Monday, March 16, 2015

Pork Pernil

D and I decided to have this.  He made it on Sunday and the pork itself was awesome.  We didn't really taste the sofrito, but I read if you stab the pork the sofrito would get in.  I don't know if D did that.  Anyway, this is a dish that you can't go far from home with.

The smell in the house was wonderful.  D took the pork out to let it rest.  I tasted the jus.  If you weren't on blood pressure medicine, you'd want some then.  The flavor was good...what wasn't masked by the salt.  But the salt taste, wow...

The crust was really crispy.  We would have again, but lower the salt (which D said he halved in the first place).

We had with Pinto Bean and Hominy Salad.

Pork Pernil

Introducing pernil, a Latin dish of tender, super-flavorful slow-roasted pork with the ultimate crispy skin.

SERVES 8 TO 10 (or 20 if you measure 4 oz servings)
Recipe from Cook's Country.

Depending on their size, you may need two bunches of cilantro. Crimp the foil tightly over the edges of the roasting pan in step 2 to minimize evaporation. Make sure to spray the V-rack in step 3.

Pork Resting; Photo by ALB
Ingredients
1 1/2 cups chopped fresh cilantro leaves and stems
1 onion, chopped coarse
1/4 cup kosher salt (D halved from this but would use 1/4 the next time).
1/4 cup olive oil
10 garlic cloves, peeled
2 tablespoons pepper
1 tablespoon dried oregano
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 (7-pound) bone-in pork picnic shoulder
1 tablespoon grated lime zest plus 1/3 cup juice (3 limes)

Instructions
1. Pulse 1 cup cilantro, onion, salt, oil, garlic, pepper, oregano, and cumin in food processor until finely ground, about 15 pulses, scraping down sides of bowl as needed. Pat pork dry with paper towels and rub sofrito all over. Wrap pork in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 12 hours or up to 24 hours.

2. Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 450 degrees. Pour 8 cups water in large roasting pan. Unwrap pork and place skin side down in pan. Cover pan tightly with aluminum foil and roast for 90 minutes. Remove foil, reduce oven temperature to 375 degrees, and continue to roast for 2½ hours.

3. Remove pan from oven. Spray V-rack with vegetable oil spray. Gently slide metal spatula under pork to release skin from pan. Using folded dish towels, grasp ends of pork and transfer to V-rack, skin side up. Wipe skin dry with paper towels. Place V-rack with pork in roasting pan. If pan looks dry, add 1 cup water. Return to oven and roast until pork registers 195 degrees, about 1 hour. (Add water as needed to keep bottom of pan from drying out.)

4. Line rimmed baking sheet with foil. Remove pan from oven. Transfer V-rack and pork to prepared sheet and return to oven. Immediately increase oven temperature to 500 degrees. Cook until pork skin is well browned and crispy (when tapped lightly with tongs, skin will sound hollow), 15 to 30 minutes, rotating sheet halfway through cooking. Transfer pork to carving board and let rest for 30 minutes.

5. Meanwhile, pour juices from pan into fat separator. Let liquid settle for 5 minutes, then pour off 1 cup defatted juices into large bowl. (If juices measure less than 1 cup, make up difference with water.) Whisk remaining ½ cup cilantro and lime zest and juice into bowl.

6. Remove crispy skin from pork in 1 large piece. Coarsely chop skin into bite-size pieces and set aside. Trim and discard excess fat from pork. Remove pork from bone and chop coarse. Transfer pork to bowl with cilantro-lime sauce and toss to combine. Serve pork, with crispy skin on side.

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