Been waiting for this! Cantonese roast pork belly has frustrated me for years because my skin was always chewy, burned, or gummy. Air drying it in the fridge was definitely the secret I did not think of so thank you for this! The sous vide also makes sure you don't hammer the meat so definitely gonna archive this recipe!
Umm, yep definitely gonna try this I will put in the time and the effort. Great video, great demo. Thanks chef! Your pork belly meatball video also rocked! Keep it up!
For anyone whos interested in chinese the word 花 (flower)in 五花肉 (five flower meat) is not meant to be taken in a literal sense like in the video shown, it actually means 花紋(pattern) since the pork belly is constrcuted in 5 layers.
@@romaindesanti4366 Nope, not really. because i want to not only cook the skin, but the sides and underside of the porkbelly too. But now that you mention it, maybe it could work, i dont know.
I have tried so many recipes, bought specific ingredients and kitchenware,wasted so much meet until today no success, I've been to the point to think that these video tutorials are edited, but my passion for cooking push me to keep trying. Personal opinion.cheers!! from California
me too! I didnt know you need to turn this into a Twice Cooked Pork 😁. I was waiting for the vinegar rub trick but I guess it's not needed since it came out so dry after 2-3 days in the fridge. If I recall correctly, someone said that vinegar helps with the drying but that was for something cooked right away. Again, for me, the first cook and then fridge is hopefully going to be the game changer I needed. I also just use an American BBQ rub and it comes out fantastic but that dipping salt looks interesting.
Ive never heard the explanation that cutting through to the meat causes moisture release that can hinder crisping. You hear it constantly to not score all wait through fat and cut the meat, but no one ever says why. Makea a lot more sense now.
1. You can press the piece of belly after the first sous vide cook, after poking the skin. Weigh it down with a press/weight/sheet pan situation to really get a flat piece. This tends to compress parts of the meat and fat, which isn't the end of the world, but it will definitely help to get a flat piece. 2. A more low-tech, less invasive method would be to prop up the piece with a small ball of aluminum foil in the oven. So if there's a side or corner of the meat that rests lower than another area, you can elevate that side to get an even surface. This method works pretty well, and it's best suited for pieces of pork that are only slightly deformed. 3. If you're a perfectionist and don't care about yield, you can also just trim the bottom with a sharp knife either after the sous vide step, or after 1 day of air drying. This will get you a very level piece of belly, but the downside is reduced yield (though the scraps are still tasty.)
Any mention on the effect of the sous vide on the meat texture and juiciness after an 88 hour 40 minute total time? On the other extreme other chefs are trimming down the 2 day refrigerator air dry to a total 26 hour 20 minute total time with tender and juicy meat. It's pork belly after all.
Separate the fat by putting it in the fridge for a while and then reduce the liquid down on the stove. Can be used for dipping or sauces, basically made yourself some flavoured pork stock!
I wonder if you can shorten the dehydration step in an air fryer. Some have a dehydration setting but not the fryer could be set at the lowest temperature setting and run for only 19-15 minutes at a time. Especially if the fryer isn't preheated it can take up to 2 minutes to reach the desired temperature.
Question: what about setting the belly in a dehydrator or a convection oven with just the fan. Just trying to get this for restaurant service/ prep time
We haven't tested into that. Important to be mindful of food safety to maintain pasteurization post sous vide cook. For pork, the minimum is 130 °F for 112 minutes, 140 °F for 12 minutes, 145 °F for 4 minutes. Restaurant dehydrators like Excalibur can cover that range, but be careful that it doesn’t dry out the meat part too much. You may want to shield the bottom and sides of the belly (leaving the skin exposed) if you go in that direction.
I found that the meat after cooking in sous vide is moist, so it's similar when you boil the pork belly. I always do next is by placing it on a wire rack and then let the meat drain some of its juices or you can pat it down with paper towel. And then I pop it in the oven with a preheated temp of 60C-65C (140F-149F) for about an hour in my oven. (It may differ to your oven). After the skin becomes rubbery. Take it out of the oven and do what he did on the video to pop that skin. Or pour a 400F oil onto that skin for more puffiness.
