This easy hands-off braise makes the perfect Sunday dinner and speedy weeknight dinners. Braised pork shoulder is a simple two-step process that, once in the oven, cooks unattended and fills the kitchen with hunger-inducing aromas.
Pork butt, pork shoulder, and picnic shoulder are basically the same cut. Despite the conflicting names, you can use them interchangeably. Adding to the confusion, pork butt or Boston butt is cut from the shoulder of the pig. Lore has it that New England butchers packed inexpensive cuts of meat into large barrels called butts for storage and transportation. Pork shoulder meat packed this way became known as pork butt and the name stuck.
These cuts are relatively inexpensive and they can be tough, needing lots of time to simmer slowly before turning silky and tender. It’s best to purchase the meat bone-in and skin-on to help keep it moist as it cooks.
A full bone-in pork butt is a formidable roast, often weighing in at 8 to 12 pounds. But you can find it sold in 2- to 3-pound hunks or ask a butcher to cut one for you. I like to keep the braise simple. Instead of adding lots of strong herbs or aromatics, this recipe relies on several heads of garlic that melt into a rich, flavorful sauce.
The leftover meat and sauce can be transformed into a range of quick weeknight dinners. Think pulled-pork sandwiches on soft rolls, pork and black bean nachos, bành mí on a crusty baguette, a fiery chili with black beans, shredded pork lettuce wraps. Sizzle leftover pork with Asian spices and serve over rice; simmer the meat in tomato sauce for pasta.
Sunday’s Garlicky Pork Shoulder
Serves 4 to 6.- 3 to 4 pounds bone-in, skin-on pork shoulder
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 2 heads garlic, cut crosswise
- 1 cups white wine
- 3 cups chicken or vegetable stock, more if needed
- 4 to 6 sprigs fresh rosemary or oregano
Film a large Dutch oven with the oil and set over medium heat. When it begins to shimmer, set the garlic cut-side down in the pot. Cook until golden, about 3 to 4 minutes. Remove the garlic and set aside. Add the pork and cook until well browned and very crisp on all sides, about 15 minutes. Remove the pork and set aside.
Add the wine and stock to the pot and stir, scraping up all the browned bits on the bottom of the pot. Return the pork and garlic to the pot and add the herbs. Cover and transfer to the oven. Cook, turning occasionally and adding more stock if necessary, until the pork is very tender and falls apart when pulled with a fork, about 3 to 3 1/2 hours.
Roast Cherry Tomatoes
Serves 4 to 6.- 2 pints cherry tomatoes
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- Coarse salt
Roast Potatoes
Serves 4 to 6.- 1 1/2 pounds potatoes, scrubbed and cut into quarters
- 1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil
- Coarse salt