Pork

1291 recipes found

Glazed Bacon
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Glazed Bacon

Betty Groff, the home cook turned proprietor of Groff’s Farm Restaurant, once said that there were only two authentic American cuisines: Pennsylvania Dutch and Creole. Her brown-sugar-glazed bacon represents the former, and she occasionally served it as an hors d’oeuvre at her restaurant, which she started in her family’s 1756 Pennsylvania Dutch farmhouse in Mount Joy in the late 1950s. The restaurant became a place of pilgrimage for food lovers, among them Craig Claiborne, who wrote an article about it in The New York Times in 1965. This recipe, which Ms. Groff said “will amaze every guest,” serves six, but she noted that you can easily scale it up to serve 30, or possibly more.

40m6 appetizer servings
Crown Roast of Pork
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Crown Roast of Pork

Craig Claiborne declared this dish to be wholly American back in 1976, saying that if there were a European antecedent for a crown roast, ‘‘we have yet to discover it.’’ It is a stunning centerpiece for a holiday meal, the rare roast you will want to carve at the table and not in the kitchen. You can serve a dressing inside the finished roast, but cook it separately. As with stuffing a turkey, the process only slows and complicates the cooking process.

4hServes 10 to 12.
Upperline’s Duck and Andouille Gumbo
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Upperline’s Duck and Andouille Gumbo

Chefs dating back to Upperline restaurant’s opening in New Orleans, in 1982, have contributed to the development of its famous duck-andouille gumbo. Miguel Gabriel, a longtime Upperline “soup chef,” has been responsible for the dark-roux brew since 2010. The recipe also works if you substitute chicken stock for duck stock — and buy the roast duck from your local Chinese restaurant.

2h 30m6 to 8 servings
Spiced Apple-Sausage Stuffing With Cranberries and Brandy
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Spiced Apple-Sausage Stuffing With Cranberries and Brandy

45mAbout 12 cups, enough to stuff a 12- to 14-pound turkey
Slow Roast Pork Shoulder With Herb Rub
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Slow Roast Pork Shoulder With Herb Rub

12h10 servings
Spicy Bacon-and-Egg Pie
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Spicy Bacon-and-Egg Pie

Bacon-and-egg pie is a rustic specialty from New Zealand, here zipped up with a mixture of sriracha and cream. Made from whole eggs that hard-cook under a pastry crust lid, with fat chunks of bacon, it is closer in feeling to steak-and-kidney pie, that sturdy pub staple, than to quiche. It is terrific picnic fare.

1h 30m8 servings
Club Sandwiches
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Club Sandwiches

Oh, the perfection of a well-made club sandwich: layers of crisp bacon, tender chicken pulled from the bone (no cardboard chicken breasts here), slices of the ripest tomato you can find and crunchy romaine lettuce leaves. All of this nestled between slices of toasted white bread slathered with homemade mayonnaise. And no one would bristle if you added slices of avocado. They might declare you a genius.

10m2 servings
Pork Stew With Black Beans
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Pork Stew With Black Beans

2h 40m8 servings
Joe Major's Stuffed Pork Chops
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Joe Major's Stuffed Pork Chops

1h4 servings
Pork Chops With Dijon Sauce
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Pork Chops With Dijon Sauce

In the Burgundy region of France, home of Dijon, pork chops are traditionally served in a sauce made with mustard, cream and white wine, and there are very few pairings that are better. Richard Olney, a prominent food writer and authority on French cooking, sautéed sliced apples and chops and then baked them all together with cream and mustard dribbled on top. I prefer the method here, but you could always fry up some apples and serve them on the side. (For a dish with roots closer to Normandy than Burgundy, make the same recipe but omit the mustard, deglaze the pan with Calvados instead of wine and stir sliced sautéed Granny Smiths into the sauce itself.)

35m4 servings
Mele e Cottechino (Apples and Pork Sausage)
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Mele e Cottechino (Apples and Pork Sausage)

Going out on New Year’s Eve has always been, according to my parents, for amateurs. Their long-standing alternative: stay home and eat well. The ritual starts with caviar and Champagne. Then Dad might prepare steak tartare and Mom, a chocolate soufflé. Good stuff. Now, all grown up (and then some), I realize they’re on to something. A low-key, intimate gathering starring good food is my preferred way to ring in the new. But in these lean times — and in my significantly smaller kitchen — putting out a succulent spread and entertaining the troops chez moi calls for some creativity.

