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Pork adobo with rice

16 ratings

Like many Filipino dishes, pork adobo is cooked with dark sugar, vinegar and soy sauce, which are then reduced right down to coat the meat. Jasmine rice flavoured with pandan leaf is a great accompaniment. Serve with the mango atchara.

Nallaine Calvo, from Filippino food stall Kubo in Belfast, shared this recipe with me.

Ingredients

For the rice

Method

  1. Heat the vegetable oil in a wide frying pan over a medium heat. Add the pork belly and fry for about 5 minutes until browned on all sides. Add the onion, garlic, bay leaves and 1 tbsp black pepper and fry until the onion is translucent.

  2. Stir in the vinegar, dark soy sauce, fish sauce and sugar. Simmer over a low–medium heat, uncovered, for about 45 minutes until the pork is tender and the liquid has reduced to below the level of the pork.

  3. While the pork belly is cooking, make the rice. First rinse the rice in a bowl of cold water at least three times until the water runs clear, then drain. Put the chopped garlic into a frying pan with a little oil and fry until golden-brown. Set aside.

  4. Put the rice into a saucepan and cover with 500ml/½ pint water. Add the bay leaf, black pepper, pandan leaf, if using, and the browned garlic. With your hands, stir the rice to incorporate the aromatics.

  5. Place the rice pan over a medium-high heat, uncovered, and bring to a rolling boil. Once boiling, remove the pan from the heat, cover with a lid and set aside for 20–30 minutes, by which time the rice should be cooked. Remove the lid and fluff the rice with a fork before serving.

  6. Once the pork belly has been cooking for 45 minutes, turn the heat down low and continue to cook, stirring so the pork doesn’t stick to the pan, until the liquid is thick and coating the pork. The soy sauce makes this quite salty already, so taste and add more if required, then serve the pork with the rice.

Recipe Tips

Sugar cane vinegar is much used in Filipino cooking and can be bought in the UK, but if you don’t have any use Japanese rice vinegar.

Dark soy sauce is thicker than the standard stuff and, as it's sweeter and less salty, it makes quite a difference to the flavour of the dish.