An amazing video well demonstrated and quite tantalizing looking. Myconcerned with this process would be the toxic plastic while heated seeping into the food. Honestly there really is no such thing as food safe plastic. And even less "food safe" when heated.
I really don't know why more people fail to understand this. So wait - when he puts the meat inside a plastic bag in that water tub, he is cooking the meat? Eeeeeh so much plastic seepage :( I thought it was just sitting in cold water.
@@KimiWei No it's just a slow way to cook the meat at a constant temperature To give it more flavor since Marinating itself by cooking in its own juices With the herbs and spices that may be added. Then typically heat blasted from the outside to give it that char. Some chefs use the same method but using oil Like beef tallow And submerged a meat in it cooking it on a low setting Which Personally I think is the best and smartest route to go when you're trying to achieve this type of cooking method. And some may say well that's a waste of oil not if you like French fries.
@@stopit4uca Why do you say 'No' and then go on to corroborate what I said? Cooking in plastic is cooking in plastic. I'm never going to voluntarily do that.
@@KimiWei What I was doing is giving you an explanation just in case you weren't familiar with the cooking industry of what he was doing and why he was doing it and explaining that there are other than doing it in plastic.
@@stopit4uca I appreciate your attempt to educate me about pre-cooking techniques. I wish I understood the options you're referring to a bit better. It's all a little mysterious to me.
If you don't have several days to wait for it to air dry, you can rub a lot of coarse salt on the skin, leave it for 10-15 minutes, remove the salt and moisture, then repeat once or twice. After that, you can also brush vinegar on top and let it air dry for 15-20 min, though I'm unsure how important this part is.
This observation is for such a niche audience, but this chef's voice (timbre and delivery) is a spot-on unintended impression of guitarist Michael Einziger from the band Incubus.
If you can't wait for 3 days, I suggest you put it in a preheated oven set at 60-65C (140F-145F) and dehydrate it for an hour (It may differ to your oven). After the skin becomes rubbery. Take it out of the oven and do what he did on the video to pop that skin. Or pour a 400F oil onto that skin for more puffiness.
this method looks almost fool proof and I'm going to have to try it. The only possible problem is my impatience, it's going to be so hard to take like 4 days to cook this. lol
You need a machine for it, normally a stick that you clip to the side of a container of water. It has a heater and a little propeller inside it to heat the water and circulate it around the container. You are able to set a temperature, then it will heat the water and keep the water at that exact temperature for as long as you'd like.
We didn’t test too much into treating the skin during the drying step for this particular recipe. For other recipes, salt is really effective for desiccating the skin and drawing out moisture during the initial cooking step. But it does tend to season the skin a bit more than you might want. Alcohol operates on a similar idea to encourage evaporation. Would be curious to see if any of these techniques improve the process.
@@chefsteps please learn more before you upload stupid videos in teaching people the incorrect way in cooking just because you can make a great content out of it.
Take a Look at Bavarian porkbelly recipes, if you want a Western recipe. Here the fat gets crispy, too. Most homecook recipes just demand to put the pork in the oven with the sauce underneath the meat. This already produces a tasty „Schweinebraten“, but the Skin might not get crispy all the way ecenly. Big restaurants cook the meat they serve and the sauce they serve, therefore seperatly. The meat goes into the oven without any sauce and the sauce gets cooked on the stove with bones and leftover meat. Just before serving both Are combined (provably with Sauerkraut and Knödel (dumblings)
@@mattymattffs Letting meat dry up a Bit, is always a good idea I have cooked a bed Wellington after a recipe of „Alex, french gut cooking“ a couple of years ago. He also recommended to let the meat dry up for some days in the griffe. It was perfect
6 days? USDA recommends using cooked pork within three to four days, kept refrigerated (40 °F or less). Refrigeration slows but does not stop bacterial growth.
@@fnhs90 The truth lies in jest. Many jokes are at the expense of others. Your world view is too 2 dimensional, and you have far too many feelings. Be more tomorrow.
