Slow-roasted pork belly with proper crackling

Why you are cooking this tonight

Crackling, when it works, is the best mouthful in home cooking. Full stop. The sound it makes when you snap it. The way it shatters against your teeth. The salty animal fat that hits the roof of your mouth a half-second behind the crunch. There is nothing else like it. Done right, this is the dinner that makes otherwise normal adults make involuntary noises at the table that they will later refuse to acknowledge.

Pork belly is also absurd value for money. $25 to $35 from the butcher at Hudson Meats, or the IGA in your town if Hudson is a stretch, buys you a hunk of meat that feeds six people and leaves enough for Monday’s bahn mi. Compare that to a piece of eye fillet at $90 a kilo and tell me which one is winning.

The thing most people get wrong is the skin. They want it crisp but they treat it like a roast chicken. Pork belly is different. The skin needs to be bone dry, scored deep, salted hard with Murray River flakes, and met with the right heat at the right moment. Miss the moment and you get leather. Hit the moment and the table goes quiet for a full minute, which on this dinner is the highest compliment available. Worth doing properly. Worth doing this weekend.

What you need

1.5 kg pork belly, bone in or bone out, skin on. Skin on is non-negotiable. Belly without skin is just pork. Ask your butcher to score the skin in parallel lines about 1 cm apart, or do it yourself with a very sharp Stanley knife or a proper skin scorer. Free-range or organic if your wallet allows. Borrowdale, Bangalow Sweet Pork, or your local butcher’s own.

2 tablespoons flaky sea salt, for the skin. Murray River or Maldon. Not table salt, the crystals matter.

1 tablespoon fennel seeds, crushed in a mortar or under the flat of a knife.

1 teaspoon cracked black pepper.

4 fat garlic cloves, sliced thin.

1 tablespoon olive oil, for the skin.

A bed of aromatics for the tray:

2 brown onions, thickly sliced.

1 head of garlic, halved across the middle.

4 sprigs fresh thyme and 4 sprigs fresh rosemary.

2 bay leaves.

250 ml dry white wine or apple cider. Either works. Cider leans sweeter and more appley, wine stays drier.

250 ml chicken stock, good quality. Massel if you must.

For the apple sauce side:

3 granny smith apples, peeled, cored, chopped. The only apple for a sauce. Pink Ladies are for eating. Granny Smiths are for cooking. This is a rule.

1 tablespoon butter, 2 tablespoons water, pinch of salt, a small squeeze of lemon.

How to cook it

  1. Dry the skin, the night before. This is the single most important step. Pat the pork belly completely dry with paper towel. Sit it on a wire rack over a tray, skin-side up, uncovered, in the fridge overnight. The skin dehydrates. A dry skin blisters, a wet skin steams. Want crackling? Plan ahead.

  2. Take it out early. 45 minutes before cooking, pull the belly out of the fridge. Pat the skin dry again if any moisture has surfaced. Room-temperature meat cooks evenly.

  3. Score the skin. If the butcher hasn’t, do it now. Parallel lines 1 cm apart, cutting through the skin and the top layer of fat, but not into the meat. A very sharp box cutter is the easiest tool. Go perpendicular to the grain. You want lots of cuts.

  4. Season the flesh side. Flip the belly over. Rub the meat (not the skin) with the crushed fennel, pepper, sliced garlic, a drizzle of olive oil. Be generous. Press it in.

  5. Season the skin. Flip back, skin-side up. Brush with a little olive oil, then rub in the flaky salt. Really work it into the score lines. The salt pulls out the last of the moisture and seasons the crackling. You want a visible, generous layer of salt crystals. More than feels comfortable. Trust.

  6. Build the tray. In a heavy roasting tin, lay down the sliced onions, halved garlic head, thyme, rosemary, bay leaves. Pour in the wine or cider and the stock. The liquid should come about 1 cm up the side of the tray.

  7. Belly onto the aromatics, skin-side up. The aromatics keep the belly off the liquid, so the meat braises in flavour but the skin stays bone-dry.

  8. Low and slow, first. 160°C fan for 2 and a half hours. The belly meat becomes meltingly tender at this stage. The skin will not crackle yet, ignore it.

  9. Blast it. Crank the oven to its maximum, 230 to 250°C fan, depending on what yours does. Keep the belly in. 20 to 30 minutes. This is the moment. Stand by the oven, look through the glass, do not wander off. The skin puffs, blisters, goes deep amber. If one corner is crackling faster than the other, rotate the tray. If it’s not blistering after 15 minutes, crank higher.

