The Best Way to Cook Pork (Confit and Rillettes)
00:00 Intro
00:45 Choosing the Pork Shoulder
01:17 Pork Shoulder Cooking Methods Overview
01:55 Braising Method (
03:05 Slow-Roasting Method
04:14 Confit Method
06:00 RECIPE STARTS HERE (Curing the Pork)
08:55 Cooking the Pork
10:51 Straining the Pork
11:51 Making Rillettes
13:20 Storing and Serving Rillettes
Chef John’s video that inspired this dish:
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CORRECTIONS: The salt amount I use in this video is very conservative. For a more intense flavor, use 1% of salt, not 0.8%. If you are making rillettes, you might want to add more salt during the final shredding and mixing with fat stage since cold things need more salt than hot. When you taste it in the warm state before dividing into jars, it should be slightly over-salted.
Note that the pork shoulder I work with comes with a huge fat cap. If yours doesn’t, you’ll either need to add some extra pork fat or olive oil.
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In the video my pork shoulder was 3433g (7.57 lb). Obviously, yours might be completely different, so use the percentages to calculate the other ingredients.
3433g boneless pork shoulder (100%)
27g salt (0.8%)
10g sugar (0.3%)
10g pimenton (0.3%)
5g black Pepper (0.15%)
40g whole peeled garlic cloves (1.1%)
180g sliced shallots (5%)
A small bunch of thyme
2 bay leaves
84g olive oil (2.5%)
Remove the fat cap from the pork and score it in a criss-cross pattern. Cut up the pork into 2 inch cubes, scoring any large chunks of fat. In a small bowl, mix the salt, sugar, pimenton, and pepper. Put the pork, fat cap, garlic, and shallots into a large bowl. Sprinkle all over with the salt mixture and mix well. Cover and let sit in the fridge overnight or up to 3 days.
Preheat the oven to 300F (150C) with a rack in the lower third.
Put a little olive oil into an oven safe pot (like a dutch oven). Arrange a layer of pork cubes fat side down. Add the remaining pork with all the aromatics and cover with the fat cap (if you don’t have a fat cap, arrange the top layer of pork fat side up). Cover the pot and bake for 4 hours or until the pork is fork tender.
Cool the pork in the fat until lukewarm. Strain reserving all the liquids and removing the bay leaves and thyme stems. Wait for the fat to rise to the top (about 5 min) and spoon off the fat and reserve. Store the pork, the juice, and the fat in the fridge for up to a week or freeze.
Crisp up the pork in a non-stick or cast iron pan before serving. Serving ideas are coming next week!
Rillettes:
Right after straining the pork, put as much meat as you want into a mixer bowl (in the video, I used 500g). Add 10% of the pork weight in juice (50g juice), and 10% of the pork weight in fat (50g fat). Whip with a paddle attachment until fluffy. Stuff into jars. Smooth the top. Top with fat. Refrigerate overnight before serving. Can be stored in the fridge for up to 2 weeks or frozen.
Toast some good bread (like baguette) in a little butter in a skillet. Spread the rillettes on top. Serve with whole grain Dijon mustard and cornichons.
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Lots of people are asking about the instant pot. My intuition tells me that's a bad idea for this dish, though to be fair I haven't tried it. On a pressure cooking setting, it might just burn because there is no liquid added. On slow cooking setting you won't get nearly as much flavor from the fat slightly caramelizing on top. But if you really want to try it, I would try slow cooking function on "high" setting for 5-6 hours or until the pork gets to the right consistency.
What would using browned butter instead of olive oil do? Are fat substitutions ok?
Will this work if cooked with Sous Vide?
Excellent video, wonderfully explained information.
Hi helen, i am trying this out tomorrow! 😊
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Dear Helen, I'm from Southern California and the closest we have to a charcuterie board is Hillshire Farms' prepackaged "Small Plates." I had the chance to try a charcuterie board in Boston and it was one of the most delicious things I have tasted. I have no idea if you imparted your knowledge onto their menu, but I am so grateful for all your tips and your recipes so I can make it myself back home!
I made this recipe this week. I have to confess that I didn´t put the pork in a regular oven, but a wood oven, but I didn´t do anymore ajustments to the recipe, so my pork ended up more toasted and without any gravy, just some fat, so I decided not to make the rillettes but rather try out the other recipes suggested in the other video. The salad turned out delicious, although I didn't put fennel, bacause I do not appreciate it that much, I forgot the shallot and didn't feel like chopping herbs. I only had parsley and I didn´t think it would bring to much to the salad. Still I must say that the pork is delicioius, I will make it again with some ajustments, because I really want to use the wood oven. I would like to thank you for the recipe, I love your channel. Thanks
Can you confit a whole duck?
went great on my first try, definitely going to be my go to for pork
This is, by far, the best way to make pork! So tender and flavorful! I used it to make burritos, tacos (for those I seasoned it up with chopped onions, red and orange bell peppers, and my own blend of taco seasoning), as well as sandwiches and salad toppings. Very versatile, and practically melts in your mouth. Thank you for such clear instructions! Heading to the kitchen now to make more.
This looked so yummy. I’m saving this video and I’m going to make it. Thank you so much Helen. I love watching your videos.
Maybe some video about ultimate meat terrine? It will be nice!
Can you cook this in a crock pot overnight instead?
I’m from Texas and we only smoke pork shoulders here. This is the way
This was amazing!! Can’t wait to do it again.
Hi Helen: At the end you stated that it is important to chill it overnight. My question is should it be SERVED chilled? Any time that I have had it in a restaurant, it has always been served at room temperature. Is the chilling just for flavours to develop, or do you prefer to serve it chilled? Oh; and "Thank You" for your amazing videos!
This is amazing. The pork confit was amazing, right out of the pot and the Rillettes is a great find. Turned out good and entire family enjoyed it. I have always liked pâté and braunschweiger/liverwurst but no one else would eat it. Now we can all enjoy this together. Looking forward to making the other 2 recipes in the coming days. Thanks!
My Inner Geek loves that you provided percentages for the salt/sugar etc. The pepper you put as a fixed 5g, this'd be about .15% by weight.
Do you recommend a dutch oven for it? No other kind of pot that can fit the oven? How big is your dutch oven?
love it!
I followed this recipe and loved it! I have to say though I making the Rillette there is no way you used 50 grams of both fat and juice! I measured it out and it was totally soupy when I used that match for 500 grams of pork! Did you mean 5grams of both? That looks like what was added in the video.
I’ve watched a few of your videos now and I really enjoy your content. I’m learning a lot. Question when I make the pork rillettes instead of the fat cap in order to preserve it, could I put it into mason jars and then use my chambered vacciler in order to seal it?
I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL!!
Would you use slow cooker?
I have a food safety question. Is it safe to leave the pork at room temperature that long, or is it supposed to be refrigerated? You didn't mention putting it in the refrigerator, and you said to let it get lukewarm so I assume it stays at room temperature, but I wanted to make sure. Thank you I can't wait to try this!
Helen you're great.
That was awesome!
This looks so hecking good… I wish I had enough money to buy that much meat
You're awesome!
The only times I have gotten pork shoulders was when there were some huge ones on sale because they were so big (25 lbs or so each) I crammed it in my roasting pan which probably should have been larger and baked it for 14 hours. By the time it was finished the meat was swimming in its own fat at least 3/4 of the way up the pan. I agree with your idea that the fat makes it better. I even had a whole bunch of fat left over for other things.
Why you whispering?
Chef John zinger!
Brilliant as always but added sugar, no thanks.