creme brulee-d pork belly confit

creme brulee-d pork belly confit

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Naaah, don’t have to thank me for this.  Glad to do it.  Well… don’t hate me for it either.  If you are finding this angelically beautiful but appallingly offensive all at the same time, I can’t help you.  Just as the curtain of the swimsuit-season is about to go up in all its rudeness and the rim of jello hanging over your jeans is being increasingly disagreeable, I’m putting this on your HD retina-display screen.  I’m bad.  But again, gelatinous pork belly confit under a jacket of perforated crispy skin and a lace of amber-like caramelized sugar…  Pass?…  Nah, you’ll have to go to the beach fat.

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Here’s what I’ve been pissing about the scene – if we say we love food, since when is “love” defined by fuss-free or worse, cellulite-free?  Shouldn’t love, once in awhile, strive for extraordinary passion?  If you thought the kind of crispy-skin pork can only exist in platinum food-porn shows but not in any home-kitchen, you were as wrong and self-belittling as I was.  The other day I recalled a pork confit recipe featured NOT in The French Laundry Cookbook, NOT EVEN in the bistro-style Bouchon Cookbook, but in the casual “family-meal” Ad Hoc Home by Keller.  Yes yes, that guys is an overachieving maniac but I have to tell you, after adapting the technique with a different flavor-profile for a couple of test-drives, I sort of get why.  The entire process was long, yes.  But most of it – the brining, confit-ing and chilling – needed absolutely no attending to.  30 mins of prep-time each was followed by hours of just-leaving-it-to-do-its-business.  Quite… dangerously reasonable.  Because that was where I came in and said, it could even use a little upgrade.

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This crazy crème brûlée is a sweet’n-savory inspiration I draw from the Cantonese char-siu pork, and it comes together absurdly successful.  Call me crazy but I agree that fatty pork could use some caramel.  But note that the addition also inherently changes the way it is prepared.  The original steps are to cut up the pork belly into pieces for crisping and serve as is.  But the addition of the torching of sugar on top, results in a larger burnt surface-area and edges.  So instead, I leave the pork belly as a whole during the entire process including the torching of the sugar.  And the cutting comes as the last step before serving.  This will give you razor-straight edges of the crackled skin and the translucent film of caramel.  Once you realize how doable this is at home, there is no turning back to the mundane love with mediocre pork.  It’s done.  I’m done.  We’re done.

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Ingredients: the confit-technique is adapted from Ad Hoc Home

  • Brining:
    • 570 ~ 600 gram of pork belly, skin-on (approx 5 1/2″/14cm square)
    • 3 ~ 4 star anise
    • 4 cloves of garlic, smashed
    • 1/2 tsp of ground white pepper
    • 1/2 tsp of black peppercorn
    • 1/2 cup of salt
    • 1/4 cup of honey
    • 4 cups of water
  • To finish:
    • 2 tbsp of pork fat, or oil for pan-frying
    • White sugar for torching
    • Yellow mustard to serve

There is a few things, secrets to success if you will, that I want to list out before I go into details.

* Brine the pork belly for 6 hours only (instead of 10 as suggested by Keller) because I found it more than enough for the desired saltiness.

* I want the pork belly to retain some level of texture to it instead of “meltingly tender” as suggested, which I thought was a bit over-done.  4 hours in a 230ºF/110ºC oven is sufficient (instead of 5 1/2 ~ 6 hours).

* The skin needs to be specially-treated to achieve the ultimate texture, and this NEEDS TO BE DONE right after the confit-ing while the skin is still hot, soft and pliable.  Instead of criss-crossing the skin, I’m following a Cantonese technique of “perforating” it, to install as many tiny holes throughout as possible.   There is special equipement for this, but it can be easily done by taping a handful of wooden skewers together.

* The pork belly MUST BE COMPLETELY CHILLED and PRESSED before it is ready for crisping.  When pressing down the pork, I don’t think it’s necessary to submerge it in fat (as how all confit is kept) unless you are trying to preserve it for a prolonged period of time.  And the most important thing I learnt is that the SKIN-SIDE MUST BE FACING DOWN during pressing.  This will give you a SUPER FLAT skin-side that’s the basis for success when it comes to crisping.

