roast pork belly on pea puree recipe – use real butter (2024)

roast pork belly on pea puree recipe – use real butter (1) Recipe: roast pork belly on pea purée

The ground is greening up with grasses and the leaves of familiar wildflowers around my house. I spy new bright green tips dotting the conifers on my trail runs and dog walks. It smells good – mountain spring. From my office window, I can see a not-too-distant ridge, white with snow thanks to that recent storm. Neighbors covered their planted flowers with buckets because pretty domesticated plants can’t take the abuse of mountain spring. Our native plants (read: weeds) are tough. They can survive the harsh and fickle changes in weather. Yay for natural (read: lazy) landscaping!


always a welcome sight

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some elk noodling around

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By the time we melted out last spring, it was summer. I live in the mountains, but shop for groceries down on the flats. So when I though it was finally springtime, most of the spring produce had come and gone and I had missed out. Not so this year, and I was quick to pounce on English peas when I found them. They are so green, so spring.


plump

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round food is really appealing to me

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I’ve never been a huge fan of peas. Snow peas and sugar snap peas, sure, but not English peas unless they were cooked to death in soup. Over the past few years they’ve grown on me as I’ve had them prepared in ways that emphasize the freshness and the sweetness. Also, I like shelling them more than anything else – something mindless to do while lost in thought. My intent was to make a pea purée that I had bookmarked on my friend, Chris Cina‘s blog. But I wanted to pair it with something different.


pork belleh(!!!), kosher salt, and sugar

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trimming the skin off

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Pork belly is the starting point for precious bacon, but pork belly itself is pretty wonderful noshing. You (we) see it on restaurant menus all the time around here, so I wanted to roast some pork belly at home, to gauge if it was something worth putting on our menu for dinner guests. I had a straightforward recipe bookmarked (it’s been on my mind for a while) and stripped it down to just a salt and sugar curing mostly because I didn’t have the other ingredients on hand.


cover the pork belly in the salt and sugar

roast pork belly on pea puree recipe – use real butter (8)

place in a small dish, cover, and refrigerate overnight

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After the pork belly has cured overnight, the flesh will be firm. I scraped off the excess cure and set it in a small baking dish. I had a 1-pound hunk of pork belly because it was the last piece in the case. This should have registered in my brain, but it didn’t, and I roasted it according to the recipe which uses two 2-pound slabs of pork belly. Durrrr…


remove excess cure

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set in clean baking dish to roast

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While the pork belly was roasting away in the oven, I busied myself shelling the peas to prepare the pea purée.


peas, chicken broth, white wine, shallots, garlic, butter, salt

roast pork belly on pea puree recipe – use real butter (12)

minced garlic and shallots

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It’s quick to do. Prep the ingredients, sweat the garlic and shallots in some butter. Then you pour in the wine and stock with the peas. Bring it to a boil and simmer the peas until tender. Such a lovely shade of green.


pour the liquids and peas into the garlic and shallots

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simmer until tender

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Now, I should note that this was made before I got my Vitamix. I puréed the peas in my old blender, which does a pretty poor job of… well everything. The purée wasn’t as smooth as I had hoped, but next time I’ll be using my Vitamix and those peas better watch out!


purée

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strain

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stir in salt and butter

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Okay, so how was the pork belly doi- ahhh! I basted it during the one hour of high-temperature roasting, but I assumed it wouldn’t have problems during the two hours at 250°F. The top had bubbled up and burned, but thankfully the meat was fine. I probably should have checked on it during those two hours as the piece of pork belly was a quarter the amount in the recipe. Now I know. I took it out of the oven, sliced off the overly burnt sections, and prepared it for dinner.


probably should have taken it out of the oven sooner

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but it sliced up nicely

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The pork belly is so good, you’ll be hard pressed not to eat it up on its own before it hits a serving plate. But I did resist and I managed to save enough pieces to nestle onto a bed of pea purée. Since I had made this the same day I made those nifty fried fennel slices, I dropped a few fennel fans on the side. Next time? BIGGER piece of pork belly. I am convinced that savory, salty, porky goodness would go with anything, but it is extra delightful with the sweetness of fresh spring peas.


a few pieces will easily fill you up

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Roast Pork Belly on Pea Purée
[print recipe]
roast pork belly from Zen Can Cook and pea purée from ChristopherCina.com

roast pork belly
1/3 cup kosher salt
1/3 cup sugar
2 2-pound slabs pork belly, skin removed

Mix the kosher salt and sugar together. Rub the salt-sugar mixture all over the pork belly until completely coated. Discard any excess. Place in a dish and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate overnight for up to 12 hours. When the pork belly is ready, preheat your oven to 450°F. Remove excess cure from the pork. Set the pork belly on a clean baking dish and roast for an hour, occasionally basting it with the pan drippings. Lower the temperature to 250°F and continue to bake for 2 more hours. It should be golden brown. Slice.

pea purée
2 tbsp butter
1 tbsp shallots, minced
1 tbsp garlic, minced
2 cups English peas, shelled
1/2 cup white wine
3/4 cup stock or water
1 tsp kosher salt

Melt a tablespoon of butter in a small saucepan over low heat and sweat the shallots and garlic. Add the peas, wine, and stock (or water) and increase the heat to high. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium and let simmer for 5 minutes or until the peas are soft. Remove from heat and purée everything (in a blender or food process or using an immersion blender) until it is smooth. Strain (discard or drink the liquid) and stir the butter and salt into the pea purée.

To serve: Spoon purée onto serving vessel and set slices of pork belly on top. Weeee!

May 10th, 2012: 11:50 am
filed under dinner, gluten-free, meat, recipes, savory, vegetables

roast pork belly on pea puree recipe – use real butter (2024)
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