The flavours and textures used in
Korean food are popping up all over the place, from exciting new restaurants
like Moon Park to funky fusion diners like Ms.Gs. With celebrity chefs such as
David Chang and Akira Back leading the charge, Korean food is being dabbled
with by other hugely successful identities in the dining scene. As a result, Korean food is developing a real
familiarity with Sydney palates.
I love that Korean food has
finally received recognition and has become mainstream to being served in
burgers and not just served as a side dish. As my tastebuds have changed over
time, I usually detest very fermented kimchi. Only now I've started to
appreciate the complexity of the flavours and have finally begun to
understand what my parents have been telling me all this time.
Ever wondered how to make that pork slider, with the tender shredded meat and crackling, then don't venture too far. I found that this dish impressed the friends and family the most, and is so easy to do as the oven does most of the work.
Ever wondered how to make that pork slider, with the tender shredded meat and crackling, then don't venture too far. I found that this dish impressed the friends and family the most, and is so easy to do as the oven does most of the work.
When we served this dish to my brother in law, his response was annoyance that we hadn't served this up to him earlier at our get togethers and loved it so much, it was summed up as, "winner, winner, pork slider dinner".
Ingredients
1.5 kg pork belly
1 onion roughly sliced
1 tsp of Chinese Five Spice
1 tsp salt
3 bay leaves
400mL oil (olive oil and rice bran is what I typically use)
To serve
hot sirachi sauce
1/2 cup of mayonnaise
handful of coriander leaves
12 soft white burger buns
Method
1. Place pork skin side on a wire rack over the sink.
2. Boil a kettle of water and pour over the pork skin.
3. Using absorbent paper, pat the pork dry.
4. Place in a tray and leave in the fridge overnight to air dry. (Steps 2-4 are to help give that crispy crackling but these can be skipped, as I've stated in the handy hints section)
5. Next day preheat the oven to 160C.
6. Rub the pork with salt and 5 spice.
7. Find a tray deep enough to add onion, bay leaves, garlic, oil
and pork and cover tightly with foil.
8. Place in the oven and cook for 4 hours or until meat is soft.
9. Drain pork from oil. Remove the meat and return the skin to the
grill.
10. Turn the grill on and return the pork belly to crisp up the
skin. Make sure you keep an eye on this as you don't want it to burn.
11. Allow the meat to cool before shredding.
12. I also like to refresh the buns to give it a nice crunch on
the outside and the contrast of the soft inside. Heat the oven to 180C and
leave the buns in for 8mins.
13. To assemble, dollop mayonnaise and chilli sauce on one side of
the bun.
14. Add a small amount of kimchi, coriander and a generous
heap of pork belly and small pice of crackling. Sandwich and secure in
place with a toothpick.
Handy hint
You don't have to wait a day to start this recipe, as soon as you
have poured the boiling hot water over the pork and dried this. Add the spices
and oil and place into the oven.
If the crackling doesn't work as well, a great trick is to cut off
the areas that it didn't work well for and place under the grill and crank the
heat up and watch it closely.
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