Roasted pork belly with pears and thyme recipe
Don't be put off by the long cooking time – the fall-apart pork belly and crispy crackling is worth the wait.
TIP: On buying your belly, have your butcher remove it from the bone. Keep the bone and bring it home. Also, have them remove the skin, having first scored it in a criss-cross fashion.
Recipe from The Really Quite Good British Cookbook, images copyright © Lizzie Mayson, recipes copyright © Hardeep Singh Kohli Nourish Books.
Ingredients
- 1 pork belly (2½–3 kg/5½–6½ lb)
- 3 tbsp rapeseed oil
- 2 tbsp sea salt
- 2 leeks
- 2 carrots
- 4 sticks of celery
- 8 peppercorns
- 12 sprigs of thyme, of which 4 should be stripped of leaves
- 560 ml perry (pear cider)
- 5 firm pears: 4 halved and cored, 1 finely diced
Details
- Cuisine: British
- Recipe Type: Pork
- Difficulty: Easy
- Preparation Time: 30 mins
- Cooking Time: 570 mins
- Serves: 6
Step-by-step
- Set the oven to the highest setting. Pop the kettle on. Place the skin in the sink and pour boiling water over it. Carefully dry the skin, thoroughly.
- Rub a tablespoon of oil and then the sea salt into the scored flesh. Place the skin in an oiled roasting tin and put in the oven. It should take only 30 minutes for the skin to become crackling.
- Remove the crackling and allow to cool. Turn the oven down to 120ºC/250°F/gas mark ½.
- Slice the leeks, carrots and celery in half lengthways. Lay them in the bottom of a roasting tin with the peppercorns.
- On top, lay the rib bones, 8 sprigs of thyme and then drizzle a tablespoon of oil over. Tuck the veg in under the ribs. Lay the pork belly on top, oil and drizzle the rest of the oil, and scatter the remaining salt over.
- Pour 350 ml (12 fl oz) of the perry into the roasting tin. Cover in tinfoil and pop into the oven for anything between 9 and 11 hours.
- At 90 minutes before the end of cooking, add the halved pears. Roast uncovered for the final hour and a half.
- Remove the pork from the oven. Carefully lift the pork and the pears out and keep warm. Discard the cooked veg.
- Add the remaining perry, deglaze the tin and reduce the liquor by half.
- Immediately before serving, add the remaining thyme leaves and finely diced pear.
This recipe is from The Really Quite Good British Cookbook, images copyright © Lizzie Mayson, recipes copyright © Hardeep Singh Kohli Nourish Books.
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