Fantastic video! My holy grail is perfect crispy pork belly, and my sous vide followed by air fryer attempts have looked like your un-air-dried version. Do you have a substitution for sand ginger in the curing stage. I'm guessing just salt is OK?
There has *got* to be a way to accelerate the drying process than just a fan blowing in the fridge. Can't you run the air through some desiccant or something?
@@chefsteps it really is. I work at a rehab cooking for 25 people, so it would be a nightmare to try and figure out how much salt to add to 15lbs of chicken wings. .75 for bone in, 1% boneless works everytime
It's a 3-prong sausage pricker from The Sausage Maker. Here's a link to purchase: www.amazon.com/TSM-3-Prong-Made-Sausage-Pricker/dp/B002L82SAO?tag=chefsteps02-20
I would say this is too much time processing of this kind of roast pork belly.The chief is so nervous how to cut the roast pork.He is not an expert cook.
Em Minas fazemos melhor, mais rápido e sem toda essa técnica. As vezes o simples o é o melhor caminho. Não desmerecendo o belo trabalho do chef, obviamente.
Yes! Fully roasted pork belly can be wrapped in foil or refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 1 week. Reheat using the foil boat method (leaving all of the skin uncovered) on a wire rack set inside a sheet pan at 400 °F / 204 °C until pork is warmed through and skin is crispy, 15 to 20 minutes. You can also freeze leftovers and reheat from frozen. You can either freeze leftovers in a single piece, or slice the pork belly into strips for 1-2 servings, and wrap and freeze those individually so you can reheat just the amount you want to serve each time. Reheat strips from frozen using the same foil boat method at 350-375 °F until pork is warmed through and skin is crispy. If the skin begins to char before the pork is fully warmed through, loosely cover skin with foil.
But most air fryers go up to 200ºC (basket ones I mean). I bought a Cosori Turbo which jumps up to 230ºC. I must say that this dish have been hard for me to achieve properly, and after the bunch of days it takes to finish it would be heart breaking if it fails.
If you near the chinese bbq restaurant go buy if better n not much morr expensive n you dont need to wait for 3day later your apertise might be change to bbq duck
dammit ! is that how you cut it ? i been slicing mine, crackle on top, if i'm lucky 30% of my meat has crackle, the rest falls off hahaha and when you were cutting the meat up, i noticed you put the crackle face down but you laid it onto the wet part of the chopping board, does that matter or not at that point? alright wish me luck tomorrow !!! hahaha
It’s a good idea but I think it would be quite energy inefficient. I think it would also probably dry the surface quite quickly but it would take longer for the moisture from underneath to move to the surface and dry out.
Chef Marc Matsumoto air dried a whole chicken to crisp the skin using a fan in his fridge. It still takes a few hours or more so hair dryer aint good enough.
You’d be holding a hair dryer for a while, sadly. We did have good results with leaving a small fan in the refrigerator aimed at the skin’s surface, so the idea is sound.
I have seen some chefs pour hot water or oil over the pork skin, apparently it makes it puff better. Have you tried this method combined with your method?
We didn't test into this for this recipe. The amount of contraction and buckling from aggressive thermal shock might be a tough hurdle in this specific case. That’s the advantage of a lower, slower cook. The rate of contraction is more controlled-both in the meat and the skin, so you end up with a flatter, more even piece of pork. But you should definitely try blanching, if you’re not satisfied with the base recipe.
Sometimes I have my doubts about the "drying part", because there are a lot of videos of people who roast the pork from raw, they only poach them a few minutes, and they get good crackling. So I don't know what to think. Shortcuts do exist, it seems. Here's a video, of a Michelin Star guy: ua-cam.com/video/-rbwpEUFzOQ/v-deo.html
I haven't watched chefsteps for a while, and just saw Chef Tim. It's really great for ya'll to expand on different cuisines, love ya'll for this.
That crunch at 21:39 sounds so perfect I would almost think it was foley work added in.