* Every pork belly, depending on which part of the pig/which type of pig it is from, has a widely varied thickness of the skin.  The crisping-time largely depends on the thickness of the skin.  When checking, you must make sure that the entire depth of the skin is rendered into a layer of blistered, crackled and very fine “foam-board-like” texture, in order for it to be crispy and not sticky.  This will take anywhere from 18 ~ 35 min on low-heat depending.

* When creating the crème brûlée-crust, hold the torch further away rather than closer from the sugar so you don’t burn the skin.  Once the sugar has solidified, you want to cut it skin-side down, then invert it back on the serving plate.

Now:

Start the day before serving:

10:00 am ~ 11:00 am:  Combine all the ingredients in “brining” except for the pork belly, in a pot.  Bring to a simmer and let cook until the salt has completely dissolved.  Chill the brine in the refrigerator until cooled.

11:00 am ~ 5:00 pm:  Place the pork belly in a zip-lock bag and pour the brine into the bag to submerge it.  Rest the bag on top of a deep plate and leave in the fridge to brine for 6 hours.  Make sure the pork belly is fully submerged at all time.

5:00 pm ~ 5:30 pm:  Preheat the oven on 230ºF/110ºC.  Take the pork belly out of the brine and rinse it clean of any scraps, then really pat it dry with a clean towel.  Place the belly, SKIN-SIDE DOWN in an oven-proof container that’s just wide enough to hold the pork belly, and deep enough to allow 1″ or 3 cm of room on the top.  The better the fit of the contain, the less fat you’ll need to confit the pork (a square cake-pan is great).  Heat up enough oil (I just used light olive oil instead of pork fat) to cover the pork belly by at least 1/2″ or 2 cm, in a pot until warmed through (but not hot enough to cook the belly).  Pour the oil into the baking container, then cover with aluminum foil.

5:30 pm ~ 9:30 pm:  Confit the pork in the oven for 4 hours.  It should be easy to pierce through with a fork.

9:30 pm ~ 10:00 pm:  Carefully remove the pork belly out of the baking container with a wide spatula, WITHOUT breaking the skin or meat.  Set the belly on the cutting board, skin-side up.  Wrap a handful of wooden skewers together with tape.  Pierce the skin ALL OVER with the tip of the skewers until you have made densely populated, mini holes throughout the skin.  Do this GENTLY without breaking up the fat-layer underneath.  I find it more efficient to move slowly from one side to the other, instead of random jabbing.

10:00 pm ~ overnight:  Invert and place the pork belly SKIN-SIDE DOWN on a flat-bottomed baking dish.  Cover with plastic wrap, then another piece of flat-shaped plate (the bottom of a cake-pan, or another baking dish) over the top of the pork belly.  Rest something relatively heavy on top (2 cans, or a pot).  Chill in the fridge for at least 12 hours, or until needed.

The next day, 40 minutes before serving:  Unwrap the pork belly and place it on a cutting board.  The skin-side should be as FLAT as a GRANITE-FLOOR.  Trim the pork belly, according to the shape of the skin, into very clean, even and straight-edged square or rectangle.  Heat up approx 2 tbsp of the confit-fat in a wide, NON-STICK pan over medium-high heat.  Carefully lay the pork belly, SKIN-SIDE DOWN on the pan then turn the heat down to LOW.  Take a piece of parchment paper and rest it over the pan, with a opening on the side FACING AWAY from you.  Trust me, the skin is going to mini-explode and splatter.  The opening allows the steam to escape, but also retain enough heat inside the pan to warm up the pork.

Leave the skin to crisp up over low-heat for 18 min, then REMOVE the parchment paper (we want to eliminate the moisture inside the pan now) and cook for another 5 min.  Check the skin and see if the entire depth is blistered thoroughly.  If not, keep cooking for another 5 min.  It took mine about 30+ minutes.

Once ready, turn the pork belly over to heat up the meat-side slighly, approx 1 min.

Move the pork belly to a board, skin-side up.  Cover the skin with an even layer of granulated sugar.  It should be thick enough that you don’t see the skin underneath.  Caramelize the sugar with a blowtorch until completely melted and browned.  Let the caramel harden.  Invert the pork belly with the crème brûlée-side facing down.  Use a VERY SHARP KNIFE, cut through the meat-layer and once the knife hits the skin-layer, PRESS THE KNIFE DOWN hard until you hear a crackle and feel the knife has cut through the skin.

Serve the crème brûlée pork belly with yellow mustard.

