Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste

May 05, 2016 1 Comment

Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Serving Suggestion

See also Thai Red Curry with Prawns   Thai Red Curry in Young Coconut  Thai Fish Cakes   Crispy Pork Belly
This dish may never make it into the pages of Slimming World but I’ll do my calorie counting on another day :-) The crispy pork skin and the melting texture of the meat in the red curry paste is pretty close to food heaven for me. This is not a complicated dish, although it may look that way with the amount of photos in the recipe but that’s simply because I covered every step. I’m sure the once you have tried this you will agree it was worth the effort no matter how long it took!

The better the pork belly, the better it will taste. At a minimum, I would at least look for outdoor reared pork.
Ingredients. 1 piece of belly pork 5-700g, sea salt, vinegar, green beans, lime leaves, as ever, optional and available frozen in Chinese or other Asian stores. If you want to serve it with the Prik nam pla dipping sauce in the bottom right of the above pic you need Thai fish sauce, lime juice and a finely chopped chilli. Simply mix 2 tbps of fish sauce with the same amount of lime juice and add the chilli. Although we refer to this as a dipping sauce, in practice you drizzle a little of it over the dish according to taste.

Crispy pork belly in red curry paste ingredients
Use a sharp knife to score the skin of the pork lightly. I always find an art craft knife or Stanley knife best for this. Place pork in steamer and steam for 30 minutes
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste steam pork
Remove from steamer, allow to cool for 10 minutes and stab the skin all over with a sharp fork or skewer. Rub salt and vinegar into the skin.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste rub salt into pork skin
Slice underside as in picture. Rub salt and vinegar into meat.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste rub salt and vinegar into meat
Grill both sides on low for around 5 minutes to help remove some of the moisture.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Grill meat both sides
A strange looking arrangement I know! The purpose of these skewers is to stop the skin of the pork from touching the base of the wok which would prevent it crisping properly. A deep fat fryer would have done the job just as well but not everyone has one in their kitchen. Fry the skin side on low for 5 minutes.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Fry pork skin side down
Remove the skewers and turn and fry the meat side down on medium for 10 minutes.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Fry pork skin side up
Turn the meat again skin side down and cook until it's nicely browned as below. No need to worry about it touching base of wok now.
Remove meat from pan, drain and allow to cool and then slice as in picture below. My skewer arrangement did not work quite as well as I hoped, the center of the pork must have been touching the wok base a little as it has not bubbled up there as much as it should have done. This is much easier to do in a deep fat fryer!
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Slice pork
Slice pork again into smaller sections as below and set aside.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Slice pork smaller
Add a little oil to pan and brown the sides of the pork as below, remove from pan.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste brown pork sides
Add curry paste to pan and heat until it bubbles. Add 2 to 4 tablespoons of water to paste, depending on how liquid you want the sauce to be.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Add curry paste to pan
Add pork, green beans and sliced lime leaves to pan (if using) and cook through for a couple of minutes whilst stirring. Note. I like my green beans almost raw. If you prefer your beans more tender then best to steam them or simmer and drain before using. Don't be tempted to extend the cooking time for this stage of the dish to more than a couple of minutes or you will overcook it.
Crispy Pork Belly in Red Curry Paste Add pork and beans to curry paste
Serve and enjoy!
Crispy pork belly in red curry paste serving presentation 2
UPDATE. Comments box added.


1 Response

Olesya
Olesya

May 10, 2018

This recipe can make you so addictive to it! I cooked it twice within one week, it was that good!!! Easy to follow all suggestions. I did not have the skewers so I used an upside-down bowl that I put on the belly and then a very heavy iron cast casserole on the top of it, so it did make the belly flat.

Leave a comment

Comments will be approved before showing up.


Also in Recipe Blog

Serving Suggestion
Beef Short Ribs in Panang Curry Sauce

October 01, 2024 2 Comments

Have you ever tasted something so delicious that it feels like a culinary revelation? That's exactly how it feels to bite into a perfectly cooked beef short rib. I’m deeply in love with them, the rich slow cooked meat practically falls off the bone, leaving you craving for more. No wonder I’ve fallen head over heels for this underrated cut of meat. Gone are the days when you had to visit a specialty butcher to get your hands on beef short ribs as well, thanks to supermarkets like Sainsbury's ...

Continue Reading

Thai Curry Pie
Thai Curry Pie

July 26, 2024

My first confession is that that I never thought I would be sitting here writing a recipe for a Thai Curry pie, but times change and we change with them or stagnate. My interest was sparked on my first trip back to Bangkok after the pandemic, chicken curry puffs have long been a popular Thai snack but savoury pies, usually steak and kidney, were very much something that was restricted to the Bangkok expat pub scene. All that had changed, bake shops were springing up outside the traditional to...

Continue Reading

Prik Naam Pla, Thai dipping sauce.
Prik Naam Pla, Thai dipping sauce.

July 01, 2023 2 Comments

This is the essential Thai dipping sauce you see all over Thailand. An absolute must for the Pad Kaprow recipe but also used to spice up almost any dish, particularly grilled meats or similar. And for many Thais they can't think of eating a fried egg without some Prik Naam Pla to top it. More than anything, it sums up the Thai food tastes of sour sweet and salty. Spicy? Of course that also depends on what chillies you use for this, and if you're prepared to do the extra work of separating out...

Continue Reading

3319
Verified Reviews