Lara Lee’s recipe for belly pork with pineapple adobo

Lara Lee’s recipe for belly pork with pineapple adobo
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Lara Lee’s recipe for belly pork with pineapple adobo
Author: Lara Lee
Published: Feb, 04 2025 08:00

A Filipino-style slow-cooked stew packed with pungent, salty and sweet-sour flavours. Lacquered cubes of tender pork belly and caramelised chunks of pineapple are the stars of this twist on adobo, the unofficial dish of the Philippines. A slow-cooked stew spiked with pepper, garlic and floral bay leaves, adobo’s signature flavour combination is vinegar and soy, giving it lick-smacking depth and complexity. There are 16 (yes, 16!) garlic cloves to give it some oomph, but if you are anti-peeling, reduce that number to eight.

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Prep 20 min. Cook 2 hr. Serves 4. 1 tbsp oil, such as vegetable, sunflower or peanut. 800g boneless pork belly slices, cut into 2cm cubes. 16 garlic cloves, peeled and bruised. 2 brown onions, peeled and chopped into 1cm chunks. 40g ginger, skin-on and minced or grated. 4 long red chillies, finely sliced. 240ml apple cider vinegar. 160ml soy sauce. 8 dried bay leaves. 1 tsp ground black pepper. 2 tbsp brown sugar. 1 large pineapple, skinned, cored and cut into 2cm chunks (about 500g).

4 spring onions, finely sliced, to garnish. Put the oil in a large, heavy-based pot on a medium-high heat. Cook half the pork in a single layer, turning occasionally, for eight to 10 minutes, until golden brown all over, then transfer to a bowl and repeat with the remaining pork. Return all the seared meat to the pot, add the garlic, onion, ginger and chillies, and cook, stirring occasionally, for eight to 10 minutes, until the onion has softened. Add all the remaining ingredients apart from the spring onions, bring to a boil, the turn down to a simmer, cover and cook for an hour and 20 minutes, until the pork is tender.

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