Friday, September 22, 2023

Wendell's Chinese Roast Pork


Hi peoples!   I wanted to show you what Wendell made for softball pupu yesterday.  It's a Foodland recipe. He bought the pork belly from Costco.  He said he thinks it was $3.99/pound.

I'm feeling better.  Taking things one day at a time.  See you again soon.

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He broiled it for a little bit to get the crackling top.  
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It was super moist and tender.
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  • 2 teaspoons Chinese five spice powder
  • .5 teaspoon Garlic powder
  • 2 pounds Pork belly, boneless, skin-on
  • .5 teaspoon White Vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon Salt, divided
  • 1 tablespoon Neutral oil

INSTRUCTIONS 

  • In a small bowl, whisk together Chinese five spice, garlic powder and ½ teaspoon salt.
  • Lay the pork belly skin side down and rub the dry seasoning into the meat side only.
  • Flip the pork belly over and wipe off the skin as much as possible with a clean dry paper towel. Using another paper towel, pat the skin dry. 
  • Next poke as many holes as you can into the skin, using a sharp metal cooking needle or a bunch of wooden skewers. This is the key to having a Chinese roast pork belly with crispy crackling.
  • Wrap aluminum foil around the base and the sides of the pork leaving the skin open and uncovered. Do not create a tall edge with your foil. Create a short edge enough that you can pick up the sides. If you create a tall edge the oven heat will not reach the skin evenly, resulting in a non-crispy skin.
  • After wrapping the pork belly in foil, dry it again with a clean paper towel.
  • Brush pork skin with a light coat of white vinegar. Do not drench pork in vinegar. The vinegar helps to remove moisture. Then evenly and lightly sprinkle sea salt over the top of the pork.
  • Bake at 225℉ for 60 minutes. Your skin will not puff up here so do not worry if you do not see it crackle. 
  • Remove from oven and evenly brush a thin coat of oil onto the skin. Then bake again at 400℉ for 40 minutes. The pork skin will start to puff up and crackle. Monitor this process around the 35-minute mark and check for golden crispy crackled skin. If you do not see it, continue baking until you do. The pork belly is a very forgiving cut of meat and will stay moist.
  • Once you see the crackled puffy skin, remove pork from the oven, and let it rest for 10 minutes so the juices go back into the meat. You can leave it in the foil or remove it and place it on your chopping board.
  • When chopping, flip it over so it is skin side down. Hold the pork firm with your dominant hand and with a very sharp heavy knife slice the meat down firmly. Then pause before you reach the skin, and with two hands slice down. This ensures a smooth slice.


8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yummy! Love when the skin is crispy. Glad you’re feeling better.

Izsmom

Anonymous said...

J, glad you back small kine. The pork looks but hoo hard for make. BTW I recently discovered if I eat pork belly, that I can taste boar taint, a very atrocious flavor (strong urine taste) and found a genetic testing site that says it's genetic. But weirdly I only got it this late age. Weird,yeah? And pork belly was my go to cut to make my pork meals like pork Tofu. Or does Times market buy from a breeder who doesn't castrate his pigs?Such a huge mystery. But Yay, you back-N

Honolulu Aunty said...

Yum!!!!

K and S said...

looks intense to make but ono! glad you are doing better.

jalna said...

Izsmom, I love the skin too.

N, how interesting! And I agree . . . too hard for me to make too.

Aunty, it was a hit at the park.

Kat, thanks!

Anonymous said...

Omg. What N wrote!
Glad you feeling better!
V

jalna said...

V, I know!

Susan said...

I’m happy to hear you’re feeling better! We had our share of experimenting with this recipe during the lockdown! It was crazy how many times we made this. I think we porked out after awhile and moved on to other stuff. Lol