Pork
1291 recipes found

Braised Pork With Turnips

Cooked Meat and Tomato Sauce Italian Style

Arthur Zampaglione's Rustic Meat Sauce

Hungarian Stewed Meat and Sauerkraut (Szekely Gulyas)

Hot Italian Sausage
Homemade hot Italian fennel sausage isn't a chore. Lightly browned and crumbled, this pork sausage makes a terrific topping for pizza or an addition to a rustic pasta dish.

Pork Braised With Turnips and Marjoram
In assembling this rather straightforward pork ragout, my main question was how to produce a sauce with substantial consistency, considering I had not planned to use any flour or other thickener. I thought that finely diced apple, which would melt into the sauce, might do the trick. It did, though also mincing the shallots meant that they, too, would add body. Pork shoulder, called butt for some reason, is the best cut for slow-cooking. It will have fat, which is to its advantage in terms of flavor and texture, and is a component that can be trimmed and put to practical use to start the cooking.

Choucroute Garnie (Garnished Sauerkraut)

South Coast Portuguese Fish Chowder

Bolognese Sauce (An Italian tomato and meat sauce)

Corn Pudding Stuffed with Greens
These individual corn puddings freeze well, so they can be made ahead of time. With their strip of green in the middle, they look lovely on the table. They don’t require many greens, so if you make a big batch of mustard greens or collards, you can freeze what remains for another meal.

Stir-Fried Pork and Greens With Noodles
This Asian noodle dish is a simple combination of greens seasoned with ginger, garlic and pork. For a vegetarian version, you could substitute tofu for the pork.

Mustard Greens With Pork, Stir-Fried

Pork Chops Ni,coise

Outdoor Porchetta
Porchetta is a popular Italian street food: juicy, aromatic slices of roast pork and pork cracklings stuffed into bread to make a sandwich. It's often done with a whole pig, but you can make your own porchetta for a crowd with a whole boneless pork shoulder. Here is a great way to do that in summer, or when the cut is too large for your roasting pan. You can order a shoulder from any butcher with a day or two of advance notice, or adapt the recipe for smaller pieces; any meaty roast with skin or a good layer of fat on the outside will work. The meat goes well with the unsalted bread that is typical in Umbria, where porchetta is a specialty. But you can use any bread you like, or serve with potatoes roasted in olive oil and scented with sage.

Southern Turnip And Mustard Greens

Portuguese Kale-and-Salt-Cod Chowder

Fresh Cod Baked With White Beans And Linguica

Stuffed Squid, Lisbon Style

Spicy Pork Stew With Hominy and Collard Greens
I’ve long adored hominy, the earthy dried corn kernels you find in pozole, the chile-laced Mexican stew. When I saw dried heirloom hominy for sale online, I bought some. I knew that having it in the cupboard when a hominy craving struck was the best insurance against cheating and buying the canned version. Like dried beans, dried hominy needs a good long soak and a lengthy cooking. But there’s nothing difficult about the process. Many pozole recipes call for the finished stew to be garnished with shredded cabbage. But after bingeing on cabbage recently, I decided to take a different route, and stirred slivered collard greens into the pot at the end of cooking. They turned silky and soft and offered a nice contrast to the chewy hominy, the brawny pork and the spicy thick broth.

Fragrant Citrus Couscous With Pork

Sopa Da Panela (Soup Of The Kettle)

South Carolina Chopped Barbecue

Pork Belly Tea Sandwiches
These sandwiches are not dainty pinkie-in-the-air nibbles, but hefty pork belly tea sandwiches that cater to hearty appetites and cold beer. Zak Pelaccio, the chef and an owner of Fatty Crab, a Malaysian street food cafe on the edge of the meatpacking district, got the idea for them from the afternoon English tea services he enjoyed when he lived in Malaysia. With each bite the sandwiches offer richness, salt and spice, the components that make game day food so satisfying. Southeast Asian chili sauce, two kinds of soy sauce and streaky pork fat heighten the taste. And they are a cinch to make. Just marinate, braise then pile the meat onto big slices of dense supermarket white bread that have been slathered with spicy mayonnaise. They can be made in advance and wrapped and refrigerated for a couple of hours before serving.

Elvis's Fried-Potato Sandwich
It is perhaps not advisable to follow an Elvis Presley diet for more than a meal or two. But for one? Let us take care of business. Fried bacon, onions, potatoes, soft white bread sliced with mustard: this is a glorious, if greasy feast. Presley led a life in which he snacked without guilt. Although he never heard of it, he lived deeply within the Greek philosophy of eudaemonia, meaning “human flourishing.” Try it for lunch some time. (Sam Sifton)