Smoked and Braised Asian Pork Belly

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chilerelleno

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Smoked and Braised Asian Pork Belly
Roasted Corn in Sweet Soy Garlic Sauce

Pork Belly

2.5 slab of pork belly
Chinese Five Spice
Kosher salt
Crushed Red Pepper

Sauce
2C cider or cane vinegar
1-3/4C soy sauce
3/4C brown sugar
1-1/4C water
1.5T sesame oil
1.5T fish sauce
(half or full measures are given below, mild or spicy)
*3-6 star anise
*4-8 Cloves, whole
*3-6 garlic cloves, minced
*1 small or medium knob of ginger, chopped
*1-2 Serrano or other chile, chopped
Green onion, chopped for garnish

This sauce is very intense when reduced.
It is full of strong spice flavors and has some heat, and is not for those with a soft palate.
It can be made with the half measures to accommodate the less adventuresome palate.

Score the bottom of the belly and season both sides generously with the chinese five spice, salt and red pepper

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Smoke at 375° for two hours, I used Cherry for smoke
Make the sauce while the belly smokes
Preheat oven to 350° at 1.5hrs into the smoke
Transfer to large casserole dish and add sauce just to the top of the belly
Cover with foil and braise for two hours

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Once done let belly rest on cutting board
Place 2C of sauce in small saucepan and reduce by half by boiling
Mix 1T of cornstarch with 1T of water and whisk into the reduction during boil
Let boil a minute while continuing to whisk, remove from heat.

Slice and spoon reduction over slices, serve hot

Roasted Corn in Sweet Soy Garlic Sauce
1 ear of corn per person
1/2 Red Onion, chopped
1 bunch of Green onions, chopped
Salt and Crushed Red Pepper to taste

Sweet Soy Garlic Sauce
1/4C Soy sauce
1/4 Seasoned rice vinegar
1T Garlic, minced and mashed
1/8C brown sugar
Combine ingredients and whisk together

Grill corn to get some nice color on it
Cut the corn off the cob and transfer to a preheated wok or large/deep skillet
Add the sauce and cook over high heat for two minutes stirring constantly
Add in onion and continue to cook/stir for two more minutes
Serve hot
Somehow I deleted the corn pics, bummer.

The Money Shot


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Last edited:
Ok, so I see you decided to go with higher temps and less time versus lower temps and more time as you had previously suggested in your last thread.

You feel as if this was an improvement over your last method?
 
Ok, so I see you decided to go with higher temps and less time versus lower temps and more time as you had previously suggested in your last thread.

You feel as if this was an improvement over your last method?
I'm always playing with some recipes.

Anyways, the belly you're likely referencing was the Hickory Smoked BBQ Braised I cooked last Sunday.
It was a much heavier/thicker slab of belly and I thought it would benefit from a slightly longer cook, 350°/3hours.
With this one being lighter and not nearly as thick, 375°/2hours isn't really all that different.
The results of the two were pretty much on par.
 
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Awesome.. That's on my list now !!.. Thanks for always giving us so much detail in the recipes..:emoji_thumbsup::emoji_thumbsup:
 
Chile is da Man! That looks awesome sir. You sure can cook them Bellies. I am HIGHLY disappointed that the corn pictures are not being posted...:emoji_astonished:
Seriously, it all looks delicious. Does the bark retain any crispness when it is cooked like that? Just curious.
Don
 
Chile sauces sound amazing,only pork belly I can eat is Bacon
But that sure does look good enough for POINTS
Richie
 
Nice!!!!!!!
Thanks Joe.
Chile is da Man! That looks awesome sir. You sure can cook them Bellies. I am HIGHLY disappointed that the corn pictures are not being posted...:emoji_astonished:
Seriously, it all looks delicious. Does the bark retain any crispness when it is cooked like that? Just curious.
Don
Really appreciate it Don.
No, after braising with it covered it's all semi-soft, but still delicious.
 
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