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Slow roast pork belly



The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
ESPECIALLY FOR XIV EYE :thumbsup:

Slow roast belly of pork to die for recipe (for 4)

Ingredients:

• 1 kilo joint of belly of pork
• 10 leaves off a sprig of rosemary
• 3 small cloves of garlic sliced
• Foil big enough to form a nest under and around the joint

Method:
1. Place the pork, crackling side down, in roasting pan. Distribute the rosemary and garlic evenly over the base of the belly. Take the foil and press it over the belly to make sure that the herbs will not shift.

2. Turn the whole lot over, crackling side up, and form the foil into a snug nest around the joint, leaving the crackling exposed and ensuring that the fat from the crackling will drip into the foil nest.

3. Roast at 140ºC for 3 hours and then turn down to 130ºC for another hour (4 hours!) - these are our fan-assisted oven temperatures so you may wish to adjust for a conventional oven, but not by much I think. Maybe +10% maximum.

:drool:
 




Rusthall Seagull

New member
Jul 16, 2003
2,119
Tunbridge wells
ESPECIALLY FOR XIV EYE :thumbsup:

Slow roast belly of pork to die for recipe (for 4)

Ingredients:

• 1 kilo joint of belly of pork
• 10 leaves off a sprig of rosemary
• 3 small cloves of garlic sliced
• Foil big enough to form a nest under and around the joint

Method:
1. Place the pork, crackling side down, in roasting pan. Distribute the rosemary and garlic evenly over the base of the belly. Take the foil and press it over the belly to make sure that the herbs will not shift.

2. Turn the whole lot over, crackling side up, and form the foil into a snug nest around the joint, leaving the crackling exposed and ensuring that the fat from the crackling will drip into the foil nest.

3. Roast at 140ºC for 3 hours and then turn down to 130ºC for another hour (4 hours!) - these are our fan-assisted oven temperatures so you may wish to adjust for a conventional oven, but not by much I think. Maybe +10% maximum.

:drool:


That sounds gorgeous! Sunday sorted
 












The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
Pork belly was the main course! :thumbsup:

Any good?

No, me and XIVE were having a drunken discussion in the pub on Friday night about slow roasting. We were swapping cookery tips and recipe ideas (a conversation we continued on Albion Roar the following day). We're always doing that - the crazy guys that we are. My missus just rolled her eyes to the ceiling.

Anyhoo, he wasn't sure how 'slow' slow-roasting should be. Now he does.
 


Man of Harveys

Well-known member
Jul 9, 2003
18,880
Brighton, UK
I wish people wouldn't keep bouncing this thread as it's making me feel very hungry.
















Oh.
 






dannyboy

tfso!
Oct 20, 2003
3,651
Waikanae NZ
ive done this a few times and its lovely
i do it slightly different though i sit the pork belly on some onion halfs in the nest and in the bottom of the nest put the herbs of your choice the garlic , pepper etc and some white wine. so while you cook it the wine herby mixture sort of steams the pork from the bottom and it also stews the garlic and onion etc for the gravy as the pork juices will drip into it. make sure you put it in a tin foil though or all the juicy loveliness will bake on to the bottom of the pan.

for the crackling use a pestle and mortar and grind up a teaspoon of cumin seeds , some pepper and def some salt. score the top of the crackling very heavily and pat this mixture in

bingo!!!
 






Starry

Captain Of The Crew
Oct 10, 2004
6,733
that sounds superb. we just had twelve piglets born on march 28th, the girlies get to live but the boys are going to be slow roasted.
 


sam86

Moderator
Feb 18, 2009
9,947
that sounds superb. we just had twelve piglets born on march 28th, the girlies get to live but the boys are going to be slow roasted.

Can I have one? My partners very keen to have a pet pig (even though we don't have a garden...). :shootself
 






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