Love me that Foley guy he’s a really good artist 🤭🤣😆
Axel Foley 😂😂
Been waiting for this! Cantonese roast pork belly has frustrated me for years because my skin was always chewy, burned, or gummy. Air drying it in the fridge was definitely the secret I did not think of so thank you for this! The sous vide also makes sure you don't hammer the meat so definitely gonna archive this recipe!
You guys bought a new angle to a traditional dish. More!
I have numbers of technique for doing this. Your method at home is the best and simple. Thanks!
Wow. Now to find some pork belly!!!!
Great technique.
Love this! More Chinese recipes please
This is absolutely phenomenal! Well done!
Umm, yep definitely gonna try this I will put in the time and the effort. Great video, great demo. Thanks chef! Your pork belly meatball video also rocked! Keep it up!
Wow ❤👌Love it Cheff.you are a great Cheff.Thank you for shareing
For anyone whos interested in chinese the word 花 (flower)in 五花肉 (five flower meat) is not meant to be taken in a literal sense like in the video shown, it actually means 花紋(pattern) since the pork belly is constrcuted in 5 layers.
After cooking it, if my pork belly isnt puffed up, i just fry the skin in oil, work every time! Best with just portion sizes though...
@@Astryca I do the same thing
I believe they do this method in Philippines too
Did you ever try to just fry the skin after the sous vide bath ( with maybe an air dry period in the fridge of a couple of hours ) ?
@@romaindesanti4366 Nope, not really. because i want to not only cook the skin, but the sides and underside of the porkbelly too. But now that you mention it, maybe it could work, i dont know.
Amazing, thank you❤
Inspiring as always, thank you
Thanks for watching!
I have tried so many recipes, bought specific ingredients and kitchenware,wasted so much meet until today no success, I've been to the point to think that these video tutorials are edited, but my passion for cooking push me to keep trying. Personal opinion.cheers!! from California
I've been trying to do this maybe 6 or 7 times and it never came out right. I've been missing the 3 day air dry! Thank you!
while air drying, rub some vinegar on the skin 2 or 3 times.
Glad we could help! Let us know how your next pork belly turns out!
@@ryanlee4361Why is that?(very curious)
me too! I didnt know you need to turn this into a Twice Cooked Pork 😁. I was waiting for the vinegar rub trick but I guess it's not needed since it came out so dry after 2-3 days in the fridge. If I recall correctly, someone said that vinegar helps with the drying but that was for something cooked right away. Again, for me, the first cook and then fridge is hopefully going to be the game changer I needed. I also just use an American BBQ rub and it comes out fantastic but that dipping salt looks interesting.
@@reggiemiller4121 from my observation, the crisp last for much longer
Mate you are making me hungry.Love Chinese pork how it is done so beautiful❤❤❤ 🐌🐖🐖🐖🐖🐖🐖
Have been thinking of buying sous vide, but it such a mystery…you have given me a purpose.
Ive never heard the explanation that cutting through to the meat causes moisture release that can hinder crisping. You hear it constantly to not score all wait through fat and cut the meat, but no one ever says why. Makea a lot more sense now.
Thanks chef ❤❤❤❤❤
That sounded so satisfying
Tastes super satisfying too!
@@chefstepshave you guys tried this on a pellet grill with wood flavour … I think I’m going to this weekend I’m air drying now
This is really informative and valuable! Thank you for making this video!
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@chefsteps What type of wok is that?
What about pressing the pork to get a flatter surface after sous vide? Looks great btw
1. You can press the piece of belly after the first sous vide cook, after poking the skin. Weigh it down with a press/weight/sheet pan situation to really get a flat piece. This tends to compress parts of the meat and fat, which isn't the end of the world, but it will definitely help to get a flat piece.
2. A more low-tech, less invasive method would be to prop up the piece with a small ball of aluminum foil in the oven. So if there's a side or corner of the meat that rests lower than another area, you can elevate that side to get an even surface. This method works pretty well, and it's best suited for pieces of pork that are only slightly deformed.
