Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Pork Braised in Milk









Cathy combined two recipes Pan-roasted Pork Chops with Olives and Sambuca-Braised Fennel found in our blog of March 22, 2018 (Click the date to get the recipe) and Pork al Latte with Fennel Pollen and Crispy Sage. It was a great rendition of this dish. We have made Pork Braised in Milk many times. We had recently eaten it a ChiSpacca and decided to use Nancy's recipe(s). We purchased an injector and injected brine directly into the meat to make it even more moist. We used Fennel as a side along with Polenta. This made for a great Winter meal.

Pork al Latte with Fennel Pollen and Crispy Sage
Chi Spacca Cookbook
Serves 4 to 6
 
For the Pork
1 center-cut pork loin (about 4 pounds)
1½ teaspoons kosher salt
1½ teaspoons sugar
1 recipe Fennel Rub (page 20)
2 lemons
1½ cups whole milk, plus more as needed
2 medium shallots, peeled and sliced ¼ inch thick lengthwise
2 bay leaves (preferably fresh)
 
For the Sage
2 cups olive oil, or as needed
½ cup fresh sage leaves
½ teaspoon kosher salt
 
For Serving
1 tablespoon fennel pollen
 
Pork braised in milk is a classic Italian preparation and results in juicy, flavorful meat. There is lemon in the braising liquid, and the combination of the milk with the acid causes the milk to form curds. Ryan likes to say it looks like a failed culinary school assignment, but i think the pillowy curds look pretty in a very rustic way. This recipe calls for a pork loin, a large cut of meat that becomes tender when braised; this is not to be confused with the smaller, thinner tenderloin, which should be grilled or seared, rather than slow cooked.
 
We brine this roast before grilling it. Brining refers to infusing meat with a solution usually consisting of water and either salt or a combination of salt and sugar. You can brine meat by soaking it in the solution or by injecting the solution into the meat. (We do the latter.) Brining tenderizes the meat, makes it juicier, and also seasons it on the inside. It is especially important with thick cuts of meat where the seasoning on the outside will have no effect whatsoever on the inside, and pork in particular, which can tend to be dry. To brine this roast, you will need a flavor injector, an inexpensive gadget that is available wherever cooking supplies are sold. The finished pork is seasoned with fennel pollen, a fragrant powder harvested from wild fennel in the hillsides of Tuscany and Umbria. You can find it at specialty food markets and online sources.
 
Ask your butcher for a (4-pound) bone-in pork loin roast with a nice fat cap. Pork loin does not have much marbling of fat in it, so the fat cap is essential.
 
You will need an extra-large platter to serve the pork on.
 
To prepare the pork, place it in a large baking dish or on a baking sheet.
Combine the salt, sugar, and ¼ cup water in a small bowl to make a brine and whisk to dissolve the salt and sugar. Fill the flavor syringe with the brine. Entering through the side of the roast, inject half of the brine deep into the center of the roast. Remove the syringe and inject the remaining brine deep into the roast through the other side. Pat the roast dry with paper towels. Reserve 2 teaspoons of the fennel rub and sprinkle the remaining rub evenly over the pork. Use the meat to mop up any fallen rub and press the rub into the meat with your hands to adhere. Set aside for 30 minutes to 1 hour to let the seasonings penetrate the pork and for the pork to come to room temperature.
 
Adjust the oven rack to the center position and preheat the oven to 325°F.
Cut off and discard the top and bottom of the lemons at the point where you can see the flesh. One at a time, place the lemons upright on a cutting board and cut down the sides at the point where the pith meets the flesh,
following the natural curve of the fruit to remove the pith along with the peel. Discard the pith and peels. Turn the lemons on their sides and cut along one of the membranes toward the center of the fruit. Working your way around the lemons, cut along both sides of each membrane to
release all the segments from the cores.
 
Combine the lemon segments, milk, shallots, bay leaves, and the reserved 2 teaspoons fennel rub in a large Dutch oven and stir to combine. Place the pork in the Dutch oven and add more milk if needed to come halfway up the sides of the pork. Warm the milk over medium-high heat until begins to bubble around the edges, about 5 minutes. Turn off the heat.
 
Roast the pork in the oven for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until an instant-read temperature registers 125°F when inserted deep into the side of the pork. Remove the pork from the oven and set aside for 10 to 20 minutes to allow the pork to rest and for the milk to form curds as it cools.
 
While the pork is braising, to fry the sage, pour enough oil into a small saucepan
to fill it 1½ to 2 inches deep. Fasten a deep-fry thermometer, if you have one, to the side of the pan and heat the oil over medium-high heat until the thermometer registers 350°F or a pinch of salt sizzles when dropped into the oil. While the oil is heating, create a bed of paper towels and have a slotted spoon or mesh strainer handy. Turn off the heat, add the sage leaves, and fry for about 30 seconds, until the leaves are crispy but not brown. Use the slotted spoon or strainer to lift the sage leaves out of the pan and transfer them to the paper towels to drain. Sprinkle with the salt. Let the oil cool and strain it into a container; cover and reserve the oil to cook with another time.
 
Remove the pork loin from the Dutch oven and place it on a cutting board with the bones facing up.
 
Using a slotted spoon, gently scoop the curds out of the pan, letting the liquid drain for a few seconds before gently dropping the curds onto an extra-large platter. When you have harvested all of the curds, slice the pork. With your knife parallel to and resting alongside the rib bones, slide your knife down the bones to release the loin, leaving as little meat on the bones as possible. Slice the loin ½ inch thick. Slide your knife under the slices and lay them fanned out over the curds so the curds are peeking out around the slices. Cut between the rib bones and pile them on the platter for people to gnaw on. Drizzle the liquid left in the pan over and around the pork slices and bones to moisten them. Sprinkle Sprinkle the fennel pollen and scatter the sage leaves over the pork.

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