1hServes 6 to 7.
Chinese Roast Pork (Char Siu)
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Chinese Roast Pork (Char Siu)

6h 45mEnough for several meals serving 3 to 4 people
Broiled Calf’s Liver
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Broiled Calf’s Liver

30m2 servings
Rice Noodles With Spicy Pork and Herbs
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Rice Noodles With Spicy Pork and Herbs

This cold rice-noodle dish, dressed in vinegar and chile oil and topped with spicy pork, herbs and peanuts, has roots in Yunnan, a southwestern Chinese province, where the garnish may vary according to the kitchen and season. The dish is quick to put together but can be served at a leisurely pace: Plate it, or set all of the components on the table and let people put together their own bowls the way they like, to their taste. The chef Simone Tong, who runs a Yunnan-inspired noodle restaurant in Manhattan, makes her version with ground pork, peanuts and a mix of fresh herbs but adds raw breakfast radishes and lacto-fermented pickles as well, for extra crunch and flavor. Feel free to do the same, or not; it’s in the spirit of the dish to improvise with what’s in season and what’s on hand.

20mServes 4
Bean-Hole Baked Beans
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Bean-Hole Baked Beans

This recipe is a project that can be time- and labor-intensive. You need to dig a hole in your yard and build a fire in that hole to cook the beans. An important note: Failing to dig the hole, and using your oven instead, will result in beans that lack bona fides but are 98 percent as good as the ones that guy cooked in a hole in his yard. This recipe will take about 3 hours plus soaking time for the oven method.

10h12 servings
Roast Pork With Applesauce
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Roast Pork With Applesauce

1h4 servings
Clay Pot Pork
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Clay Pot Pork

1h 15m4 servings
Braised Chicken Legs With Wild Mushrooms
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Braised Chicken Legs With Wild Mushrooms

A good roasted chicken is a simple pleasure, but a braised chicken dish is always more interesting. Here, dried wild mushrooms, smoked bacon and red wine perfume the sauce to give these chicken legs depth and character, with a flavor nearly similar to a game bird. Using turkey broth makes this braise even more heady. For a quick, concentrated broth, simmer 2 pounds of meaty turkey wings with 6 cups water for about an hour. Finding a dried wild mushroom is not like hunting for its fresh counterpart in the forest. Most Italian delis and nearly all supermarkets sell little packets of dried wild mushrooms.

2h6 servings
Pad Kee Mao
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Pad Kee Mao

This stir-fry of rice noodles and ground pork gives Pad Thai a serious run for its money. Pad kee mao translates loosely to “drunken noodles,” though there’s no alcohol here — just an easy-to-assemble dish that skews salty, sour and spicy from a glaze of fish sauce, soy sauce, rice vinegar and fresh chiles. Fatty ground pork imparts a lot of flavor, though you could swap in ground chicken or even firm tofu. If you’re sensitive to heat, leave out the smashed chiles, to finish — and add a pinch of sugar to offset the salty punch of the dish.

20m4 servings
Lemon Grass-Ginger Pork Sliders
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Lemon Grass-Ginger Pork Sliders

30m16 to 18 sliders
Bill Blass’s Meatloaf
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Bill Blass’s Meatloaf

This homespun, bacon-wrapped version of the American classic is attributed to Bill Blass, the world-famous clothing designer of the 60s, 70s and 80s, who is perhaps best known for dressing First Lady Nancy Reagan and the upper echelons of New York society. While he became hugely successful – he reportedly sold his business for $50 million in 1999 – his culinary tastes remained firmly Midwestern. From his 2002 obituary in The Times: “A man of robust but simple tastes who would go out of his way for a hamburger, Mr. Blass would serve guests his own meatloaf recipe, followed perhaps by lemon meringue pie. He always maintained, only partly in jest, ‘My claim to immortality will be my meatloaf.’” This is his recipe.

1h 15m6 to 8 servings
Sausages in Red Wine With Polenta
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Sausages in Red Wine With Polenta

1h4 servings
Fusion Coq Au Vin
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Fusion Coq Au Vin

1h 15m4 servings
Spicy, Garlicky Meatloaf
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Spicy, Garlicky Meatloaf

This meatloaf is as pungent and zesty as a meatball, but baked in that iconic, sliceable loaf form. A combination of chilies and sage add a spicy, earthy note, and a glaze of tomato paste and olive oil elevates a traditional dish away from its ketchup roots. The pine nuts are a visual cue: this is something a little different. And it tastes great the day after.

1h 40m6 to 8 servings