Apple and Fig Stuffed Porchetta Sandwiches

This is a dish for a crowd. If possible, source your pork from a ranch or butcher that deals with pasture-raised pigs. The quality of the meat will not go unnoticed in this rustic preparation. It’s nice to bake the buns yourself, but it is a lot of added work unless you relish the joys of baking your own bread, like us! Fresh-baked bread inevitably raises the quality and experience of any sandwich.
By / Photography By | September 01, 2013

Ingredients

SERVINGS: 15-20 Sandwich(es)
  • 1 pork belly, skin on (approximately 5 pounds)
  • 2 pounds Gravenstein apples
  • 2 pounds Mission figs, roughly chopped
  • 1/2 cup chopped fresh rosemary
  • 1 lemon
  • Sea salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • Kitchen twine
  • 1 cup rendered pork lard, softened to room temperature
Apple Cider Vinegar Reduction
  • pan drippings from the porchetta
  • 1 1/2 pints Nana Mae’s Gravenstein Apple Cider Vinegar
  • salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
Finishing the Sandwiches
  • 15-20 brioche sandwich buns
  • finely grated Valley Ford Cheese Co. Estero Gold cheese
  • fresh arugula

Instructions

Remove pork from the refrigerator 3–4 hours prior to cooking. Meat cooks better and more evenly when it begins at room temperature.

Preheat oven to 450°. Core apples and run over a mandolin, slicing to 1⁄8-inch slices. (If you do not have a mandolin you can use a knife, but the apple slices should be very thin.) Place the sliced apples in a bowl of water with the juice of 1 lemon to keep them from oxidizing while you work.

Liberally and evenly season meat side of pork with salt and pepper. Six 3-finger pinches of salt usually does the job.

Add pepper and rosemary, then spread the apple slices and chopped figs on the meat.
Now it is time to roll and tie the belly. Roll the meat as tightly as possible and tie in at least 3 places. Start your tie in the middle of the roll and work your way outwards, keeping the roll as tight as possible.

Rub softened lard over the outside (skin side) of the roll and liberally season with salt.

Place pork roll on a baking rack set on a large sheet tray in the preheated oven. Monitor closely, as this is the stage in which the skin will crisp up and become that crispy crackling that we all yearn for. This should take about 30–40 minutes.

Once the desired skin crispiness is achieved, reduce the heat to 350°. If the skin starts to look like it is getting overdone, cover with foil and continue to monitor. Roast until the thickest part of the meat reads 145° on a meat thermometer. When done, remove from oven and let rest for at least an hour.

Meanwhile, pour the drippings from the roasting pan into a saucepan, add the apple cider vinegar and cook over medium heat until reduced by half. Season to taste.

Slice the meat with a bread knife for greater ease cutting through the skin and place slices (including the crispy skin) on brioche buns (or any bun of your choosing, but we love brioche for this sandwich). Top with finely grated Estero Gold cheese, a sprinkling of arugula, then a drizzle of the reduction sauce. Or, ditch the bun altogether and serve the sliced porchetta with a fresh green salad!

Recipe courtesy of Kendra Kolling, The Farmer’s Wife

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Ingredients

SERVINGS: 15-20 Sandwich(es)
  • 1 pork belly, skin on (approximately 5 pounds)
  • 2 pounds Gravenstein apples
  • 2 pounds Mission figs, roughly chopped
  • 1/2 cup chopped fresh rosemary
  • 1 lemon
  • Sea salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • Kitchen twine
  • 1 cup rendered pork lard, softened to room temperature
Apple Cider Vinegar Reduction
  • pan drippings from the porchetta
  • 1 1/2 pints Nana Mae’s Gravenstein Apple Cider Vinegar
  • salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
Finishing the Sandwiches
  • 15-20 brioche sandwich buns
  • finely grated Valley Ford Cheese Co. Estero Gold cheese
  • fresh arugula
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