3. If you're a perfectionist and don't care about yield, you can also just trim the bottom with a sharp knife either after the sous vide step, or after 1 day of air drying. This will get you a very level piece of belly, but the downside is reduced yield (though the scraps are still tasty.)
@@chefsteps do you think trussing might work?
Any mention on the effect of the sous vide on the meat texture and juiciness after an 88 hour 40 minute total time? On the other extreme other chefs are trimming down the 2 day refrigerator air dry to a total 26 hour 20 minute total time with tender and juicy meat. It's pork belly after all.
Really amazing recipe..
Glad you liked it
Please make char siu!
here's our sous vide char siu recipe:
www.chefsteps.com/activities/char-siu-tender-cantonese-style-barbecued-pork
@@chefstepsGrant's version is interesting, but I want to see Tim's version!
You are like a professor in a cooking class explaining the whys and hows , nice video, thanks.🧄🫕🧂🌯
Hello from Canary islands...Great video
...thank you. When you put it in the covencion oven...you use heat up and below or just up?
Any recommendations on what to do with the juices out of the sous vide bag?
Separate the fat by putting it in the fridge for a while and then reduce the liquid down on the stove. Can be used for dipping or sauces, basically made yourself some flavoured pork stock!
ChefSteps. Doesn't it need to cool down quickly after Sous vide process to prevent food poisoning? Because it gonna be air-dried in fridge
Question: instead of using the air fryer, would putting it in smoker yield similar results?
I wonder if you can shorten the dehydration step in an air fryer. Some have a dehydration setting but not the fryer could be set at the lowest temperature setting and run for only 19-15 minutes at a time. Especially if the fryer isn't preheated it can take up to 2 minutes to reach the desired temperature.
Question: what about setting the belly in a dehydrator or a convection oven with just the fan. Just trying to get this for restaurant service/ prep time
We haven't tested into that. Important to be mindful of food safety to maintain pasteurization post sous vide cook. For pork, the minimum is 130 °F for 112 minutes, 140 °F for 12 minutes, 145 °F for 4 minutes. Restaurant dehydrators like Excalibur can cover that range, but be careful that it doesn’t dry out the meat part too much. You may want to shield the bottom and sides of the belly (leaving the skin exposed) if you go in that direction.
I found that the meat after cooking in sous vide is moist, so it's similar when you boil the pork belly. I always do next is by placing it on a wire rack and then let the meat drain some of its juices or you can pat it down with paper towel.
And then I pop it in the oven with a preheated temp of 60C-65C (140F-149F) for about an hour in my oven. (It may differ to your oven).
After the skin becomes rubbery. Take it out of the oven and do what he did on the video to pop that skin. Or pour a 400F oil onto that skin for more puffiness.
Could I ask what Wok are you using on the induction burner? The seasoning looks amazing!
14-inch Sur La Table carbon steel wok, and the induction cooktop is the new Breville Control Freak Home.
www.chefsteps.com/product/control-freak-home
@@chefsteps thank you so much!
An amazing video well demonstrated and quite tantalizing looking. Myconcerned with this process would be the toxic plastic while heated seeping into the food. Honestly there really is no such thing as food safe plastic. And even less "food safe" when heated.
I really don't know why more people fail to understand this. So wait - when he puts the meat inside a plastic bag in that water tub, he is cooking the meat? Eeeeeh so much plastic seepage :( I thought it was just sitting in cold water.
@@KimiWei No it's just a slow way to cook the meat at a constant temperature To give it more flavor since Marinating itself by cooking in its own juices With the herbs and spices that may be added. Then typically heat blasted from the outside to give it that char. Some chefs use the same method but using oil Like beef tallow And submerged a meat in it cooking it on a low setting Which Personally I think is the best and smartest route to go when you're trying to achieve this type of cooking method. And some may say well that's a waste of oil not if you like French fries.
@@stopit4uca Why do you say 'No' and then go on to corroborate what I said? Cooking in plastic is cooking in plastic. I'm never going to voluntarily do that.
