Brined-and-Braised Pork Belly With Caraway

Brined-and-Braised Pork Belly With Caraway
Tom Schierlitz for The New York Times. Food stylist: Jill Santopietro.
Total Time
3 hour 15 minutes, plus 24 hours' brining and overnight refrigeration
Rating
4(42)
Comments
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Ingredients

Yield:Serves 4

    For the Brine

    • 1cup caraway seeds
    • 3tablespoons fennel seeds
    • 3tablespoons whole black peppercorns
    • 3tablespoons coriander seeds
    • 1cup Diamond Crystal kosher salt, plus more as needed
    • 1cup packed dark brown sugar
    • 6cloves garlic, crushed
    • 2cups cider vinegar
    • 2pounds pork belly (center cut)

    For the Braise

    • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • 2tablespoons canola oil
    • 1carrot, chopped
    • 1stalk celery, chopped
    • 1onion, chopped
    • 4cloves garlic, crushed
    • 6sprigs thyme
    • 3tablespoons caraway seeds, toasted
    • 4cups apple cider
    • 4cups chicken broth
Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Two days before serving the pork, prepare the brine: In a large skillet over low heat, toast the caraway seeds. Cool and grind in a spice grinder. In a large plastic container, combine the caraway, fennel, peppercorns, coriander, salt, brown sugar, garlic, cider vinegar and 4 cups water. Add the pork, cover and refrigerate for 24 hours.

  2. Step 2

    The next day, preheat the oven to 300 degrees. Remove the pork from the brine and pat dry. Season with salt and pepper. In a braising pan over medium-high heat, heat the oil. Add the pork and brown on all sides. Transfer to a plate. Add the carrot, celery, onion, garlic, thyme and 2 tablespoons toasted caraway seeds to the pan. Brown the vegetables until the onion is translucent, about 5 minutes. Return the pork to the pan, skin side up. Pour in the apple cider and enough broth to cover the meat by three-fourths. Bring to a boil, then cover and braise in the oven until the pork is very tender, about 2 hours. Cool the pork in its cooking liquid and refrigerate overnight.

  3. Step 3

    The next day, preheat the oven to 300 degrees. Scrape off and discard excess fat from the braising liquid. Remove the pork and discard loose gelatin. Cut the pork into serving pieces and place in a wide saute pan with a heatproof handle. Bring the braising liquid to a boil and reduce by about two-thirds, or until it lightly coats the back of a spoon; strain. Pour just enough liquid over the pork to submerge halfway. Sprinkle with the remaining caraway seeds, then place the pan in the oven and heat through, basting occasionally. Top pork with sauce and serve with braised cabbage, a recipe for which can be found at nytimes.com/magazine.

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Ratings

4 out of 5
42 user ratings
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Comments

1 cup of caraway seeds for the marinade, plus more for the braise seems overpowering. And, 1 cup of salt to only 4 cups water is quite a powerful brine. Are these numbers correct?

Made it exactly as described. The proportions are correct and the results fabulous.

I cooked this exactly as written and enjoyed the results, including the delightful sauce. The amount of caraway was extravagant. For a ratio of meat to fat in the end I prefer alternatives from Spain and Britain: Chicharrones de Cadiz (see website of Morito restaurant in London) and Slow Roasted Belly (see Gordon Ramsay's website). Also, they produce leftovers that can be taken in a Mexican direction (sauced and put into tacos) which I've done many times.

Incredible flavor. Seemed aggressively seasoned, but it wasn't. It was heaven.

I cooked this exactly as written and enjoyed the results, including the delightful sauce. The amount of caraway was extravagant. For a ratio of meat to fat in the end I prefer alternatives from Spain and Britain: Chicharrones de Cadiz (see website of Morito restaurant in London) and Slow Roasted Belly (see Gordon Ramsay's website). Also, they produce leftovers that can be taken in a Mexican direction (sauced and put into tacos) which I've done many times.

Made it exactly as described. The proportions are correct and the results fabulous.

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Credits

By Marco Canora, the chef and co-owner of Hearth

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