onions at the bottom of a small dutch oven or oven safe pot. Season with salt and pepper and add 1 cup of dark beer and 1 cup of water. Place the belly on top of the carrots and onions. Place into the oven for 30 minutes. (Enjoy the rest of the beer while waiting!)


Mix the maple syrup, soy sauce, mustard, and Worcestershire sauce into a small bowl. After the first 30 minutes of cooking the pork belly in the oven, take belly out of the oven and lower oven temperature to 325 degrees.

Bast the pork with a third of the maple syrup glaze, put cover on pot and return to oven. Bake the pork belly for an additional 3 hours, occasionally basting with the maple glaze.

After the 3 hours pull the pork belly out of the oven and crank the oven up to broil. Pour on the remaining bit of maple glaze and return pork belly to broiler for 5-7 minutes to crisp the skin. Keep a watchful eye on the oven at this point because the maple can burn.

Let the pork belly cool for a few minutes on a cutting board, meanwhile put the carrots and onions on the serving platter. Slice the pork belly and place on top of the vegetables. Reduce the remaining liquid in the pan and thicken with a tablespoon of butter. Pour over the belly slices and serve hot!


2 comments:

  1. I tried it today, but using a pound slab of Nueske's applewood smoked bacon. I omitted the salting of the pork (bacon) and I used an Ale rather than a Stout (it's all I had on hand), and added a couple of tablespoons of freshly squeezed orange juice to the beer and water mix. The slab bacon was nearly two inches thick on one end, and about 1.25 inches thick on the other end. The thinner end was a bit overcooked but held together very well, while the thicker end cooked just right, but started to come apart. In the end, all was very tasty. Next time I will make sure the bacon is uniform thickness. Yummy with Nueske's bacon.

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