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Scooped by Good Things From Italy
January 28, 2015 4:47 AM
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The Italian Dish - Posts - Sara Jenkins' Italian Porchetta

The Italian Dish - Posts - Sara Jenkins' Italian Porchetta | La Cucina Italiana - De Italiaanse Keuken - The Italian Kitchen | Scoop.it

What do you do when you miss a dish that you can get in Italy but doesn't exist here? If you're Chef Sara Jenkins, you open your own storefront and start making and selling that dish. That's how Porchetta was born, a tiny storefront in the East Village in New York City that sells heavenly servings of porchetta, a pork dish that is found all over central Italy.  In Rome, it's sold frequently on the street in food carts.  It's pork that is stuffed with herbs, slow roasted and piled high on a bun.  

And it's outrageously delicious.

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Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Le Marche and Food
May 29, 2012 1:13 AM
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What does Porchetta mean to you?

What does Porchetta mean to you? | La Cucina Italiana - De Italiaanse Keuken - The Italian Kitchen | Scoop.it

I did a random survey on my foodie friends, acquaintances, chefs even some italians, “What does Porchetta mean to you?”

Some said a pork loin rolled up and roasted with some salt, pepper and garlic. Others didn’t have a clue or said the restaurant chain with the same name!

If visiting a market day in any little village or city in Italy you would find a porchetta stall, serving freshly roasted pork with stuffing. But it is how it is cooked and what it is stuffed with that actually makes it a porchetta. Just because it is pork it can be the only food called porchetta – WRONG. Porchetta actually refers to anything roasted over a WOOD fire with WILD FENNEL. You can make any piece of meat that is porchetta along as you have roasted it in a wood fire oven and stuffed or even marinated or cooked with fennel (preferably wild). So you can actually find rabbit porchetta, duck porchetta etc, etc.

Now in Australia we are in fennel season, and also getting a bit colder, I think it is time to make Coniglio in Porchetta – Rabbit Porchetta or a Porchetta of your choice.


Via Mariano Pallottini
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Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Le Marche and Food
February 10, 2012 3:32 AM
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How to Make Porchetta at Home

How to Make Porchetta at Home | La Cucina Italiana - De Italiaanse Keuken - The Italian Kitchen | Scoop.it

Roasting skin-on pork belly that's been wrapped around a pork loin gives you the best of both worlds: crackling mahogany crust and juicy meat seasoned with fennel, chile, and orange. Start at least 24 hours ahead. First, ask your butcher for a skin-on pork belly that’s just long and wide enough to wrap around a trimmed, center-cut pork loin...

 


Via Mariano Pallottini
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Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Italia Mia
February 6, 2013 2:46 PM
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How to Make Porchetta at home

How to Make Porchetta at home | La Cucina Italiana - De Italiaanse Keuken - The Italian Kitchen | Scoop.it

Porchetta is an Italian street food, served in market stalls or from trucks, often in sandwich form.Made from an entire gutted, spit-roasted pig, and stuffed with citrus, rosemary, fennel, and other aromatics, the key characteristic is that each portion is a miniature celebration of the best parts of the entire pig: the fat, the lean, and the crackly skin. [...]
Rather than cook a whole pig, or mess with a finicky shoulder, our version of porchetta has been adapted for the home cook. We use a huge piece of skin-on pork belly, wrapped around a boneless pork loin, seasoned with spices, and tied into a roast. Explain to your butcher what your intentions are; they will trim the pork belly and the loin for you as needed. Once you’ve got it assembled, it’s nearly foolproof: Stick it in the oven, turn it a few times, adjust the temperature as needed, and you’re done. The result is astonishingly delicious, all crunchy skin and moist, flavorful meat, a celebratory meal that is equally appropriate for a holiday dinner, or eaten standing up over the sink in sandwich form.

