CANTONESE-STYLE TARO AND PORK BELLY CASSEROLE
This casserole relies on the complementary flavors and textures of taro and pork belly: one meaty, the other earthy; one chewy, the other tender.
Provided by Wilson Tang
Categories HarperCollins Dinner Pork Wheat/Gluten-Free Tree Nut Free Dairy Free Christmas Peanut Free Sesame Oil
Yield Serves 10
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- BRING a large pot of water to a boil. Submerge the pork belly in the boiling water for 2 minutes to clean it. Remove from the pot and place in a colander. Rinse under cold water.
- USING a siu yuk poker (a needle or skewer works just as well), poke holes in the skin of the pork belly. (This will make the skin crispy after cooking.)
- IN a large bowl, toss the pork belly with the soy sauce to coat.
- MEANWHILE, heat the neutral oil in a large skillet to 350°F over medium-high heat. Add the pork belly and fry for 2 minutes on each side. Remove from the oil and set aside on a paper towel-lined plate.
- MAKING sure your oil is still at 350°F, add the taro (working in batches, if needed) and fry for about 2 minutes, until lightly browned. Remove and drain on a paper towel-lined tray.
- ONCE the pork belly is cool enough to handle, cut it into 3-inch strips. Place in a large bowl and mix with the taro.
- IN a small bowl, combine the salt, MSG, sugar, wine, toasted sesame oil, chicken powder, white pepper, five-spice powder, and fermented bean curd. Stir until the bean curd is broken up. Pour over the pork belly and taro mixture and toss until coated.
- ON a heat-safe tray, alternate tiles of pork belly and taro root, tightly packed. You can use multiple trays. Using the steaming method below, steam the trays in batches for 30 minutes, or until tender.
- USING a spatula or your hands, transfer the pork belly to the platter, maintaining the alternating pattern. Pour the remaining sauce on top and serve.
- How to Steam:
- Steaming is perhaps what sets dim sum apart from all other dumpling-loving kitchens of the world. We steam everything at Nom Wah in an industrial Vulcan steamer. At home, I recommend steaming in a wok. Steaming times vary depending on the density and size of what you are steaming. But the general setup to steam in a wok is as follows.
- Fill the wok with enough water to come up to the lower rim of the steamer but not so much the waterline is above the food bed. Line the bottom of the steamer with paper or a lotus leaf or something so that the fiddly bits won't fall through the cracks. (If steaming dumplings or bao, you won't need to line the steamer.) Place whatever needs steaming in the basket, leaving ample room between items. Bring water to boil and steam for the desired duration. If you need more water-water tends to evaporate-add boiling, not cold, water so as not to stop the steaming.
- If you do want to DIY it, just use a plate in a pot. All you need is tinfoil and a plate that fits in your pot. Fill a pot with ½ an inch of water. Then make a sort of tripod out of tinfoil by forming three golf ball-sized balls and placing them in the bottom of the pot, making sure their tops rest above the waterline. Rest the plate on the tinfoil, cover, and steam. This method is especially useful when making rice rolls, in which you'll be using a cake pan instead of the plate.
- You can put anything in the steamer as long as it isn't so small that it would tumble through the holes into the roiling waters below.
BRAISED PORK BELLY WITH TARO
Steps:
- Peel the taro and cut in ½ inch by 2 inch slices. Submerge the slices in cold water until ready to use.
- Blanch the pork belly in 1 quart (1 liter) of boiling water for 8-10 minutes. Transfer to a colander, rinse thoroughly with cold water, and drain. The meat should now be firm enough to cut into ½ inch by 2 inch pieces.
- Heat the oil in a skillet or wok until almost smoking hot. Add the garlic and onions. Stir fry until aromatic (about 1-2 minutes). Mix in the red bean curd and one cup of water. Blend until well-mixed, then add the remaining sauce ingredients. Mix.
- Add the pork belly, lotus root, star anise and tangerine peel. Stir the mixture then transfer to a 4 quart (4 liter) braising pan or a clay pot. Add additional water if needed to just cover all the ingredients.
- Bring to a boil, then cover and simmer for 90 minutes. Check the liquid level every half hour and add more hot water if necessary.
- Serve over rice.
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- Combine the ribs with the marinade ingredients and marinate for 20 minutes. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a wok or Dutch oven over medium high heat. Add the smashed ginger and sear the ribs for 1 minute on each side until browned.
- Turn the heat down to medium and add the shallots and garlic. Stir-fry for another minute and add the Shaoxing wine, ground bean sauce, hoisin sauce, soy sauce, salt, five spice powder, white pepper, and sesame oil. Stir-fry the ribs for another minute.
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- While the ribs are cooking, heat ½ cup vegetable oil to 300 degrees F in a wok or cast iron pan and add the taro, spreading the pieces out so there is a single layer. Fry on each side until they just start to turn brown and have a slight crust on them, about a minute on each side. Drain the excess oil and toss the taro with a large pinch of salt. This process give the taro a light crust and prevents it from becoming mushy after cooking with the ribs.
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- Prepare the pork for braising. The preparation before braising affects the quality of the dish. You need to blanch the pork to remove the untoward ‘porky’ smell, apply some dark soy sauce to the surface to get a better appearance and pan-frying the skin side to create more aroma.
- Prepare the taro for stewing. Taro is referred to the potato of the tropics. Choose the bigger taro so that you can cut it into pieces of the same size with the pork slices.
- prepare the sauce. You can start to prepare the sauce while soaking the pork belly in the water. The flavor of this savory sauce is entirely different from other braising liquid.
- Braised the pork belly and enjoy. The final step is to braised the pork and taro slices with the sauce. It may take a while, but I am sure it is worth to wait when the aroma from the lengthy braising drifting in from the kitchen.
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