What better reason to cook a mound of pork, than to cook it for your friends? Not my first choice for a birthday dinner, but okay - I'm open minded...
I ordered the required belly for pickup 3 days in advance of the meal, and it took 2 days to come in to our butcher. They only sell the whole belly, from which I was told would yield 6 pounds approx. Perfect, exactly as the recipe called for. Wrong! Try 14 pounds. That belly was huge. We cut off a chunk, and may make some bacon with it, alas, what to do with 8 extra pounds of pork belly...but you also need to order a 2-3 lb boneless, centre cut pork loin.
There is a lot of assembly required for this meal, and planning. The recipe says to start at least 24 hours ahead. I am the queen of getting my heart set on a recipe, and realizing at dinner time, I actually needed WAY more time to prep the dish. I think this problem stems from not actually reading recipes completely...this is not my type of thing, so it's great that Greg stick handles this. I've already managed to contribute to messing up the meal by ordering the wrong quantities of pork...so as per most meals, I stick to the sidelines and enjoy a gin and tonic made with the best combo - Hendrick's Gin and Fentiman's Tonic. My role here, other than drinking, is to toast the 3 tbsp of fennel seeds and 2 tbsp of crushed chili flakes...very important component right? They are nice and done when they are fragrant in the pan, always using low heat, only about a minute. Then grind these spices with 2 tbsp fresh sage, 1 tbsp fresh rosemary, and 3 cloves of minced garlic.
This belly is like having the biggest slab of bacon on your counter. You have to have it skin side down, to score it in a checkerboard pattern. Then, flip it skin side up, and poke dozens of holes through the skin. Get out your trusty meat mallet and pound the skin for 3 minutes to tenderize (this helps with crispiness). Arrange the loin down the middle of the belly. Season generously with (kosher) salt, and rub the loin and belly with the fennel/chili mixture, and top with orange slices.
Next comes a hard part (well okay, this would be hard for me, maybe not for others). Roll the belly around the loin, tie crosswise with kitchen twine at half inch intervals. Move the roast to a wire rack set in a rimmed baking sheet. This was the main assembly part, that whole visual part I commonly fail at. Nothing to do with the gin at all. This prepared roast then sits in your fridge for one to two days, which allows the skin to air dry.
Before cooking, this puppy needs to be brought back up to room temperature, which will take about two hours. You can preheat the oven to 500 degrees, and season the roast. Put the roast in the oven, on the rack and baking sheet, turning once, for 40 minutes. Reduce to 300 degrees and roast, turning the pan occasionally. The meat should read 145 degrees when you remove it from the oven. This will take one and a half to two hours. If the skin doesn't get crispy, the recipe recommends increasing the heat to 500 and roasting for ten more minutes. It should be rested for ten minutes before serving. This allows the juices in the, meat to redistribute, rather than just pouring out as soon as you cut it up. Resting is important, because no one wants a plate of blood, do they?
We actually rested the meat for about an hour - just kept it aside covered in some tin foil. For a group of 15-20, this worked well. We served it with a quince aioli and two side salads, one a frisee salad and the other an arugula salad (from the garden). Even though the meal isn't too rich, it's still nice to have those greens to cut it. This was a big hit with the group, and what little amount we had left was great for sandwiches with dijon and arugula.....delish!!