Pork Ragu

IMG_4790.jpg
 

NOTES from THE TABLE

We all need a recipe like this one in our back pocket: weeknight easy, dinner party perfect, leftovers for days.

Jenny Rosenstrach’s recipe for Pork Shoulder Ragu follows through with all its promises. It’s simple to prepare, makes your house smell amazing, and brings a classic list of ingredients together in an unexpected way.

Serve this with a good salad (perhaps with a vinaigrette with a sweet zing), a hearty wide pasta like pappardelle or egg noodles, and lots of good shaved parmesan or pecorino romano on top (spring for the good stuff).

The leftovers are amazing, and you can shake them up by eating this the second night on good rolls instead of pasta.

Crowd your tables,

Megan


PORK RAGU

This recipe was created by Jenny Rosenstrach for her blog, Dinner, a Love Story, and is also published in her cookbook of the same name. Here is the recipe straight from Jenny’s blog, in her husband Andy’s own words:

Originally published at Dinner, a Love Story. Find the full, excellent cookbook here.

Because this is pork, it goes well with a salad that has a little sweetness to help cut the porkiness. (That’s Jenny’s word.) Greens with pear, blue cheese, and pine nuts? Greens with pistachios and pomegranates? Either would be good with our standard vinaigrette.

Also, this serves about six normal-size people. If you are cooking for more than that, cook another pound of pasta, up the meat to 3 pounds, and add few more tomatoes, and another 1/2 cup of red wine. Like the other braised pork recipe we ran recently, it’s nearly impossible to get wrong, so don’t get too hung up on the exactness of measurements. But if you use 3 pounds of pork and keep the liquid at a third of the way up the meat, that will be enough to feed four parents and four kids. With leftovers. A few of you have reported back that it benefits from an extra splash or two of diced tomatoes at the end to loosen it up. I have done this many times.

2 to 2 1/2-pound boneless pork shoulder roast

1 small onion, chopped

1 garlic clove, minced

salt and pepper

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 small pat butter

1 large can whole tomatoes, with juice

1 cup red wine

5 sprigs fresh thyme

5 sprigs fresh oregano

Small handful of fennel seeds

1 tablespoon hot sauce, for smokiness (I used Trader Joe’s Hot Chili Sauce)

Pappardelle

Freshly grated Parmesean

Preheat oven to 325°F. Liberally salt and pepper the pork roast. Add olive oil and butter to large Dutch oven and heat over medium-high until butter melts, but does not burn. Add pork roast to pan and brown on all sides, about 8-10 minutes in all.

Add the onion and garlic and saute for 1 minute. Add tomatoes, wine, thyme, oregano, fennel, and hot sauce and bring to a boil. Cover, and put in oven. Braise for 3-4 hours, turning every hour or so. Add more liquid (water, wine, or tomato sauce) if needed. (The liquid should come to about 1/3 of the way up the pork.) Meat is done when it’s practically falling apart. Put on a cutting board and pull it apart with two forks, then add back to pot and stir. Cook 1 to 2 pounds pasta according to package directions. When it’s is ready, put into individual bowls and top with ragu and lots of Parm.