Red-Braised Pork Belly
This is based on the recipe for “Dong Po Rou” here (see link), adjusted mostly to use ingredients which may be more commonly found in American kitchens. It takes about 3 1/2 hours and is extremely easy. (“Red Braised” refers to the color meat gets when slow-cooked in one of several kinds of cooking liquid, including soy sauce. And no, it’s not a bright red red, the same character for “red” also describes the color of tea.)
Materials
Pasture-raised pork belly roast 2-3 pounds
2 or 3 bunches of green onions (scallions)
An inch or 2 of ginger
2/3 cup Soy sauce
2 cups Shaoxing wine OR dry sherry OR cream sherry
A few tablespoons of molasses and white sugar, or brown sugar
A covered pot that will fit your pork belly, ideally heavy and ceramic
Method
Trim the green onions and scatter them in the pot until the entire bottom is covered. If they are too big cut them in half. You need enough scallions to cover the pot, so, perhaps 6-10 plants (2-3 bunches).
Slice the ginger and arrange the slices relatively evenly on top of the scallions.
(Optional) blanch the pork belly for about a minute to firm it up and make it easier to cut.
Cut the pork belly into pieces 2 or 3 inches on a side. (Leave all the layers of the pork belly intact.)
Place the pork belly pieces fat side up on top of the scallions and ginger.
Pour the wine or sherry (or some mix thereof) and the soy sauce over the pork.
Sprinkle the pork with molasses and sugar or brown sugar. How much depends on what you want. Probably a tablespoon of molasses and 2 T of sugar are a good start. Most of the sugar is probably going to dissolve in the sauce, so if you want sweeter pork but you don’t want to eat the sugar, just skip the sauce.
Cover the pot, bring the mixture to a boil, and then turn down to a low simmer (no need to stir). Cook for one and a half hours and then flip the meat fat-side down and continue cooking, covered, for another 90 minutes.
(Optional) Before serving, take out the meat, put it in a pan and put it fat-side up under the broiler for a couple minutes to brown and slightly crisp the top. (If you’ve left the skin on the pork belly roast you can try to crisp the skin this way, although crispy pork belly would require a different recipe.)
(Optional) Put some of the cooking liquid into a saucepan and cook it over high heat to make a reduction.