From pulses to pulled pork: Yotam Ottolenghi’s slow-cooking recipes (2024)

Slow cooking always feels so right at this time of the year. With windows firmly closed, there are few things I like more than getting something going on the stove or in the oven hours before it’s due to be eaten. It does wonders for what’s being cooked and also feels like such a “job done”. The thing I love most, though, with all those windows closed, is the smell that spreads and builds throughout the house. The first bite might be with the eye, but it’s the smell of a dish on which the anticipation is built.

Roast pork shoulder with quick carrot pickle and sticky rice (pictured top)

This works very well when you need to feed a crowd. The rice is the perfect canvas for the flavourful pork and its roasting juices. Radishes or another crunchy vegetable would make a good substitute for the carrots in the pickle.

Prep 30 min
Marinate 3 hr+
Cook 5 hr 12 min
Serves 8

2½ tsp fennel seeds, lightly crushed in a mortar
100ml oyster sauce
1 tsp chilli flakes
2 tsp soft light brown sugar
50g fresh ginger
, peeled and coarsely grated
45ml sweetened rice vinegar
½ tsp ground star anise
½ tsp freshly cracked black pepper
Salt
2.2kg pork shoulder
, skinless and boneless with the fat left on top
400g sticky rice, soaked in cold water for an hour, then drained well
8 tbsp (30g) coriander leaves, with soft stems attached

For the carrot pickle
120ml sweetened rice vinegar
4 tsp maple syrup
½ tsp salt
4 large carrots
, peeled and julienned – use a mandoline, if you have one (600g)
7 spring onions, trimmed and sliced into thin rounds (60g)

First make the marinade. Put the fennel seeds, oyster sauce, chilli flakes, brown sugar, ginger, vinegar, star anise, pepper and three-quarters of a teaspoon of salt in a 30cm x 20cm x 8cm-deep baking dish. Mix well, then lay the pork joint in the dish and rub it all over with the marinade. Cover loosely with foil and leave to marinate at room temperature for at least three hours (or, if you’re getting ahead, put it in the fridge overnight, in which case take it out of the fridge at least an hour before roasting, to give it time to come up to room temperature first).

Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas 4. Lift off the foil cover, pour 450ml room temperature water into the dish, then replace the foil, this time tightly. Roast in the oven for five hours, basting the meat every 30 minutes during the last two hours of cooking. By the end, you should be left with about 200ml liquid at the bottom of the pan, so if need be top up with a splash more water.

Turn up the oven to 200C (180C fan)/390F/gas 6. Remove the foil lid (save it for later), baste the pork once more and return it to the oven for another 10-12 minutes, until the top is deeply browned in places and the meat is glossy.

Remove from the oven, lightly cover with the foil and leave to rest for half an hour.

Meanwhile, put the rice in a medium saucepan for which you have a lid, cover with 440ml cold water and add a teaspoon of salt. Bring up to a boil and, once simmering, turn down the heat to medium-low and cover loosely so some steam can escape. Cook gently for 20 minutes, then take off the heat and leave to sit, still covered, for 10 minutes.

About 10 minutes before serving, make the pickle. Put the vinegar, maple syrup and half a teaspoon of salt in a medium bowl and stir to combine. Add the carrots and spring onions, toss well to coat, then set aside.

To serve, gently pull apart and roughly shred the pork with two forks. Spoon the rice into bowls, top with some pork, spoon over some of the roasting juices and serve with the pickled carrots and coriander on the side.

Mung bean and barley khichree with spicy pine nut ghee and lime

This comforting one-pot meal is a south Indian dish traditionally made with rice and a mix of lentils. It has as many variations as its name has spellings (khichdi or kichri, to name just two). Here, the texture of the barley adds a nice bite. Feel free to swap the mung beans for any other lentil, such as puy, that retains its shape after cooking. To make the dish vegan, swap the ghee for olive oil.

