Serves
15
1
whole shoulder of pork with skin (7to 9 lbs)
12
garlic cloves, chopped
1
1.6 oz bottle fennel seeds
Salt
and freshly ground pepper
8
small dried chilies, crumbled
Juice
of 6 lemons
4
tbsp olive oil
Pan
Drippings
1
14-oz can chicken broth
Juice
of 2 lemons
Preheat
the oven to 450˚.
Score
the entire skin of the shoulder by slicing deeply through the skin and into the
meat. Continue scoring, making cuts ¼ inch apart from one another.
Place
the garlic, fennel seeds, salt and pepper to taste, and chilies in a food
processor. Pulse until all the seasonings are coarsely ground. Rub this mixture
all over the skin of the pork and into the cut areas to cover all the surfaces
of the meat.
Place
the shoulder on a rack in a roasting pan and roast for 30 minutes, or until
skin begins to crackle and brown. Loosen the shoulder from the bottom of the
pan and pour half the lemon juice and 2 tablespoons of the olive oil over the
pork.
Turn
the oven temperature down to 250˚ and roast the pork for 12 to 18 hours. The
pork becomes almost shredded, crispy on the outside and moist from the juices on
the inside. It’s ready when it is completely soft under the crisp skin. You can
tell by pushing with your finger; the meat will give and might even fall off
the bone. It will be cooked after 12 hours, but if you like it crispier, cook
it for closer to 18 hours. Baste occasionally with the remaining lemon juice
and olive oil.
For
delicious pan drippings, remove the meat from the pan. Pour off most of the
fat, leaving about 2 tablespoons in the pan. Place the roasting pan with all
the bits of meat stuck to the bottom on the stove over medium heat. Scrape the
bits as the pan heats up. When the pan gets good and hot, add the can of
chicken broth and the juice of 2 lemons. Deglaze the pan by scraping all the
bits from the bottom of the pan. Let the juices and the broth reduce for about
5 minutes. Spoon the sauce over the meat.
Editor’s
Note:
You may not get this far. I was forced to dump the chicken broth and lemon
juice into the pan with the pork still in it, as we gathered around, pulling
chunks of pork off the bone and dunking them. The sauce is incredible … it
literally melts away any worries you might have been harboring during the day.
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