Take a simple dinner shortcut for aromatic pork with Chinese five spice. Its blend of spices such as cinnamon and Sichuan peppercorns make a flavour-packed dish.
Prep:20 mins
Serves 5-6
1 tbsp Chinese five-spice powder3 tbsp soy sauce1 tbsp honey100ml Shaohsing rice wine or dry sherry2 tbsp malt vinegarthumb-sized piece of ginger, peeled and finely grated4 garlic cloves, finely grated½ red chilli, roughly chopped (optional)1-1.2kg piece of boneless pork belly, lightly scored all over1 tsp sunflower oil200ml chicken stock2 tsp cornfloursliced spring onions, chillies and roughly chopped coriander, to serve (optional)
STEP 1Mix together the five-spice powder, soy, honey, rice wine, vinegar, ginger, garlic and chilli. If you have time, pour the mixture into a shallow dish and sit the pork in the dish skin-side up, so only the meaty side is in the marinade and the skin stays dry. Salt the skin lightly and chill overnight if you have time, or for up to 24 hrs. (If you don’t have time to marinate the pork, skip this and move straight to step two.)STEP 2Heat the oven to 150C/130C fan/ gas 2. Pour the marinade (the excess if you’ve chilled the pork overnight) into a roasting tin. Sit the pork on top, skin-side up – it should fit snugly in the tin. Roast for 2 hrs. Remove from the oven, then lift the pork onto a board. Pour the fat from the tin into a bowl, then pour the juices through a sieve into a small pan. Wipe down the tin. The pork can be prepared up to this stage two days ahead and kept chilled.STEP 3Turn the oven up to 230C/210C fan/gas 8. Put the pork back in the tin, skin-side up, and brush the skin with the oil. Roast for 30-35 mins, basting with the reserved fat once or twice, until the skin has blistered and crackled. If the skin hasn’t crackled after 35 mins, slide the pork under a hot grill, but watch carefully to ensure it doesn’t burn. Lift the pork onto a board and leave to rest for a few minutes.STEP 4While the pork is still in the oven, add the stock to the pan with the roasting juices and bring to the boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for a few minutes, adding more soy or vinegar to taste, if you like. Mix the cornflour with 1 tbsp water to create a smooth paste. Stir this into the sauce and simmer until thickened. Keep warm on the lowest heat. Carve the pork into thick slices and serve with veg and the gravy, or cut into squares and top with spring onions, chillies and coriander, with the gravy alongside for dunking.