Pork Rib Guazzetto

  1. Trim the fat off the ribscountry ribs often have the fat cap from the loinleaving only a thin layer on the meat.
  2. Lift the soaked porcini out of the soaking liquid and squeeze the juices back into it.
  3. Chop the mushrooms into small pieces; strain the soaking liquid (see box, page 140) and keep it in a warm spot.
  4. Film the pan bottom with the olive oil, and set over medium-high heat.
  5. When quite hot, lay the ribs in and let them sear for a couple of minutes in place.
  6. When theyre colored and slightly crusted, turn them all to another side and brown well.
  7. Turn after 2 minutes and continue to brown evenly all over, about 8 to 10 minutes in all.
  8. Thick ribs should be seared on the narrow sides as well as the cut surfaces.
  9. Keep the pan as hot as possible without burning.
  10. Remove the crusty ribs to a bowl or a platter and sprinkle 1/4 teaspoon salt all over them.
  11. Immediately drop the minced bacon into the pan.
  12. Lower the heat and stir the bacon around the pan bottom, rendering the fat and scraping up some of the meat crust before it burns, for about 2 minutes.
  13. When the bacon is rendered and sizzling, dump in the minced onions, stir well, and get them sizzling and starting to sweat.
  14. Stir in the celery, shredded carrots, and chopped porcini, and cook over medium-high heat until the vegetables are wilted and golden, stirring often, about 5 minutes.
  15. Clear a hot spot, plop in the tomato paste, toast it for a minute on the pan bottom, then blend it into the vegetables.
  16. Drop in the strips of orange rind and stir them in.
  17. Return the ribs to the pan (with the juices theyve released) and toss them with the vegetables for a minute to heat them all over.
  18. Pour in the wine, raise the heat, and let it boil until almost completely evaporated, turning the ribs over and over in the pan.
  19. Pour in the mushroom-soaking water and enough hot broth just to cover the ribs.
  20. Drop in the bay leaves and the rosemary sprig, submerge them, and bring the liquids to a boil.
  21. Cover the pan and lower the heat slightlycheck and adjust it to maintain steady perking of bubbles all over the surface of the sauce.
  22. Cook for about 2 1/2 hours or more, until the meat is so tender its falling off the bonealmost falling apart.
  23. During that time, check the pot every 20 minutes or so, and add hot broth in small quantities (1/2 to 1 cup) just to keep the rib meat covered.
  24. If the level is falling much faster, lower the heat to slow the evaporation; if the sauce level isnt dropping at all, raise the heat and set the cover ajar to speed its concentration.
  25. When the meat is sufficiently tender, turn off the heat.
  26. Taste the sauce and adjust the seasonings.
  27. If youll be using the sauce right away, spoon off the fat from the surface.
  28. (Otherwise, wait until youve chilled the sauce and just lift off the solidified layer of fat.)
  29. Let the ribs cool completely in the sauce, then with a wide spatula lift them out whole and set them on a platter.
  30. Pick out the bay leaves, herb stems, and strips of orange rind and discard; also retrieve any rib bones or meat pieces that may have broken off during the long cooking.
  31. With your fingers, or a fork, tear or shred just enough pork into rough bite-size pieces, until you have a quantity thats equal to the volume of sauce in the pota one-to-one ratio of sauce to shredded meat.
  32. This is enough for a traditional guazzetto, which should have the character of a meat-laden sauce rather than a meat stew.
  33. Fold and stir the pork pieces into the sauce.
  34. The traditional way to serve this guazzetto is to dress the pasta with the sauce and shredded meat for the first course, then serve the remaining whole ribs with vegetables for the second course.
  35. If you have meaty ribs left, shred the meat to toss in salads, fill sandwiches, use for ravioli stuffing, or make a pork-rib hash for breakfast.
  36. Or reserve the whole ribs and meat and, when ready to eat, reheat under the broiler until crisp like spare ribs and serve with salad.
  37. Use the guazzetto now or chill it thoroughly.
  38. Store for several days in the refrigerator, or freeze it, in measured amounts for different dishes, for use within a few months.
  39. Dry and fresh pastas
  40. Gnocchi
  41. Risotto
  42. In baked pastas
  43. To fill and dress ravioli
  44. To top polenta and pasticciata

countrystyle pork, porcini, extravirgin olive oil, salt, bacon, onion, stalks celery, carrot, tomato paste, orange rind, red wine, hot turkey broth, bay leaves, rosemary, freshly ground black pepper, saucepan

Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/pork-rib-guazzetto-384448 (may not work)

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