Sunday Collards
- 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil, peanut oil, or canola oil
- 1 smoked ham hock or smoked hog jowl or 1/4 pound slab bacon, diced
- 8 cups water
- 3 dried chile peppers or 1 tablespoon crushed red pepper flakes
- 1 tablespoon kosher salt
- 3 3/4 pounds collard greens (about 72 leaves, or 3 bunches), ribbed, washed, and cut into 1-inch-wide strips
- Pour the oil into an 8-quart stockpot over medium-high heat and swirl it around so it covers the bottom.
- Score the ham hock with a small sharp knife, and when the oil begins to shimmer, set it in the pot.
- Sear the hock all over as best you can and allow it to render some fat, about 6 minutes (since a hocks shape is so oblique, it will become spottily browned, but that is fine).
- Pour the water into the pot; it will hiss and pop for a few seconds.
- Add the chiles and salt and bring to a boil over high heat.
- Reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer for 30 minutes, until the stock is deeply flavored with smoke and spiciness.
- Add a few handfuls of the collards to the pot.
- The greens will float on the surface, so stir them frequently, submerging them with the spoon, until they have turned a bright Kelly green (3 to 5 minutes) and become floppier and more compact, so you can add more handfuls.
- Continue adding handfuls of collards, stirring and submerging them, until all the greens are in the pot (6 to 10 minutes).
- Turn the heat to low and simmer very gently for 1 hour.
- The greens will be a very dark matte green and completely tender.
- Place on plates with a slotted spoon, and pass a cruet of Pepper Vinegar at the table.
- Killer Leftover-Collard Greens Egg Drop Soup:
- We save leftover collard greens in their liquor in the refrigerator, because with strategic additions of canned tomatoes, beans, onions, or potatoes, they become the foundations for terrific soups.
- Our hands-down favorite is collard greens egg-drop soup, which we make by reheating leftover greens and liquor in a large saucepan over medium-high heat and gently cracking into them 2 eggs for every 2 cups of leftover greens and liquor (one large serving will be exactly that size).
- We simmer the soup until the eggs are just poached, about 8 minutes.
- If you prefer your yolks made harder, you can continue cooking the soup until the eggs are done to your liking, about 3 minutes for a yolk with a hard exterior and a soft center 5 minutes for a yolk that is completely hard-cooked.
extra virgin olive oil, ham hock, water, chile peppers, kosher salt, collard greens
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/sunday-collards (may not work)