Prep 20 min
Soak 1 hr+
Cook 1 hr 25 min
Serves 4-6

150g pearl barley
75g green mung beans
75g chana dal
170g ghee
(or olive oil)
Salt
3 onions
, peeled, halved and thinly sliced (400g)
1 cinnamon stick
3 fresh bay leaves
2 tsp cumin seeds
, lightly crushed in a mortar
40g ginger, peeled and finely grated
10g fresh turmeric, peeled and finely grated
200g chopped tinned tomatoes
8 tbsp (30g) coriander leaves
, with some soft stem attached, roughly chopped
2 limes, each cut into 4 wedges

For the spicy ghee
50g pine nuts
2 tsp black mustard seeds
, lightly crushed in a mortar
1 tsp ground kashmiri chilli (or paprika)
2 tsp chilli flakes

Put the barley, mung beans and chana dal in a medium bowl, pour over a litre and a half of boiling water, to cover, and set aside to soak for an hour. (Alternatively, if you want to get ahead, soak them in cold water overnight, then drain, wash under cold running water until it runs clear, then set aside to drain.)

Put 70g of the ghee in a large saute pan for which you have a lid on medium high heat. Once it’s melted and hot, add the onions, cinnamon, bay leaves and a quarter-teaspoon of salt, and cook, stirring occasionally, for 20-25 minutes, until the onions have softened and are lightly golden. Add the cumin seeds, ginger and turmeric, and cook for two minutes until fragrant, then stir in the tomatoes, the soaked and drained barley, mung beans and chana dal, a litre and a half of boiling water and a teaspoon and a quarter of salt. Cover the pan and leave to simmer, stirring occasionally at the beginning and more frequently at the end to prevent the mix from catching, for an hour, until most of the water has been absorbed and the khichree has a thin, porridge-like consistency. Set aside, still covered, for 10 minutes.

Meanwhile, make the spicy ghee. Put the remaining 100g ghee in a small saucepan on medium-high heat. Once it’s very hot, stir in the pine nuts and cook for a minute, until they are lightly golden. Off the heat, stir in the mustard seeds, kashmiri chilli, chilli flakes and an eighth of a teaspoon of salt.

Spoon the khichree into bowls. Divide the coriander and spicy ghee between the bowls and serve with the lime wedges on the side.

Slow-cooked carrots with hazelnuts and mozzarella

From pulses to pulled pork: Yotam Ottolenghi’s slow-cooking recipes (2)

Slow-cooking carrots in this way really intensifies their flavour, and brings out their natural, earthy sweetness. Try to get carrots that are roughly the same size, ideally about about 16cm long and 3-4cm wide at the thickest end. Serve alongside roast or poached chicken or salmon.

Prep 30 min
Cook 1 hr 40 min
Serves 4 as a side

6 medium-large carrots (850g), peeled and cut in half lengthways (700g net)
4 shallots (175g), peeled and cut in half lengthways (150g net)
6 garlic cloves, unpeeled, bashed lightly with the flat of a knife
4 sprigs fresh thyme
90ml olive oil
Salt

2 tbsp maple syrup
4 tsp lemon juice
125g buffalo mozzarella
, roughly torn
25g blanched hazelnuts, very well toasted and roughly chopped in half
10g basil leaves, roughly torn

Heat the oven to 140C (120C fan)/275F/gas 1. Put the carrots, shallots, garlic, thyme, oil and three-quarters of a teaspoon of salt in a large, ovenproof saute pan. Mix to combine, then roast for 90 minutes, stirring gently every half-hour, until the carrots are tender but not falling apart (the thicker parts should still have a slight bite).

Remove from the oven and turn up the temperature to 240C (220C fan)/475F/gas 9. Drizzle the carrots all over with the maple syrup and, once the oven has come up to temperature, return them to the hot oven for 10 minutes more, or until starting to colour in places (they won’t be overly browned). Remove and set aside to cool for five minutes, then stir in the lemon juice.

Sprinkle the mozzarella with a small pinch of salt. Transfer half the carrot mixture (including the shallots, garlic and thyme) to a large platter with a lip, arranging them so they’re all facing in the same direction, then scatter half the mozzarella on top. Repeat with the remaining carrot mixture and mozzarella. Spoon over any liquid from the pan, then scatter over the hazelnuts and basil and serve warm or at room temperature.