@@KimiWei What I was doing is giving you an explanation just in case you weren't familiar with the cooking industry of what he was doing and why he was doing it and explaining that there are other than doing it in plastic.
@@stopit4uca I appreciate your attempt to educate me about pre-cooking techniques. I wish I understood the options you're referring to a bit better. It's all a little mysterious to me.
If you don't have several days to wait for it to air dry, you can rub a lot of coarse salt on the skin, leave it for 10-15 minutes, remove the salt and moisture, then repeat once or twice. After that, you can also brush vinegar on top and let it air dry for 15-20 min, though I'm unsure how important this part is.
if i wanted to speed up the drying time could i put it into a dehydrator?
See the Guga foods video on pork belly cooking methods
Can I substitute the air drying with putting it inside the refrigerator instead? I'm afraid the meat will go bad if I leave it outside for 3 days
This observation is for such a niche audience, but this chef's voice (timbre and delivery) is a spot-on unintended impression of guitarist Michael Einziger from the band Incubus.
Recipe please !?
If you can't wait for 3 days, I suggest you put it in a preheated oven set at 60-65C (140F-145F) and dehydrate it for an hour (It may differ to your oven).
After the skin becomes rubbery. Take it out of the oven and do what he did on the video to pop that skin. Or pour a 400F oil onto that skin for more puffiness.
since i'm using a conventional oven, where should i put the pork belly? center rack, or upper rack closer to the top broiler?
I bake mine at 250 degrees about 2.30 hours. moist and tender, I am a fan of ground fennel on the meat... then you have to deal with the skin
this method looks almost fool proof and I'm going to have to try it. The only possible problem is my impatience, it's going to be so hard to take like 4 days to cook this.
lol
Come to Hong Kong and try the traditional roasted pork belly , then compare which one tastes better.
I'm not familiar with sous vide bath. Do you have to set it at a certain temperature and how will we know it's the right temperature? Thanks
You need a machine for it, normally a stick that you clip to the side of a container of water. It has a heater and a little propeller inside it to heat the water and circulate it around the container. You are able to set a temperature, then it will heat the water and keep the water at that exact temperature for as long as you'd like.
I think this is closer to Lechon. I think the scraping of the skin for those itty-bitty bubbles is so important for cantonese siu yuk.
@ChefSteps . Won't the actual meat dry out if u leave it exposed to the air? I do understand drying the skin out though but not the actual meat
I did your recipe. lt was a waste of meat and time.
Curious whether you tested the often mentioned methods of applying vinegar/salt/alcohol on the skin while drying it out in the fridge
We didn’t test too much into treating the skin during the drying step for this particular recipe. For other recipes, salt is really effective for desiccating the skin and drawing out moisture during the initial cooking step. But it does tend to season the skin a bit more than you might want. Alcohol operates on a similar idea to encourage evaporation. Would be curious to see if any of these techniques improve the process.
@@chefsteps please learn more before you upload stupid videos in teaching people the incorrect way in cooking just because you can make a great content out of it.
@@pakkagewa4591 Daddy, chill
Any Chef can share a way to accelerate the air dry stage? Using ventilators, maybe?
on a tray, uncovered, in the fridge for 12h
Is he from ATK?! HI!!!
Def going to try this. I have faith in Asian Michael Cera's recipe.
Cũng là heo nhưng màu sắc, độ giòn đạt đến mức độ nào là cả một công trình ❤ bạn làm rất tốt, xin cảm ơn
Take a Look at Bavarian porkbelly recipes, if you want a Western recipe. Here the fat gets crispy, too.
Most homecook recipes just demand to put the pork in the oven with the sauce underneath the meat. This already produces a tasty „Schweinebraten“, but the Skin might not get crispy all the way ecenly. Big restaurants cook the meat they serve and the sauce they serve, therefore seperatly. The meat goes into the oven without any sauce and the sauce gets cooked on the stove with bones and leftover meat. Just before serving both Are combined (provably with Sauerkraut and Knödel (dumblings)
Do love a bit of German pork. 😂
My mum always taught me to vinegar wash the skin and dry it in the fridge for a day. Does really work
@@mattymattffs Letting meat dry up a Bit, is always a good idea
I have cooked a bed Wellington after a recipe of „Alex, french gut cooking“ a couple of years ago. He also recommended to let the meat dry up for some days in the griffe. It was perfect
at the sametime feel like this clip was to show off breville crazy equipments lol
6:32 succulent you say? As in a succulent Chinese meal?!
