Posts tagged Porchetta

Porcehtta and Grits

How to Make Porchetta at Home

0

Pan Seared Porchetta With Creamy Grits

Porchetta. Arguably, the most exalted, yet feared preparation of our tasty friend, the pig. Many home cooks have tried to prepare this delectable dish – which proffers decadent, herbaceous, slow-cooked meat wrapped with golden, fat-basted, teeth jarring, salty ‘cracklin’s’ – and most, most have failed. It’s not their fault. How many of us have a commercial sized oven capable of boxing a full size gutted pig all rolled up with herbs, garlic and oil, and sewn together? Not any apartment I’ve ever lived in.  I guess if you had your own gigantic rotisserie on wheels, that might help, but sadly, they don’t sell those at IKEA. At least not yet.

 

So, brave home cook with a hankering for crispy, juicy, herby porchetta, what do you do? Well? You cheat. And by cheat, I mean go with what you can get your hands on and make the best of it. That is the quintessence of New Soul Food.  Your grandmamma will be proud. (esp. if you don’t have to use her oven).

 

Our porchetta begins with a common, easy to find pork cut known as the shoulder (or Boston butt). We chose this cut because it has lots of fat (which equals flavor!) and it contains some dark and light meat, giving us some semblance of using a whole pig (if you squint real hard). We chose a nice, locally sourced 7lb, bone-in shoulder with the skin intact.

7lb. Pork Shoulder. You can certainly leave this fat on and score it for extra fat cracklins. We chose to remove some of the fat cap to get a better, more edible crust.

 

We actually removed some of the fat cap on this because we wanted a more aesthetically pleasing crust (read: our guest were scared of full on cracklin’s) but you can certainly leave it as-is. In the pic below, the fat we left is on the bottom.

Trimmed Porchetta (pork shoulder)

 

The next task is de-bone the shoulder. This is actually harder than it looks because the angular shoulder bone zig-zags its way across the inside of the shoulder as you can see below.

Deboning is harder than it looks.

To make the pistou (herb paste), we loaded our food processor with garlic, sea salt, cracked pepper, olive oil and some Simon and Garfunkel (parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme). This is more eye-balling than recipe.

Pulse for pistou!

 

What you’re looking for is a slightly damp paste the consistency of dry ricotta cheese. Spread this on your butterflied shoulder and break out the kitchen string!

The homemade pistou (herb paste) has been applied. Now we truss the porchetta.

Obviously, I could stand to truss a few more things to get my chops back, but you get the picture. Pork should be wrapped, pistou on the inside. You’ll probably have green fingernails for a few days after this as well,

Trussed Porchetta. Not pretty, but trussed.

 

Preheat your over to 400 degrees F. Once the oven is up to temp, place the uncovered porchetta dish on the middle rack for 20 minutes. After that, reduce the over temp to 275 degrees F and tightly cover the baking dish with foil. Cook until the internal temperature reads 175-180 on a temperature probe (approx 1.5 hours). Remove the dish from the oven and let the porchetta sit for at least 10 minutes before carving. You can slice the porchetta into 1 inch rounds and serve right away with any sides of your choice. We had roasted broccolini with garlic and red chilis and cannelini beans, stewed with fatback and thyme.

Crusty, Herby Porchetta fresh form the oven!

The best part is that the leftovers are as good (or better) than the original. We had it seared with grits the next morning for breakfast (banner pic).

We’d like to take credit for this inspiration for this preparation – our porchetta loyalty runs deep – however, we got the idea from Chad Robertson, owner and Chef of Tartine Bakery and Bar Tartine in San Francisco. If you love bread (like I do) I highly suggest his book Tartine Bread.

Let's just say the Porchetta is popular...

What is Porchetta? Everything good about pork!

1

Porchetta Sandwich and Sea Salted Potatoes from Roli Roti

Porchetta, its the other white meat (that one you’d cut in line, beg/borrow/steal/lie to your grandma to get your hands on). The beautiful sandwich above is a porchetta sando from the Roli Roti truck at San Francisco’s Ferry Building. At the time of this article, Roli Roti was slangin’ out piping hot porchetta at the Ferry Building on Thursdays and Saturdays to lines (LONG lines) of eager pork fans (and new converts).

 

So what is Porchetta? Vegetarians – beware.

A Pile of Piping Porchetta from Pienza

Porchetta is a fatty, juicy, amazing pork preparation that is essentially all the good parts on a pig rolled into one - literally. It’s a hollowed out pig stuffed with fresh herbs and salt so you get the cracklin’s, the belly, the loin, etc all in one preparation. It’s the Italian version of pulled pork – slow and low with lots of love, fat and flavor. Wikipedia has a pretty decent description:

The body of the pig is gutted, deboned, arranged carefully with layers of stuffing, meat, fat, and skin, then rolled, spitted, and roasted, traditionally over wood. Porchetta is usually heavily salted in addition to being stuffed with garlic, rosemary, fennel, or other herbs, often wild.

The picture above is a traditional Tuscan porchetta we found in Pienza, Italy. That photo was taken my best friend Noah, who later stuck his entire head inside that actual porchetta. True story.

Click through the gallery below to see more porchetta in sandwich version from Roli Roti, one of our favorite SF food trucks. These porchetta (porchettas? porchetti?) are slow roasted on a spit under roasting chickens, so the cracklins are constantly basted with roasted chicken schmaltz. In case you didn’t hear me: CRISPY PORK SKIN BASTED IN CHICKEN FAT. Then (THEN!) all those juices fall down onto roasting potatoes at the bottom of the roaster. I kid you not, one of the best things on this, our planet earth.

Go to Top