Sweet Crispy Pork (Muu Grop Warn) |
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Prep Time: 30 Minutes Cook Time: 60 Minutes |
Ready In: 90 Minutes Servings: 6 |
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Another great recipe from Thai Food by David Thompson with a few small changes to the cooking method made by myself. A really sweet dish that should be offset by serving with other sour dishes. Note that you should use 3 whole coriander stems for the recipe, use the leaves to garnish and the roots for the paste. I deep-fried my own fresh shallots but they can already be purchased fried as well. I used the dried granular palm sugar, the original recipe called for 2 cups of natural palm sugar. Ingredients:
1 kg pork (belly is best, but use a whole pork cut) |
vegetable oil (for deep frying) |
180 g palm sugar (dry, see description) |
1/2 cup fish sauce |
1 tablespoon oyster sauce |
3 tablespoons shallots, deep-fried |
1 tablespoon coriander leaves |
1 tablespoon coriander (3 roots scraped and diced) |
1 g salt (pinch of salt) |
4 garlic cloves, peeled |
1 teaspoon white peppercorns |
1 star anise, roasted and ground |
Directions:
1. Steam pork until well cooked. This will take 30-60 minutes depending on your steamer and the cut of meat so check for an internal temperature of 70C (155F) with a meat thermometer and remove at that temperature. 2. Allow to rest 10-15 minutes at room temperature and then place in refrigerator a while to cool. 3. While pork is cooling you can make the paste by adding all the paste ingredients one by one to a mortar and pestle and pounding until smooth. Set to one side. 4. Mix fish sauce and oyster sauce in a small and then mix in the palm sugar until dissolved if using soft palm sugar, or otherwise just break solid palm sugar into a few pieces because it will dissolve later in the wok. 5. Cut pork into cubes of around 1cm (1/2 ). 6. Deep fry the pork over moderate heat until nice and golden, remove and drain. 7. Add a little of the left-over oil from deep frying to a wok over moderate heat and stir fry until golden in colour and fragant. 8. Add sauce / sugar mix to wok and lightly stir once or twice until it has become sticky. 9. Reduce heat, add pork and simmer a few minutes until coated. The meat will become tough if you leave it too long. 10. Serve sprinkled with deep-fried shallots and coriander leaves. |
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