  10. Make the apple sauce while it’s crackling. Apples, butter, water, salt into a small saucepan. Lid on, low heat, 10 to 12 minutes until collapsed. Mash with a fork, stir in the lemon, taste. Done.

  11. Rest. Pull the belly out, lift onto a board, rest 15 minutes loosely under foil (foil not touching the skin, or you kill the crackling). Do not skip the rest. The juices redistribute, the meat relaxes.

  12. Sort the sauce. The pan juices underneath are liquid gold. Lift off the onions and herbs (bin the herbs, eat the onions). Tip the juices into a small pan. Skim the top layer of fat. Reduce over medium heat for 5 minutes until it’s the consistency of thin gravy. Taste, salt if needed.

  13. Carve. Sharp serrated knife through the crackling first, then the knife switches to a heavy chef’s for the meat underneath. Cut thick slabs, 2 cm. Stack the crackling next to the meat so people can grab it.

What to pour with it

Wine. A bone-dry Clare Valley or Eden Valley Riesling is the pairing that unlocks the dish. Aromatic, racy acid that slices through the fat. Grosset, Pewsey Vale, or Jim Barry, $25 to $45. If you lean red, a light Mornington or Tasmanian Pinot Noir (Kooyong, Tolpuddle, Paringa Estate) works beautifully against the apple sauce and fennel.

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Two things that go wrong

Leathery skin, no crackle. Nine times out of ten, the skin wasn’t dry enough before it went in. Leave it uncovered in the fridge overnight, pat it dry, salt it properly, and blast it at the end. If you are mid-cook and the skin still won’t crackle, a blowtorch is a legitimate rescue tool. Or slice the skin off and lay it flat on a tray under a hot grill for 5 minutes, watching closely.

Dry, chewy meat. The belly didn’t have enough time at the low temperature, or the temperature was too high for the whole cook. Low and slow for two and a half hours, then blast. Do not try to crackle and cook at the same temperature, you will get neither.

Variations worth knowing

Asian-style pork belly

Swap the fennel and wine for five-spice, soy, Shaoxing rice wine, ginger and star anise. Stock becomes a chicken-and-soy mix. Serve with steamed rice, pickled cucumber, and a chilli sauce. Same method, different universe.Porchetta-styleBoneless belly rolled around a herb paste of fennel, garlic, rosemary, sage, lemon zest and chilli, tied with kitchen string. Roast the same way. The classic Italian version. Serve in crusty rolls the next day with rocket and salsa verde, which is arguably the best pork sandwich on earth.Slow-roasted shoulder insteadPork shoulder (boneless, 2 kg) can be cooked the same way if belly is unavailable. No crackling payoff, but the meat pulls apart with a fork and makes a knockout filling for tacos, rolls, or a pile over polenta.

Leftover plan

Leftover pork belly, cold, sliced thin, is the best sandwich of the year. Soft white roll, a heavy spoonful of the apple sauce, a handful of watercress, a smear of hot English mustard. Standing at the kitchen bench, Monday lunch. Absurd.

Or chop the meat and crackling into chunks and fold through fried rice with spring onions and a dash of kecap manis. Taco night: warm corn tortillas, shredded pork belly, pickled onion, coriander, a squeeze of lime. Freezes for two months, defrost slowly, refresh under a hot grill to re-crisp whatever is left of the crackling.

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Pork Belly with Crackling

No ratings yet
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 3 hours
Total Time 3 hours 20 minutes
Servings: 6 serves
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Australian

Ingredients
  

  • 1.5 kg boneless pork belly, skin on
  • 2 tbsp flaky sea salt
  • 1 tbsp fennel seeds, crushed
  • 1 tbsp cracked black pepper
  • 4 cloves garlic, smashed
  • 1 lemon, halved
  • 60 mL olive oil

Method
 

  1. Day before: pat skin completely dry with paper towel. Score the skin in 1cm parallel lines with a sharp knife or Stanley blade, just into the fat, not the meat. Rub salt all over the skin (lots), the underside (a bit). Place uncovered on a rack in the fridge overnight to dry the skin.
  2. Day of: pat the surface dry again. Brush off the salt. Rub fennel and pepper into the underside (not the skin).
  3. Preheat oven to 240°C fan. Place pork on a rack in a baking tray, skin side up. Pour 1cm of water into the tray below.
  4. Roast 30 minutes at 240°C until the skin starts to bubble and crisp. Reduce to 160°C fan, roast 2 hours.
  5. Increase to 220°C for the last 15 minutes if the crackling needs more colour.
  6. Rest 15 minutes. Slice down between the crackling lines, then through the meat. Squeeze fresh lemon over.
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