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Any good recipes for a large boned pork shoulder?

13 replies

vacaloca · 09/01/2009 14:25

I've got the whole family coming round tomorrow. I had planned to do racks of ribs, but they didn't have any at the butchers so I got a boned pork shoulder instead, thinking I'd seen a Jamie Oliver recipe for it, but I was wrong. Anyone got any good recipes for it? It's about 4kg and it's rolled up and has the skin on, so it should have lovely crackling.

OP posts:
fishie · 09/01/2009 14:30

there was something lovely in observer or guardian recently, anna del conte.

fishie · 09/01/2009 14:33

ah i think it was waitrose mag. poncy reading material i have

vacaloca · 09/01/2009 14:39
Grin
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Mumwhensdinnerready · 09/01/2009 14:58

I have two recipes. Tescos have these on offer at moment so have stocked up.

This one was based on a Jamie one I saw on tv. My recipes are a bit vague as I add quantities to suit.
Large pork shoulder
2 onions
flour
1 red pepper shopped
diced fresh chilli to your taste
3 tablespoons dried paprika
Fresh cream
1 pint hot veg stock.

Brown the onion and put into a large casserole dish. Add the peppers.
Remove the rind and surplus fat from the pork. Brown it whole in large frying pan.
Place on top of the onions etc. Add the stock and paprika.
Oven 160C (mine is electric fan I don't know the gas equivalent) for 2 1/2 hours.
At this stage take it out and check seasoning. If you want a smooth sauce take the meat out and use a hand blender to whizz up the liqid. Add some flour to thicken.
Put it all back in the oven for another half hour and add a pot of single cream 10 minutes before serving.
As long as you give it 3 hours it will be okay to leave longer. The meat wil be beautifully tender.
Serve with rice.

Mumwhensdinnerready · 09/01/2009 15:08

The red pepper is chopped of course!
My second recipe I did last night and my DH and DSs loved it.

Indonisian Pork
Large pork shoulder
2 onions
flour
2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
2 tbsn lemon juice
diced fresh chilli to your taste
2 to 3 tablespoons peanut butter
1 pint hot veg stock
Flour to thicken.

Brown the onion and put into a large casserole dish. Add the peppers.
Remove the rind and surplus fat from the pork. Brown it whole in large frying pan.
Place on top of the onions etc.
Add the stock and all other ingrediants.
Put a lid on and put in oven for 3 hours @160C.
At this stage take it out and check seasoning.
If you want a smooth sauce take the meat out and use a hand blender to whizz up the liquid. Add some flour to thicken.
Put it all back in the oven for another half hour, more if you need it to wait.

I hope I haven't missed any vital details from these recipes as I just made them up by trial and error.

vacaloca · 09/01/2009 20:03

Thanks, they sound good. Will show DH and let him decide as he's going to be head chef.

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ZacharyQuack · 10/01/2009 08:59

How about Jamie Oliver's stuffed porchetta recipe from his Christmas show? Here

puppydetox · 10/01/2009 09:05

nigella marinates the joint in olive oil, black pepper, onions and an apparently ridiculous number of bay leaves, then roast. it makes the most delicious savoury thing i've ever tasted, and the gravy is amazing. can dig out the exact recipe if you like.

puppydetox · 10/01/2009 09:13

recipe is for loin of pork but i've used it very successfully for shoulders. This quantity is for 2kg so can double (personally wouldn't double the oil though).

6tbsp olive oil
4 cloves garlic, crushed
6 peppercorns, bruised
6 dried/fresh bay leaves, crumbled
1 tsp salt

mix above and rub into meat, marinate in fridge if time.

gas 6/200c - finely slice 1 onion and 10 more bay leaves on a roasting tray, sit meat on top, roast.

IotasCat · 10/01/2009 09:23

There is a great Jamie Oliver recipe for goulash made with pork shoulder. In fact we are having it tonight

IotasCat · 10/01/2009 09:27

The recipe is on his website, it's called spicy pork and chilli pepper goulash

Dreyfus · 10/01/2009 09:27

This one is from Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, the meat ends up incredibly tender and the crackling is crisped at the end to give a fabulous result. I suppose you'd have to leave out the brining as you don't have 24 hours advance notice, but I also missed out that step when I made it and the meat was just so tender and delicious.

Slow-roasted pork shoulder
This sumptuous dish is based on a recipe by the late Edna Lewis, who specialised in the rib-sticking, soul-feeding dishes of the American South. Brining the pork first, then cooking it slowly before blasting the skin in a hot oven gives you juicy, tender pork, perfect crackling and a rich, savoury sauce - what more could you want for your feast? Serves 10.

1 bone-in pork shoulder
½ tsp each salt and black pepper
2 tsp thyme leaves, chopped
3 garlic cloves, peeled and thinly sliced lengthways
12 bay leaves
2 onions, peeled and thickly sliced
2 carrots, peeled and quartered lengthways
1 bottle red wine (or port)
A good slug of double cream
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

For the brine

40g flaky sea salt per litre of water
60g demerara sugar
6 juniper berries, lightly crushed
1 tsp white peppercorns
A couple of cloves
1-2 dried chillies or 1 tsp chilli flakes
A couple of bay leaves

Put the ingredients for the brine in a large pan and warm gently over a low heat, stirring, until the sugar and salt dissolve. Remove from the heat, cool, then chill. Put the pork in a big clean plastic bucket or tub, add brine to cover and leave in a cold place for 24 hours.

Preheat the oven to 150C/300F/ gas mark 2. Remove the meat from the brine, rinse and pat dry. Using a small, sharp knife, cut 12 evenly spaced slits into the skin about 2cm wide and 3cm deep. Mix together the salt, pepper and thyme, and spoon a little into each slit, followed by a sliver of garlic and a bay leaf - let the bay stick out a bit so you can remove it easily later. Sprinkle any remaining seasoning over the pork.

Scatter the onions and carrots in the base of a roasting tin and put the pork on top, skin-side up. Pour in the wine, lay a piece of greaseproof paper over the pork, then seal very tightly with two layers of foil. Cook for four to five hours, until the meat is spoonably tender. Remove from the oven and up the heat to 220C/425F/gas mark 7.

Remove and discard the bay leaves, then cut the skin away from the meat, and cover to keep warm. Strain the pan juices into a saucepan, pressing on the veg to extract as much liquid as possible. Skim off most of the fat. Slice the skin into thick strips, place on an oven tray and roast until puffed up, crisp and golden, 10-13 minutes.

To make the sauce, simmer the pan juices until reduced by half, stir in the cream and heat through. Roughly carve the meat, and serve with the sauce and crackling on the side.

vacaloca · 11/01/2009 20:08

oh, thank you for these. I've printed them out for future reference as I didn't see them before I started cooking. In the end I marinated the meat in my usual mix of garlic, salt, paprika and white wine, making sure the rind was very dry and not marinated and left uncovered in the fridge overnight. I followed Nigella's instructions in her How to Eat book about doing the first hour at 210C and then lower it and we cooked it for a good 4-5 hours. It was perfect! The crackling was cracking and the meat lovely and tender. It was a great success.

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