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33 Comments
  • Belinda @themoonblushbaker

    May 20, 2013 at 8:57 PM Reply

    I would rather beach on the five layers of heaven than on the seas side to be honest. Fat cooked pork belly? I got to try this and with winter(Australia) coming up no need to feel bad!. Stunning photos.

    • Mandy L.

      May 20, 2013 at 9:30 PM Reply

      Belinda, hahaaa PERFECT TIMING for you guys!!!!

  • moms dish

    May 21, 2013 at 4:05 AM Reply

    This reminds me of Ukraine, we use to eat bacon(called it Sallo). It was such a huge part of our life :)

  • Joanne

    May 21, 2013 at 7:26 AM Reply

    Beautiful. Roast pork belly is quite common in my country. But yours is the first tgat actually make me want to try and make it. Can you share tips on food photography? You make an old pan look perfect and rustic for the shot. Eye for detail. How do you cook up a storm and have energy to take such photos. Enjoy your writing too.

    • Mandy L.

      May 21, 2013 at 12:57 PM Reply

      Joanne, I’m quite an amateur in photography actually :P. Never actually tried to shoot well before this blog and it’s still a learning process. The pan itself was pretty rustic to begin with (after several wash in the dishwasher!!), and the high contrast just made it even more obvious. To be honest, shooting while cooking is quite exhausting..haha

  • Juliana Loh (@bilbaobab)

    May 21, 2013 at 2:55 PM Reply

    OMG this sounds amazing!!! i am drooling reading this. I really have to try experiment with this recipe! My roast pork never turns out this crispy and delish. a friend gave me a tip is that make sure it’s absolutely dry before you pop the pork belly in the oven. she used a hair dryer to dry it out before doing that and it turned out amazing – I will have a go and let u know how it turns out!!

    • Mandy L.

      May 21, 2013 at 11:58 PM Reply

      Juliana, I have tried roasting pork directly in the oven and the skin never turned out crispy (it was more chewy and rubbery). But this time, the pork is confited first and the skin was already soft when pan-fried, and it turned out really nicely. I “hair-dry” my chicken’s skin before roasting, too ;)

  • sab

    May 22, 2013 at 12:04 AM Reply

    let’s go for the fat belly in swim suit!!!!

  • Tyr

    May 22, 2013 at 6:07 AM Reply

    Been reading your blog for a while, and totally in love with your recipes and writing, both in English and Chinese. This recipe is giving me the push to finally go get a torch:p

    Just wanna say hello, and keep up the good work!

    • Mandy L.

      May 22, 2013 at 1:46 PM Reply

      Tyr, oh you must get a torch! It’s such an useful tool for so many things in the kitchen.

  • Shanna

    June 11, 2013 at 11:56 PM Reply

    looks sooo sexy! And if you are just new to the photography than props to you! Do you think this technique would work with chicken or duck?

    • Mandy L.

      June 12, 2013 at 12:56 AM Reply

      Shanna, yeah I would imagine it can work for chicken or duck. To get the skin of chicken/duck very crispy, you need to dry it VERY WELL before roasting/cooking. Drying the skin with a blowdryer is a brilliant shortcut as opposed to hanging it for a long time (how peking duck is prepared).

  • Dominique

    August 1, 2013 at 1:06 AM Reply

    My husband and I just recently discovered the goodness of pork belly. I’ll have to try making this. It looks and sounds incredible. Love your blog. I’m a new follower.

  • Justin

    September 15, 2013 at 8:05 PM Reply

    Mandy,
    Not only am I glad I found this recipe, I’m so glad I found your site. I love everything about it, from the colors to the great pictures and well written posts. This recipe is being bookmarked until the first snow storm of the season. My Neighbors upstairs thank you in advance. I had to share this recipe on my, “Whacchoo Bloggin’ Bout” section. Thank you for this.
    http://www.meatandpaprika.com/2013/09/whaccoo-bloggin-bout-week-3/
    Justin & Garnet

  • Seika

    October 17, 2013 at 6:06 AM Reply

    Hi Mandy,

    I really love your blog and I have been meaning to try this recipe. I was wondering why you opted for light olive oil rather than lard?

    Thank you!!!

    • Mandy L.

      October 17, 2013 at 2:44 PM Reply

      seika, I used a combination of light olive oil and lard, about 50/50 and the result was good. You could try using light olive oil completely if you don’t have lard.

