Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Preheat the oven to 300°F. Season the pork shoulder generously with salt and pepper. In a Dutch oven over medium-high heat, warm the olive oil and sear the pork, turning, until it is well browned all over, about 10 minutes. Transfer the pork to a plate. Add the leeks and garlic to the Dutch oven and brown, stirring, 3 to 5 minutes.
Capocollo is essentially the pork counterpart of the air-dried, cured beef bresaola. It is widely available wherever significant Italian communities occur, due to commercially produced varieties. It is widely available wherever significant Italian communities occur, due to commercially produced varieties.
Cook for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, turning the pork twice during cooking (once after 45 minutes and again after an hour and a half). Raise the temperature to 425°F. Uncover the Dutch oven and add the olives.
In Franconia, the meat, the pork rind and the bone are roasted together as a whole. Before that, the pork rind is scratched in a criss-cross pattern, seasoned with salt, pepper and caraway and put in a casserole dish with diced root vegetables and onions where it is doused with beer and roasted in the oven for about two or three hours.
17th-century diagram for a smokehouse for producing smoked meat. Smoked meat is the result of a method of preparing red meat, white meat, and seafood which originated in the Paleolithic Era. [1] Smoking adds flavor, improves the appearance of meat through the Maillard reaction, and when combined with curing it preserves the meat. [2]
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Pork jowl is a cut of pork from a pig's cheek. Different food traditions have used it as a fresh cut or as a cured pork product (with smoke and/or curing salt ). As a cured and smoked meat in America, it is called jowl bacon or, especially in the Southern United States , hog jowl , joe bacon , or joe meat .