The bougee way of making roasted pork belly. No Chinese restaurant is going to take 3-4 days to make this.
In Singapore, the puffy skin is scraped off and roasted again so that its like Peking Duck.. flat biscuit like , no bumps.
Use a rotary tool from leatherworking to speed up the shin pricking process.
Not many have a sous vide at home
6 days? USDA recommends using cooked pork within three to four days, kept refrigerated (40 °F or less). Refrigeration slows but does not stop bacterial growth.
"There's no rhyme or reason to this." Spends the next 5 minutes describing both the rhyme and the reason.
Hes clearly referring to how you're sprinkling it. Stop finding criticism that doesnt exist
@@fnhs90 You've missed both the point and the joke. Best of luck interacting with the world around you tomorrow.
@@gamersruin sure, your bs is called out, and it's just a joke 😂😂
@@fnhs90 The truth lies in jest. Many jokes are at the expense of others. Your world view is too 2 dimensional, and you have far too many feelings. Be more tomorrow.
@@gamersruin hahha. Use all the fancy words you want, your bs was called out, and now you're trying to withdraw it as a joke. Hilarious 😂😂😂😂
No five-spice powder in your dry rub/ cure?
Brush vinegar on skin if you want a more pleasant crunch.
Fantastic video! My holy grail is perfect crispy pork belly, and my sous vide followed by air fryer attempts have looked like your un-air-dried version. Do you have a substitution for sand ginger in the curing stage. I'm guessing just salt is OK?
Wow. Looks great but it takes nearly 5 days to make
A week to prep and about a minute to finish 😂
Lithium orotate and amanita muscaria are very helpful for calming the nerves and it makes u better at cooking.
There has *got* to be a way to accelerate the drying process than just a fan blowing in the fridge. Can't you run the air through some desiccant or something?
Use the Airfryer for 45min @ 190-200deg C tops and easy. The difficult part is preparation.
Stop giving my secrets away to the masses I was the only one I’ve ever seen do baking percentages with meat 😭😭
This is the way.
@@chefsteps it really is. I work at a rehab cooking for 25 people, so it would be a nightmare to try and figure out how much salt to add to 15lbs of chicken wings. .75 for bone in, 1% boneless works everytime
Do you wait for the pork belly to come up to room temp before air frying it?
No need to temper the belly. You can go straight from fridge to air fryer.
not having any luck finding a skewer tool like he is using; anyone have any ideas?
Avanti 13000 Pork Belly crisping tool.
It's a 3-prong sausage pricker from The Sausage Maker. Here's a link: www.amazon.com/TSM-3-Prong-Made-Sausage-Pricker/dp/B002L82SAO?tag=chefsteps02-20
@@chefsteps thank you for your timely response; I ordered one.
花 in this case doesn't mean flower but pattern. Like when Chinese describe flower patterns on garments originally
the chef just knows nothing about Chinese language😂
4 days of drying/prep before you even cook it? I'll just go buy some. lol
Wait. This guy was on ATK!
[insert Leo DiCaprio pointing at TV meme]
Don't u score it or leave it uncovered in the fridge salted overnight
all is great but i'd dip it in ketchup and bbq sauce and siracha
You do you!
I think it’s better than the shop and this is the best pork belly recipe but it really takes a lot of effort 😂
whats the brand of the puncturing tool?
It's a 3-prong sausage pricker from The Sausage Maker. Here's a link to purchase: www.amazon.com/TSM-3-Prong-Made-Sausage-Pricker/dp/B002L82SAO?tag=chefsteps02-20
I've not seen it with dipping salt, I don't think I could part with scallion-ginger sauce with this pork.