From pulses to pulled pork: Yotam Ottolenghi’s slow-cooking recipes (2024)

FAQs

Should I cut up pork shoulder before slow cooking? ›

Trim off any large pieces of fat from the outside of a 4 to 6 pounds boneless pork shoulder or butt (or 5 to 7 pounds bone-in), but leave small pieces and the interior fat. If using boneless pork, cut the pork into several large fist-sized pieces. If using bone-in, leave the pork as is, on the bone.

Can you overcook meat in a slow cooker? ›

Can you overcook something in a slow cooker? Slow cookers are specially designed to cook food for long periods of time, but yes, you can still overcook in a slow cooker if something is left on the wrong setting for longer than it's supposed to be.

Is pork best cooked slow? ›

The flavour of pork benefits from slow roasting, espeically in stews or casseroles that prevent the meat from drying out. That all-time favourite – pork belly – is one of the best and most popular cuts to slow roast.

Should you flip meat in a slow cooker? ›

There is no need to flip meat in a crock pot. In fact, I don't recommend trying it because it will be more hassle than it's worth. While it can be tempting to flip a roast in the name of even cooking, the crock pot takes care of that for you.

Should pulled pork be fat side up or down in crockpot? ›

Worgul recommends placing the pork in the slow-cooker fat side up. The fat will render thoroughly during the cooking process and by placing the meat fat side up, it makes it much easier to remove excess fat before serving. "The cooker will be nearly filled with fat and liquid after hours of cooking.

Is it better to slow cook pork on low or high? ›

The Slow Cooker as a Tool for Braising

You can even leave your house. Set the cooker to low; the high setting will boil the meat instead of braise it, so it's only a quicker trip to an undesirable outcome.

Is 4 hours on high the same as 8 hours on low? ›

Low: 7-8 hours to reach the simmer point. High: 3-4 hours to reach the simmer point. If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device.

What happens if you don't brown meat before a slow cooker? ›

Browning Is Better

And if you dredge the meat in flour before you brown it, your sauce will thicken up to make a gravy. You should always brown ground beef or any ground meat in a skillet before adding it to your slow cooker to prevent the meat from clumping up or from adding excess grease to your cooked dish.

Should pulled pork be covered in liquid in a slow cooker? ›

Your liquid should not cover your pork in the slow cooker: it should only come up about a quarter of the way up the sides. The pork will make more liquid as it cooks, and you need to leave room for that. And 10 hours later, this huge hunk of meat is tender and ready.

Why is my pork tough after slow cooking? ›

It's because you haven't let the collagen break down. Extend the cook time, make sure there's enough liquid and keep an eye on the dish.

Why is my slow-cooked pork not shredding? ›

If the pulled pork doesn't shred easily you either got the wrong cut of meat, or it is not done cooking. For best results, cook on low heat. If you must, this can be cooked on high for about 6 hours.

Should I sear pork before slow cooking? ›

Preparing the pork

I prefer to season the meat before adding it to the slow cooker with my favourite spices, along with salt and pepper. I also recommend browning the meat slightly prior to slow cooking which will help maximise the flavour. However, this is a step that can be left out if you don't have enough time.

Should you stir while slow cooking? ›

Should I stir ingredients in my Crockpot slow cooker while they're cooking? Although you may be tempted, resist the urge to check on the ingredients during the cooking process! Lifting the lid allows heat and steam to escape, which will cause you to have to increase the cooking time.

Do you remove bone from pork shoulder before slow cooking? ›

Remove any bones and large pieces of fat.

Does pork shoulder get more tender the longer it cooks? ›

Unlike the more lean tenderloin and chops, pork shoulder is an incredibly forgiving cut of meat. It becomes more tender as it cooks and benefits from a lengthy cook time, so even if it stays on the heat a few minutes too long, you won't suddenly end up with something dry or rubbery.

Do I cut the string off pork shoulder for pulled pork? ›

Remove and discard strings, fat, water, onions and grease remaining in pot. When pork roast is cool enough to handle, use a fork or your fingers to pull it apart until the entire roast is shredded.

Why is my pork shoulder still tough in the slow cooker? ›

If your meat is still tough, it may simply need more time for the collagen-rich connective tissues to break down fully. Ensure you follow recipe guidelines for cooking times but remember, these can vary depending on the specific cut and size of the meat. Finally, check if your slow cooker is on and hot.

References

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