      • Seika

        October 20, 2013 at 12:36 PM Reply

        Definitely looking forward to trying it out with lard! If serving as a small appetizer to a large Thanksgiving meal, about how many people do you think the portion in the recipe would serve?

        • Mandy L.

          October 20, 2013 at 2:39 PM Reply

          Seika, this is really rich and I would say for 2 small pieces/person is enough really, so this would serve around 5 ~ 6 max.

  • Matt

    October 17, 2014 at 4:09 AM Reply

    Trying this recipe tonight! Question about what happens after the pork has cooked in the olive oil – after removing the pork from the pan (and NOT breaking the skin/mean), do you dry off the excess oil or leave it on? Thanks..

  • Lisa

    November 26, 2014 at 7:19 PM Reply

    Oh horrors — So far, I have followed all of the wonderful directions beautifully . . . until . . . I broke a piece of the skin in the center of the belly when removing it from the oil after confitting (that’s what happens when one is tired from cooking all day and has just finished a glass of wine). Now what?? Your directions emphasize “without breaking the skin”. Please help me save this lovely belly :)

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      November 26, 2014 at 7:55 PM Reply

      Lisa: Hahaha don’t worry. It’s ideal to keep the whole “slab” of skin in one piece so it’s pretty in the final presentation, but as long as the whole piece of pork and skin is still intact (tell me they’re still one piece right?…), you can proceed with the rest of the instruction. It’s just gonna have a big “scar” in the middle.

  • Lisa

    November 27, 2014 at 5:54 PM Reply

    Oh that’s fine – I don’t mind scars, they add character :) The pork is whole and the skin is intact. I’ve made 14 dishes for thanksgiving, and this is the one I am looking forward to the most. Thank you!

  • Lisa

    November 28, 2014 at 6:46 PM Reply

    Update: the pork belly was divine, and your instructions were perfect. Thank you!

  • Foon Lam

    January 27, 2016 at 2:38 AM Reply

    What an ingenious idea! Would never have thought to “brulee” the skin that way to give it extra crunch and flavour. Way to go.

  • Bee @tacosandmimosas

    February 23, 2016 at 2:41 AM Reply

    Lol! “you’ll have to go to the beach fat.” Love it!
    Looks delicious! Now I need a torch!

  • Tina

    May 1, 2016 at 11:05 PM Reply

    Finally got the chance to make this over the weekend. I saw in the comments that you had a simplified version so I did a mix of both recipies.
    I brined the pork belly for 6 hours, rinsed it off and baked it in a baking dish for 3.5 hours in just a light drizzle of oil.
    The meat shrank considerably and shock and horror, I realised that the butcher had left the bones inside the belly. Managed to remove them without destroying the meat too much.
    I left it to rest overnight and then attempted to crisp up the skin. That didn’t work out too well. It bubbled up in parts and just got progressively darker in others. Crème brulé’d it, and it was delicious anyhow.
    Family loved it and thought it was amazing. I would have liked it to be a bit juicier. Not sure if it would require a longer or shorter cooking time.
    Great recipe on the whole, will definitely try it again, though might go for the shorter brining, cooking and resting time and compare the two.
    Thank you for sharing your recipe and what stunning photos!!

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      May 2, 2016 at 1:14 AM Reply

      Tina, it definitely sounds like the shorter version would suit you better. It yields a firmer piece of meat and less likely to crumble. I also feel that this recipe is more difficult to handle because how soft the Pork gets after such a long cooking time :)

  • Alan

    May 9, 2016 at 3:43 PM Reply

    HI Mandy, I recently bought an Anova sous vide circulator and just wondering would I be able to achieve the same result by using Sous vide instead of confit method? cheers!

  • Nanette

    February 14, 2018 at 3:05 AM Reply

    Goodness gracious. You have really outdone yourself this time. I am crazy about this recipe and your recipes. I will be visiting you regularly and I hope you become famous with all of your photography. You are so very talented. Thank you tons.

  • Jessica

    June 18, 2021 at 9:47 AM Reply

    Thanks for the lovely recipe. I am trying it Saturday for my husband’s first Father’s Day.
    This yields a lot of pork belly. Can you store some in the fridge for a few days or freezer, or does it all need to be consumed that night?

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      June 18, 2021 at 1:56 PM Reply

      Jessica, after the skin is fried, it’s best to be consumed within a few hours. But un-fried pork belly can be kept in th fridge (or freezer I suppose).

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