Quick Salt Pork Recipe (2024)

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There are few ways easier to preserve pork.

By

Chichi Wang

Quick Salt Pork Recipe (1)

Chichi Wang

Chichi Wang wrote a variety of columns for Serious Eats including The Butcher's Cuts, in addition to other stories. Born in Shanghai and raised in New Mexico, Chichi took her degree in philosophy but decided that writing about food would be more fun than writing about Plato.

Learn about Serious Eats'Editorial Process

Updated August 09, 2018

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Quick Salt Pork Recipe (2)

Why It Works

  • Though salt pork is usually made with trimmings of shoulder or belly, use whatever scraps and cuts of meat you have on hand.
  • Cured for just 10 days or so, the salt pork can be frozen and taken out at a moment's notice as needed.

Sometimes I open my freezer and try to make sense of the chaos in there. Cooks wiser and more responsible have all kinds oflogical ways to organize their lardersand freezers, with label makers and permanent pens, with airtight plastic bags and containers.

My system, if can even be called that, is all in my head. For instance, I know that the unmarked red plastic bag with a large hunk of what appears to be pork is in fact the Boston butt of a shoulder I broke down a few months ago, and it is sitting next to a half-eaten apple pie with a lard crust, a small plastic water bottle I filled with turkey stock, and a quarter of a block of firm tofu.

It is not, in other words, an inviting freezer filled with ready-to-use items. So once every few months I take out most of what's in there and try to cope with the mess.

My counter overflowed with organs and bones. Even after I finished taking the grit from gizzards, trimming fat from sheets of skin, and breaking down racks of ribs, there were still shoulders and legs to break down and tails and claws to dispense. I threw most of the goods into a large pot of fat for confit, which is always what I do when I don't know want to think or plan ahead.

Quick Salt Pork Recipe (3)

Along the way I had been trimming off odds and ends to even out bellies, shoulders, and ribs. By the end of my organizing frenzy I accumulated a few handfuls of nicely marbled, albeit irregularly shaped hunks of meat. At a butcher shop these would be scraps for sausage and ground meat. But a much simpler way to deal with those bits and pieces, especially if you do not possess a meat grinder, is toturn everything into salt pork.

Most culinary traditions that use a lot of pork have some version of salt pork. There arefew ways easier to preserve porkthan to toss some salt into a container with meaty hunks and wait until the pork is salty and appreciably hardened.

Back in the day, salt pork was so salty and rigid that, like hard tack, it required no refrigeration at all and could be taken on long journeys without risk of spoilage. Salt pork is something I'd pack with me if I were embarking on the Oregon Trail.

"Just one little chunk can go a long way towards flavoring your entire dish with meaty depth."

Today we use salt pork as a flavor enhancer rather than a sustaining life force, so there's no need to go overboard with the salt.Cured for just 10 daysor so, the hunks of pork can be frozen and taken out at a moment's notice for all your winter stewing needs. Just one little chunk can go a long way towards flavoring your entire dish with meaty depth. I toss a chunk or two intobean and kale stews, Bostonbaked beans, and impromptucassoulets. Beans and salt pork, in other words, are companionable items to have in your soup pot.

Though salt pork is usually made with trimmings of shoulder or belly, it is in keeping with the spirit of salt pork touse whatever scraps and cuts of meat you have on hand. There's meat in the legs and hocks that you may want to square off, there's meat in the head that you may not need for headcheese, there's flesh around the neck that can be trimmed down, and so forth. Once you've collected enough scraps,simply dredge them in salt and let time do its deed.

As always, in working with cured or fermented products, follow your nose when it comes to concerns of spoilage. Check on your chunks of pork once every two days to be safe: The meat should have a sweet aroma after curing.

November 2010

Recipe Details

Quick Salt Pork Recipe

Prep10 mins

Cure336 hrs

Total336 hrs 10 mins

Serves4 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 pound porkscraps from belly, shoulder, and beyond, cut into 2-inch chunks

  • 2 tablespoons salt

  • 1 tablespoon sugar

  • Herbs, such as thyme and bay leaf, optional

Directions

  1. Toss pork, salt, and sugar in a large bowl. If using herbs, add herbs into the bowl. Transfer to a plastic container or bag and refrigerate 5 to 7 days. If scraps are smaller than 2 inches, curing process may take less time. Toss scraps to redistribute the cure. The pork will have given off liquid. Cover and refrigerate for 5 to 7 more days.

  2. Rinse scraps and pat dry. Take care to blot excess moisture. Refrigerate for 1 to 2 weeks, or freeze for several months for longer storage.

Notes

This recipe can be scaled up or down easily depending on how much pork you have.

  • Pork
Nutrition Facts (per serving)
257Calories
17g Fat
3g Carbs
21g Protein

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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 4
Amount per serving
Calories257
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 17g22%
Saturated Fat 6g30%
Cholesterol 76mg25%
Sodium 716mg31%
Total Carbohydrate 3g1%
Dietary Fiber 0g0%
Total Sugars 3g
Protein 21g
Vitamin C 1mg3%
Calcium 22mg2%
Iron 1mg5%
Potassium 380mg8%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.

(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

Quick Salt Pork Recipe (2024)
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