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Yucatán Pork Stew with Ancho Chiles and Lime Juice

Tia Harrison breaks down a pig each week at Avedano’s and finds making stew a versatile way to use cuts like pork shoulder, shanks and belly. Here she cooks the stew with pleasantly bitter ancho chiles.

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  • ACTIVE: 40 MIN
  • TOTAL TIME: 3 HRS 40 MIN
  • SERVINGS: 8
  • Make-Ahead
  • Staff Favorite
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Recipe

Ingredients

  1. 1/4 cup vegetable oil
  2. 4 1/2 pounds trimmed boneless pork shoulder, cut into 2-inch pieces
  3. Salt and freshly ground pepper
  4. 2 large white onions, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
  5. 8 garlic cloves, smashed
  6. 1 pound carrots, cut crosswise into 2-inch lengths
  7. 3 ancho chiles, seeded and cut into very thin strips with scissors
  8. 3 bay leaves
  9. Pinch of ground cloves
  10. 1/4 cup fresh lime juice
  11. 6 cups chicken stock
  12. 6 plum tomatoes, quartered lengthwise
  13. 2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
  14. Steamed white rice and sliced jalapeños, for serving

Directions

  1. In a very large enameled cast-iron casserole, heat the vegetable oil until shimmering. Season the pork with salt and black pepper and add half of it to the casserole. Cook over moderate heat, turning, until browned all over, about 10 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the pork to a plate. Brown the remaining pork.
  2. Return all of the pork to the casserole along with any accumulated juices. Stir in the onions, garlic, carrots, chiles, bay leaves, cloves, lime juice and chicken stock. Season with salt and pepper and bring to a boil. Add the tomatoes, nestling them into the liquid. Cover and cook over low heat until the pork is very tender and the carrots are cooked through, about 3 hours. Discard the bay leaves and stir in the cilantro. Serve with rice and sliced jalapeños.

Make Ahead

    The stew can be refrigerated for up to 3 days. Reheat before serving.

Wine

This Mexican-influenced dish gets its earthiness from ancho chiles, a flavor that pairs well with Argentina’s premier grape, Malbec. Originally from France, this dark-berried, spicy variety reaches its pinnacle in Mendoza, producing juicy, potent wines like the smoky 2005 Trivento Golden Reserve and the cherry-inflected 2007 Crios de Susana Balbo.

Reviews

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User Reviews

(Average Rating)

This is a keeper! I made a couple of alterations, based on what I had on hand without going shopping -  I added some parsnips, used canned plum tomatoes instead of fresh, used some cubed pork shoulder that i had frozen last summer, and served it with cornbread. Delicious and even better the next day. Don't be bummed by the thinness of the sauce - it's very rich and flavorful. Adding okra sounds like a great idea - I'll try that the next time I make this dish, which will be soon!

Posted by: CHARLOTTE.DAVIS on November 14, 2008

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Although the flavor was good and the pork was tender, I thought the sauce was too thin and there was too much of it. I would also add more carrots and other veggies to 'stew' it up more.

Posted by: karenf on October 29, 2008

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What a wonderful one-dish meal!  Great taste and delightful to the eye.  We've made this twice already and we're planning to make it again.  We doubled the amount of carrots, because they were so yummy the first time and we wanted more.  Added a couple more pinches of cloves.  We also added about 1 cup of okra (trimmed and cut into 1/2 pieces) to the last 30 minutes of cooking by gently pushing them into the stew as to not disturb the tomatoes. The okra added another level of complexity and color to the dish. 

Posted by: skfoodie on October 19, 2008

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