We've got a recipe for ginger-scallion sauce from Tim as well! www.chefsteps.com/activities/ginger-scallion-sauce
@@chefsteps I make it fairly regular already, so good!
I would say this is too much time processing of this kind of roast pork belly.The chief is so nervous how to cut the roast pork.He is not an expert cook.
Em Minas fazemos melhor, mais rápido e sem toda essa técnica. As vezes o simples o é o melhor caminho. Não desmerecendo o belo trabalho do chef, obviamente.
can you keep the leftover in the fridge and will it still be crispy?
Yes! Fully roasted pork belly can be wrapped in foil or refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 1 week. Reheat using the foil boat method (leaving all of the skin uncovered) on a wire rack set inside a sheet pan at 400 °F / 204 °C until pork is warmed through and skin is crispy, 15 to 20 minutes.
You can also freeze leftovers and reheat from frozen. You can either freeze leftovers in a single piece, or slice the pork belly into strips for 1-2 servings, and wrap and freeze those individually so you can reheat just the amount you want to serve each time. Reheat strips from frozen using the same foil boat method at 350-375 °F until pork is warmed through and skin is crispy. If the skin begins to char before the pork is fully warmed through, loosely cover skin with foil.
But most air fryers go up to 200ºC (basket ones I mean). I bought a Cosori Turbo which jumps up to 230ºC. I must say that this dish have been hard for me to achieve properly, and after the bunch of days it takes to finish it would be heart breaking if it fails.
Chef really likes having "no rhyme or reason" 😂
23 minutes and the only takeaway: dry the skin
If you near the chinese bbq restaurant go buy if better n not much morr expensive n you dont need to wait for 3day later your apertise might be change to bbq duck
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dammit ! is that how you cut it ? i been slicing mine, crackle on top, if i'm lucky 30% of my meat has crackle, the rest falls off hahaha
and when you were cutting the meat up, i noticed you put the crackle face down but you laid it onto the wet part of the chopping board, does that matter or not at that point? alright wish me luck tomorrow !!! hahaha
"There's no rhyme or reason to this" :D
Looks nice but Hot Thai Kitchen’s technique is easier and more available to regular people
How you treat your bunka knife hurts my soul
Music Budget = 1 song
and don't spend it all at one place!
If he wanted to demonstrate the right cut of pork belly, why did he choose one that was 90% fat?
what about drying it with a hairdryer?
It’s a good idea but I think it would be quite energy inefficient. I think it would also probably dry the surface quite quickly but it would take longer for the moisture from underneath to move to the surface and dry out.
Chef Marc Matsumoto air dried a whole chicken to crisp the skin using a fan in his fridge. It still takes a few hours or more so hair dryer aint good enough.
You’d be holding a hair dryer for a while, sadly. We did have good results with leaving a small fan in the refrigerator aimed at the skin’s surface, so the idea is sound.
You need to burn the skin then scrape it down. Then re oven. Thats the Cantonese pro do it.
Min 4 days to make one dish? Wow.
What is that tool? When I search for sausage skewer, I don't get anything similar in the results.
I have seen some chefs pour hot water or oil over the pork skin, apparently it makes it puff better. Have you tried this method combined with your method?
I've had good results doing that, used boiling water in my case. It makes the skin contract any dry out quicker in my experience
@@aL3891_ some people swear by that method so maybe it's worth combining that method with this video
We didn't test into this for this recipe. The amount of contraction and buckling from aggressive thermal shock might be a tough hurdle in this specific case. That’s the advantage of a lower, slower cook. The rate of contraction is more controlled-both in the meat and the skin, so you end up with a flatter, more even piece of pork. But you should definitely try blanching, if you’re not satisfied with the base recipe.
Sometimes I have my doubts about the "drying part", because there are a lot of videos of people who roast the pork from raw, they only poach them a few minutes, and they get good crackling. So I don't know what to think. Shortcuts do exist, it seems.
Here's a video, of a Michelin Star guy:
ua-cam.com/video/-rbwpEUFzOQ/v-deo.html