Perfect for Taco Tuesday!
Link to Brian’s recipe: https://www.brianlagerstrom.com/recipes/perfect-carnitas
Ingredients
For the Pork and Cure:
▪4–5 lb pork shoulder, cut into 2–3 inch cubes, bone removed (about 1.8–2.3 kg)
▪50g salt (3 Tbsp)
▪2g dried oregano (2 tsp)
▪10g onion powder (1½ Tbsp)
▪30g minced garlic (6-8 cloves)
For the Braise:
▪100g (about ½ cup) water or stock
▪1 cinnamon stick
▪4 bay leaves
▪1 orange, quartered and juiced into the pot
Finish and Serve
▪150g (about ⅔ cup) rendered pork fat, reserved from cooking
▪150g (about ⅔ cup) pork gold (cooking liquid), reserved from cooking
▪flour tortillas, warmed
▪white onion, chopped
▪cilantro, chopped
▪salsa taquera
Salsa Taquera Recipe Here: https://www.brianlagerstrom.com/recip…
1. Cut a 4–5 lb pork shoulder into 2–3 inch cubes, removing the bone if necessary.
2. Combine cut pork with salt, garlic, onion powder, and oregano, to coat each piece. Cure in fridge 1 hour.
3. Pack the pork snug in an even layer in a dutch oven.
(mine is 6.75 qts, use slightly less meat if your pot is meaningfully smaller than that.).
4. Add 1 cinnamon stick, 1 quartered-and-juiced orange, bay leaves, and water or stock. Cover and roast at 250°F for 3 hours, flipping pieces of pork over after 90 minutes.
5. The pork is done when it’s shreddable when you pull it apart with forks, but not fall-apart.
6. Rest covered at room temp 30-60 minutes, then refrigerate overnight.
7. Once fully chilled, remove pork from pot and separate the rendered fat from the cooking liquid (pork gold). Shred the pork into a mix of medium chunks and finer strands, removing pure-fat bits.
8. Mix about 150g rendered fat and 150g pork gold into the shredded pork until evenly coated.
9. Crisp in a nonstick pan over medium-high heat for about 90 seconds while pressing flat to ensure pan contact. Flip, and fry for additional 90 seconds or until about 40% of the pork is golden and crispy. A pro move to finish is splashing in a little more pork gold to ensure moistness.
10. Serve on warm flour tortillas with onion, cilantro, and dried chile salsa.



I am not likely to ever make this recipe, but I am so glad I watched it because of how much he taught me about cooking meat, specifically pork. But I’d bet a lot of his technique here would make beef more flavorful too.
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