Porchetta
Adapted from a recipe in Bon Appetit; Serves 12-15 people
Ingredients:

1 five to six pound piece fresh pork belly, skin on1 three pound boneless, center-cut pork loin3 tablespoons fennel seeds2 tablespoons crushed red pepper flakes2 tablespoons minced fresh sage1 tablespoon minced fresh rosemary4 garlic cloves, mincedKosher salt1/2 orange, seeded, rind-on, thinly sliced

Method:

First, let’s prepare by doing a test-fit of the two pieces of pork. Place the belly skin-side down, and arrange the loin in the center. Roll the belly around the loin so the ends of the belly meat. If any of the belly or the loin overlaps, trim meat with a sharp knife. Unroll and set aside.In a small pan over medium heat, toast fennel seeds and red pepper flakes until fragrant, about 1 minute. Let spices cool, and then finely grind in a spice mill or clean coffee grinder until very fine. Transfer to a small bowl, and toss with the sage, rosemary, and garlic. Set spice mixture aside.Arrange belly skin side down on a counter or large cutting board. Using a knife, score the belly flesh in a checkerboard pattern about 1/3 of an inch deep, to help the roast cook evenly.Flip belly over, and sing a paring knife, poke dozens of 1/8 inch deep holes through the skin, all over the belly.Using a spiked meat mallet, pound skin side of belly all over for at least three minutes. This will tenderize the skin, and help it to puff up and get crispy when roasted.Turn belly and salt both loin and belly generously with kosher salt. Rub flesh side of belly and entire loin with fennel mixture. Arrange the loin down the middle of the belly, and top with orange slices.Wrap belly around loin, and tie crosswise tightly at 1/2 to 1 inch intervals with kitchen twine.Trim twine, and transfer roast to a wire rack set on a baking dish. Refrigerate uncovered for at least 24 hours to allow skin to air-dry. When ready to cook, let porchetta sit at room temperature for two hours. Preheat oven to 500 degrees, and season porchetta with salt. Roast on rack in baking sheet for 40 minutes, turning once. Reduce heat to 300 degrees and continue roasting, rotating the pan and turning the roast about every 20 minutes, until a thermometer inserted into the center of the roast reads 140 degrees, about 1 1/2 to 2 hours more. If skin is not yet a deep brown mahogany, crank heat back up to 500, and roast for ten minutes more. Let rest for 30 minutes, before slicing into 1/2 inch round slices with a serrated knife. Serve slices, or in sandwich form.

*Note: I feel compelled to mention that, at approximately 850 calories per 1/2 inch slice, this dish is one of the worst things for you that you could ever eat. If this bothers you, I think you should look at the above photo again. All it means is that you should probably make this dish now, before you begin feeling the oppression of your own guilty New Year’s resolutions.


Read more: http://www.fromaway.com/cooking/porchetta#ixzz2K8bhsAUk ;


Via Mariano Pallottini
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Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Le Marche and Food
March 12, 2012 9:40 AM
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Pollo Porchettato - Chicken cooked like porchetta from central Italy

Pollo Porchettato - Chicken cooked like porchetta from central Italy | La Cucina Italiana - De Italiaanse Keuken - The Italian Kitchen | Scoop.it

Anyone who has traveled to Italy has surely seen porchetta, the young pig stuffed with herbs and roasted. It's very tender and flavorful, and proffered at market stalls over the peninsula, but particularly in the central regions.

I'm not about to get myself a whole hog and try the procedure at home, but an easy way is to use pork roast or chicken breast and pretend it's porchetta! Simple enough to prepare anytime you don't really feel like cooking, but nice enough to serve to guests, too.

1 whole chicken breast, split
Slices of pancetta or bacon
garlic, minced
rosemary
thyme
sage
salt and pepper
peperoncino flakes, if desired
white wine

Click for directions


Via Mariano Pallottini
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Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Le Marche and Food
January 8, 2012 2:15 PM
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Le Marche Style Sudbury porchetta by Vespa Street Kitchen

Le Marche Style Sudbury porchetta by Vespa Street Kitchen | La Cucina Italiana - De Italiaanse Keuken - The Italian Kitchen | Scoop.it

Chef Rob Gregorini was born and raised in Sudbury but learned rustic Italian cooking from both grandmothers, who are from the regions of Umbria and Marche. He makes “an interpretation of a classic Central Italian” porketta at his fast food spot, Vespa Street Kitchen. He has streamlined the recipe for us.


Via Mariano Pallottini
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