
We don’t make a roast dinner every week but we do like one occasionally, especially in the brighter months when you can lighten them up a bit with some spring veg. Ask your butcher to score the pork skin for you, then leave it uncovered in the fridge overnight to dry out the skin, which will help with the crispy crackling.
Wine suggestion: Quite often we have an oaky white with roast pork but tonight we had a notion for red and a 6 year old Olga Raffault Chinon Les Pucasses which was just hitting it’s stride and will be drinking nicely for another 10 years we think. Deep , complex and brooding and yet the limestone soils give it an immediate freshness and vivacity.
Roast pork belly with herbs & new potatoes – serves 4
- 3-4 tsp fennel seeds
- 1.5kg thick end of pork belly, bone in, skin completely dry (see above)
- 300g new potatoes
- a few sprigs of mint, leaves picked and finely chopped, stalks reserved
- a knob of butter
- 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- a small bunch of parsley, leaves picked and finely chopped
- a small bunch of chives, finely chopped
- 2 handfuls of peas or broad bean tops if available (we didn’t have these but we served with some double podded broad beans instead)
- juice of ½ lemon
Heat the oven to 220C/425F/Gas 7.
Toast the fennel seeds in a small pan until fragrant, then tip into a pestle and mortar and coarsely grind. Score the skin and fat (but not the flesh) of the pork with a sharp knife if your butcher hasn’t done this for you already.
Put the pork into a roasting tray and rub allover with the crushed fennel seeds and some salt.
Put the pork into the oven for 30 minutes to crisp up the skin, then reduce the heat to 160C/315F/Gas 2-3. Add half a glass of water to the tray and roast for a further 2 hours, until crispy and tender. You will need to keep checking the water and ensuring that the pan doesn’t dry out.
While the pork is roasting, halve the potatoes if they’re big and put into a saucepan with the mint stalks. Cover with salty water and simmer until just tender, then drain and return to the pan, discarding the mint stalks. Add the butter and 1 tbsp of the olive oil, season with salt and pepper, then set aside.
Remove the cooked pork from the oven and allow to rest for 15-20 minutes. Add the chopped herbs to the potatoes and stir gently to coat, then spoon onto a warm platter. Slice the pork and arrange on the platter with the potatoes, then skim the fat from the juices in the roasting tin and spoon the juices over the pork and potatoes,.
If you have pea or bean tops, put them into a bowl and dress with the 1 tbsp of olive oil and the lemon juice, and season with salt and pepper. Scatter these over the pork and serve. (We dressed our broad beans with some olive oil and lemon and served these alongside instead).
(Original recipe from Gather by Gill Meller, Quadrille, 2016.)
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