Grilled Pork Belly

Grilled Pork Belly

Grilled Pork Belly with Pickled Apples and Smoked Peanut Butter

Recipe by Kevin Gillespie


This dish resulted from my improbable mission to grill pork belly. Normally, all the fat in pork belly would render into the fire of the grill, sending up an inferno. But I braise the belly first to melt away the fat—that’s the secret. An initial braise allows the belly to grill up golden brown and crispy on the outside with an interior of molten fat and soft protein. It’s so juicy it almost gushes. This was a signature preparation of mine at Woodfire Grill and remains so at Gunshow. You could serve the grilled belly with almost anything, but something acidic, like the pickled apples, helps cut through the fat. For the smoked peanut butter, I usually just put a bowl of peanut butter in a smoker, but I simplified the method here for home cooks. Apples love pork, peanut butter loves apples, pork loves smoke—it’s a flavor love fest.

Ingredients:

2 cups salted roasted peanuts
1⁄4 teaspoon liquid smoke
1⁄4 cup grapeseed oil or canola oil
1 cup All-Purpose Pickling Liquid (recipe below)
1 Fuji apple
12 ounces Braised Pork Belly (recipe below)
Kosher salt and ground black pepper
4 scallions, root and tough green ends trimmed, finely bias sliced, about 1⁄4 cup

Method: 

Using a Vitamix or high-speed blender, blend the peanuts on medium speed to a fine grind, about 30 seconds. With the blender running, drizzle in the liquid smoke and oil. Turn the blender off, scrape down the sides,
and then return to medium-high speed and the mixture will come together into a smooth butter. You need to keep it on medium-high speed, as high speed will heat it and cause the oil to separate from the solids, causing it to “break.” Store the peanut butter, tightly covered at room temperature, for up to 1 month.

Bring the pickling liquid to a boil over high heat. Peel, core, and dice the apple (1⁄4-inch dice) into a small bowl and strain the hot pickling liquid over the top. Discard the solids. Spoon out 2 tablespoons of the pickling liquid to use later and refrigerate the apples until ready to serve.

Heat a grill pan over high heat.

Peel the skin and top layer of fat from the pork belly and discard. Cut into strips 3 inches long and 1⁄2 inch wide. Pat them dry and brush with the reserved pickling liquid. Season with salt and pepper and grill the pork belly until deep golden brown on one side, about 3 minutes. Flip, brush with more pickling liquid, and grill for another 2 minutes, or until golden brown.

Spoon about 2 tablespoons of the peanut butter across each plate, top with the pork belly, and garnish with the pickled apples, a little pickling liquid, and a sprinkle of scallions.

All Purpose Pickling Liquid

There couldn’t be a more straight-to-the-point recipe than this. You’ll see slightly different recipes for everything that can possibly be pickled. That’s all well and good if you’re a pickling fanatic. But this is the One Ring to rule them all. It’s a solid base recipe. I use it to pickle carrots and turnips that get served with Rustic Pork Terrine but also to pickle peaches for Mosaic Pork Terrine and apples for Grilled Pork Belly with Smoked Peanut Butter. Just add spices and herbs to this liquid to flavor different pickles however you like.

Ingredients:

2 cups apple cider vinegar
1⁄2 cup sugar
1⁄4 cup pickling spice
2 tablespoons kosher salt

Method:

Combine all of the ingredients in a small saucepan and bring to a boil. Stir to dissolve the sugar and salt, and remove from the heat. Strain over the items you are pickling and cool to room temperature. Refrigerate the pickles and, for the best taste, let them pickle for about a week before eating. The longer you pickle them, the more intense the flavor will be.

Braised Pork Belly

Ingredients:


1 (2-pound) center-cut slab raw pork belly
2 tablespoons kosher salt
1 cup apple cider vinegar

Method:

Heat the oven to 300°F.

Rub both sides of the pork belly with the salt and lay flat, fat side up, in a baking dish that is just a little larger than the slab. Add the vinegar; it should come about halfway up the side of the meat. Wrap tightly with aluminum foil and braise in the oven for 3 hours.

Remove from the oven and let rest, wrapped in the foil, until the pork cools to room temperature. Remove from the pan, wrap in parchment and then foil, and refrigerate or freeze until ready to use.