Join Melissa Miranda as she makes pork tenderloin sandwiches with a fish sauce salsa verde on Hawaiian rolls. Don't be intimidated by the tenderloin cut -- it's your friend! It cooks extremely quickly and comes out beautifully tender, as long as you don't overcook it.
Click here to learn how to clean your cast iron: https://youtu.be/JZ4p6anpy0s
Harissa paste gives this braised pork shoulder its spicy, garlicky flavor. Contributing food editor Alison Roman demonstrates how to make this simple main dish and a crunchy herb salad to go along.
Join Chris Morocco as he makes sweet and saucy pork chops. For weeknight-friendly pork chops that cook in record time but are still succulent, we turn to an unexpected ingredient: sugar. A pinch sprinkled over the surface helps the chops caramelize and develop a golden-brown crust before the meat has a chance to dry out. For max juiciness, we finish cooking them in a buttery-tangy pan sauce that then gets spooned over every slice.
From a single pig to eight delicious creations–butcher John Ratliff of Ends Meat joins Bon Appétit to demonstrate the full transformation of pork through nose-to-tail butchery. Watch as one pig becomes bacon, hot dogs, dry-aged pork chops, ham, coppa, guanciale, salami, and terrine, through centuries-old techniques of curing, smoking, and fermentation.
Forget about every canapé or thing-on-a-stick that you were planning to serve at your party. Forget about platters. Forget about, like, toothpicks. All you need is a smoked bone-in ham. Order a good one, score, glaze, and bake it. Put that ham on a big wooden board, provide a blade with which to slice it, and a vehicle with which to devour it .Then watch your guests turn into a pack of wolves, leaving you with just a bone…and the memory of the best holiday party ever.
Read more: Our Best Baked Ham Recipes for Every Pork-Loving Occasion
Rick Martinez is back in the Test Kitchen to make double-pork carnitas with corn tortillas and green pico de gallo. That's right, these carnitas use two kinds of pork (shoulder and belly) because one is definitely not enough.
Check out the recipe here: https://weightloss-tricks.today/entertaining-style/parties/article/carnitas-party%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="StackedRatingsCardWrapper-ghvskg ffDePc SummaryCollectionGridSummaryItem-HgAzv kSXTun search_result_item-614c889802c4327d9f5d6038">
Join Chef Harold Villarosa as he demonstrates the proper technique for slicing different cuts of beef, poultry, and pork. Unkle Harold lays out the hows and whys behind serving up different kinds and cuts of meat, relaying all the know-how you need to present your proteins like a pro.
These easy shrimp tacos provide you with your new go-to party trick: massaging red onion in lime juice with a little bit of salt until they're softened. You'll soon use them on everything.
Butcher and author Bryan Mayer shows Bon Appetit how to butcher an entire pig at Wyebrook Farm and explains every cut of pork. There are five sections of the pig that yield edible cuts: pork shoulder, pork belly, pork loin, pork butt (or ham), and the head. From those sections, the butcher can offer sausage, bacon, spare ribs, brisket, ribs, steaks, pork chops, pork cutlets, coppa, presa, secreto, and tenderloin.
Join Gaby in the Bon Appétit Test Kitchen as she makes Tortilla de Papas. Salting the potatoes ahead of time draws out some of their liquid and guarantees they’re well seasoned, but skip this step if you want some of that moisture when you take a bite!
Check out the recipe here: https://weightloss-tricks.today/recipe/tortilla-de-patatas%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="StackedRatingsCardWrapper-ghvskg ffDePc SummaryCollectionGridSummaryItem-HgAzv kSXTun search_result_item-58bf2b65c75edc1f397b291f">
Produced by Bon Appétit with Swanson® | A few ingredients can go a long way. And in this easy-to-make dish, Bon Appétit executive chef Mary Nolan shows us how big flavors are coaxed out of pepperoncinis, shallot, garlic, browned pork and Swanson® Natural Goodness® Chicken Broth.
Here are five massive sandwiches you need to try. Eat a Tipsy Texan at the Franklin Barbecue, a Pastrami and Cole Slaw sandwich at Langer's in Los Angeles, a Roast Pork Hoagie at John's Roast Pork in Philadelphia, and more from around the US.
The key to this onion-garlic dip is in the slow roast for the perfect caramelization. You want to keep the onions and garlic in a mound rather than spreading them out. This will help this steam and soften and not caramelize too quickly.
There’s no centerpiece quite as dramatic than a salt-baked fish. It’s all about making a tight seal with the salt crust—it forms a mini-oven around the fish, keeping the flavors of the aromatics inside. Add just enough water to the salt until it feels like very wet sand. To test it out, pack a little in the palm of your hand; if it holds its shape without cracking, you’re good to go. (If not, add more water.)