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Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Puerco de Mayo
Eric had five helpings. He may have had six. It's a bit like War and Peace. I can't remember whether I've read it six times. It may be five or it may be seven. If I read it first in 1994, and it's fourteen years later, once every couple of years...it could be seven. Or six, since I could almost read it again. The point is, after the fourth time, does it matter? I kept telling him he'd be sick, but was very happy to keep spooning out meaty pieces from the large clay bowl where the pig, long fallen from its bones, was lying in the dark sauce of ancho, tomato, caramelized onion, Turkish dark pepper, lime, orange, thyme, brown sugar, pepper. With full-fat, organic sour cream to grace its rich, sweet, peppery corners, it was a bowl of very delicious pork.
The idea (pig/orange/tomato combo) came originally from Diana Kennedy's The Art of Mexican Cooking. Then I winged it.
The night before:
One pork shoulder, skinned and slashed deeply (2")
5 tomatoes, broiled till black (8-10 mins. -it sweetens them), keep skins on
2 yellow onions, quartered
Half a head of garlic, cloves peeled and flattened
One orange, juice squeezed and pulp reserved
2 limes, juice squeezed
Two ancho chiles, soaked, stalks removed, keep seeds
3 Tbsp brown sugar
I also sprinkled over 2 Tbsp of dark red Turkish chile (sweet, salty) bought in the bazaar in Istanbul. I don't know where one could find it, here.
salt, pepper
5 stalks thyme
In a deep roasting dish, season surface of slashed pig with salt and pepper and all the sugar, put tomatoes whole on top of shoulder and squash down till thickly crushed. Pour orange and lime juice over, and add any orange pulp. Scatter onion, garlic, ancho and thyme all about the pan. Cover and put in fridge overnight to get acquainted.
Next morning, assuming you're eating the pig that night, put, covered with foil or lid, into a 250'F (approx, 120'C) oven. Add a cup of water to the pan first. Go out to work, if that's what you do. Worry not.
Come back at about 6pm and uncover your pig. You will find that she/he has fallen from the bones and is in no way suitable for finishing on the BBQ, as you had intended. Transfer pig carefully to a tray or big platter. Pour the significant amount of cooking liquid into a saucepan and reduce if necessary until you have about one-and-a-half cups. You may want to add some lime juice or salt or sugar, or another ancho. Make sure there are no stray bones lurking. If you have a blender, blend the sauce till smooth and return to heat to keep warm. Lift meat from any remaining bones, place into a deep warm dish, and pour over the sauce. Serve in bowls, with sour cream.
Eric said that this is better than the Ginger Ale pig. Mimi looked shocked. It's pretty good, anyhow.
Preceed with guacamole, accompany with margaritas and follow with mangoes.
Three parts tequila, three parts fresh lime juice, two parts Cointreau. Shaken like the blazes with plenty of ice. Poured.
A dessert's detritus...
Wow.
ReplyDeleteSounds - and looks - outrageously delicious! WIHBT.
ReplyDeleteI have jotted down the recipe, adjusted for my own style:
"Next morning, assuming you're eating the pig that night, put, covered with foil or lid, into a 250'F (approx, 120'C). Go out to worry, if that's what you do. Work not."
:-)
Yes that was por you Beence...I think of you as my personal fireman.
ReplyDeleteMan. Oh man. I don't, as a rule, eat porc. But but but, I think I could have been bribed (like hello?). I can smell it just looking at it! And guacamole? Margaritas? MAN. I want to live with that woman.
ReplyDeleteWe could all live in a sort of compound (I'm thinking Bushwick, with an abandoned lot to turn into a farm) and fatten one happy pig a year...and then turn vegetarian.
ReplyDeleteBed Stuy? I'm now talking to myself...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRMT9JI7ppk
ReplyDeleteQue viva México!
What a delicious 5 de mayo.
Muchas gracias!
Cons
De nada, chica!
ReplyDeleteIf I understand correctly, everybody in here is happy about the French getting their a**es kicked. Sacrilege! Vive la France! ;-) Allez les verts! Maximilian est mort, vive le roi. Que viva Mexico y que nos deje en paz! I'm kidding, of course. ;-) The funniest part is that to the best of my knowledge, Cinco de mayo isn't even a big date down there; it's more an US Mexican holiday. Go figure.
ReplyDeleteHola Cons, mucho gusto verte acá. :-)