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Top 4 Roast Pork Belly Recipes

06 August 2009 | 1:03 - By Phil Lees

What is the best method to roast an unctuous and crispy piece of pork belly?

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Pork belly is an intriguing cut of meat to roast at home, if only because there is no single agreed method to roast it. For most cuts, there is an underlying and often overwhelming consensus on the correct plan of attack. Not so with belly; probably because there is so much room to experiment and the ultimate goal is to balance the crispness of the skin and soft richness of the meat and fat to your individual preference.

It is difficult to get completely wrong and at various points in the cooking, can be saved from disaster. If the skin doesn’t become crisp, it can be cooked separately under the grill. Alternately, if the skin starts to bubble and blister before the meat is done, then turn down the oven. The payoff is huge and short of burning the meat to black carbon, the results echo an unreportable splendour on the table.

The most common preparation before it hits the oven is to score the skin with cuts through to the fat and rub in generous amounts of salt, and any aromatic herb or spice to taste. As for methods, here’s four that work.

Method 1: SBS/Gaté

In response to a reader’s question, Gabriel Gaté’s advice from last week was to:

Place a little moisture in a roasting tray, e.g. water, wine or stock, then place a rack in the tray. Place the meat, skin-side up, in the rack and cook in a low oven (at no more than 120°C) until the meat is tender. If you are not cooking the crackling separately, place the meat under a hot grill if necessary to finish the crackling just before serving.

Method 2: NY Times/Schneider

In the NY Times, Edward Schnieder suggests:

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees (220 degrees C). Roast the pork, skin side down, in a lightly oiled roasting pan for an hour (pour off accumulated fat every now and again). Turn the pork over, lower the heat to a little under 400 (200 degrees C) and roast for another 45 minutes or an hour, or until the skin is crackling crisp and the meat feels very tender when pierced with a pot fork or skewer. Once the roast is out of the oven, you can strip off the skin, scrape off the fat from the underside and return it (the skin) to the oven for five or ten minutes to get even crisper.

Method 3: Rival Australian TV Show

I’m attracted to this method because it is much more complex than necessary, a method that a chef with far too much time on their hands would dream up and attempt. It uses butcher's hooks to hang the pork within the oven which is a barrel of laughs to wrangle out of the oven when cooked. Asbestos forearms help. From The Cook and The Chef:

Preheat oven to 100C. Place a cup of water in a baking tray at the bottom of the oven. Hang the pork upright in front of the fan in the oven, the skin towards the fan and the pork hanging vertically so that the fat renders down through the piece and not into the skin. If the angle of the hang is such that the rendering fat drips into the skin, the skin will not crisp. Cook for about 50 minutes. In the last 10 minutes of cooking, increase the temp to 240C, this will give the skin a good crust. If the skin doesn’t blister, then remove from hooks and lay skin side up at the top of the oven and set your grill at 200C until blisters appear.

Method 4: Me

I discovered this a few weeks ago but it would be conceited to imagine that I’m the first person to roast pork belly in this manner. Preheat the oven to 130oC. After you’ve scored the skin and rubbed in the salt, place the belly skin-side down and wrap the meat in two layers of aluminium foil, forming a close fitting mould around the meat with only the skin exposed. Place on a baking tray, skin-side up, and roast until the internal temperature of the meat hits 65oC-70oC (about two hours). The aluminium foil both shields the meat from heat and keeps escaping juices and aromatic herbs (if you add them) close to meat, but away from the skin.
Got a better method? Share below.

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Comments (15)

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26 Sep 2011 19:32 AEST

William

From:

Up or Down

Yes, Trevor, I had to do a double take after reading your comment. Our author was being shall we say 'pedantically helpful'. I expect it is easier to get a tight fit with the foil if you fold it over the upturned belly as it were. He does say to do the baking skin side up. Actually, wrapping the meat then cutting away the foil over the skin would ensure a good fit. For the cutting use a box cutter - no one should do pork without one handy - they are the biz for scoring the skin.

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18 Sep 2011 9:12 AEST

Trevar

From:

Keh?

When you say "place the belly skin-side down and wrap the meat in two layers of aluminium foil, forming a close fitting mould around the meat with only the skin exposed," what do you mean? If you put it skin-side down then the skin wouldn't be exposed, would it? Do you wrap it then break the foil open on the skin side?

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12 Mar 2011 23:53 AEST

Heather's Table

From:

Kurobuta Pork

If you live in Melbourne, do yourselves a favour and try a piece of Kurobuta pork belly (avlb from Wangara Game). There is no way you can mess it up and everytime I make it, it is truly outstanding.

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06 Mar 2011 22:52 AEST

Steve

From:

Pork Belly

I just cooked sliced pork belly on the webber (heat beads). Prior to cooking I rubbed them with lime juice, salt and pepper. Much of the fat was rendered out leaving crispy skin. It was excellent and simple. Very filling just served with a garden salad

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05 Mar 2011 6:03 AEST

robert gregg

From:

No Crackle in my pork belly

was excited last night to order double cooked pork bellt only to discover thr pork whilst tender was soft with a spongy skin - to be correct should it not have been crackled?

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23 Jan 2011 21:20 AEST

Jem

From:

Method 4 works well

Tried your method (method 4). Cooked it at 140c for 1.5 hours. Then sprayed very little olive oil on the crackling and wacked it up to 220c for half an hour. Came out perfect. The silver foil worked a treat and kept all the juices in but also had rock hard crackling. I think the half hour could be reduced to 20 or 25... Depends how quick your oven get's from 140c up to 220c (mine is a little slow). Served with braised cellery & carrot (done in oven at same time) and some small baked spuds

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30 Aug 2010 4:05 AEST

John

From:

Recipe 4

I've done recipe 4 several times before I saw it on here.I do it the same except for the last hour I put the belly on a rack in the oven to finish-gives the pork a better colour but retains the moisture.A few minutes under the grill some gives a great crackling.

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22 Aug 2010 23:11 AEST

Jason

From:

Crispy crackling

You must all be on crack, all you have to do is slow cook it for 1 - 2 hours and then deep fry the skin. It's so easy just place enough oil in the pan so that it comes up a few mm high. Then heat it up nice and hot, slice up your oven cooked pork rashes and place them skin down in the oil. Leave it there for a few minutes until it is golden brown, and finally, a quick Bam! from your spice weasel. mmmm- mmm!

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01 Jun 2010 3:48 AEST

Island Eye

From:

Roast Pork Belly Recipes

Great recipes! Definitely I'll cook it with a great pleasure.

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23 Mar 2010 12:40 AEST

Benji

From:

reply to oil rub to jillian

If you are scoring the skin then you dont really need to rub in any oil. just score the skin deep enough that the layer of fat between the skin and meat is exposed

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About this Blog

A blog about what the world eats, when and where it eats it, and why it matters to us all. Only much less ambitious than that sounds and with more excruciating puns.

Phil Lees grew up in rural Victoria, the first generation in his family to not have lived on the farm and thereby not slaughter their own meat.

In 2005 he moved to Cambodia and started the nation’s first food blog, Phnomenon.com, named after the best pun that he has ever made. It turns out that Cambodian food is delicious and unlike the warnings in most guidebooks, is not likely to kill you with any immediacy. Gridskipper called him a “national treasure”. Lonely Planet’s Greater Mekong guide called him “the unofficial pimp of Cambodian cuisine”. The New York Times laughed at a funny hotdog he saw.

Phil makes a mean sausage, a hoppy pale ale, a modest laksa. He owns three barbecues and is in the market for a fourth.

 
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