Chicharrón Fries

I think chicharrón must translate to “throw pork into a pot and forget about it for a long time”, because that’s just about what you do. You cut up a pork belly, cover it with water, then stew it low and slow until all the water’s gone, then crank the heat and fry it in its own fat until crispy. Served it with a spicy miso mayo nappa cabbage cole slaw. My worry wasn’t that it wouldn’t be delicious, because it was, but that the pork bits would explode in my face, because that’s likely to happen if your fry pork.

Cheeseburger Bao

I felt like toying with my faible for cheeseburgers and simultaneously angering traditionalists, so I ended up stuffing cheeseburger ingredients into a bao bun. Fluffy steamed buns are hard not to like, so how does the unorthodox filling fare? You know what, it’s delicious, and I’m pretty sure I could tweak the recipe some more to get the flavors just right, but I actually prefer the traditional cheeseburger. There’s something about the composition of toasted bun, hard seared patty, sauce, onion and lettuce that’s hard to beat.

Roasted Kohlrabi

It’s somewhat rare that dishes I cook surprise me, but this one did. Take a kohlrabi root, peel it to a compact puck, salt it, wait until the seasoning absorbs, brush with melted butter and roast it low and slow for 2-3 hours, turning and continuing to brush with butter until it’s all nice and browned. What you get are some wonderfully chewy bites with concentrated savory flavor that you wouldn’t expect knowing the raw counterpart. What’s most fascinating is that there’s a natural acidity to it that gets concentrated while roasting and balances everything out really nicely, no need for marinades or anything. Crack of black pepper, some crunchy finishing salt and shavings of parmesan and you get a marvelous little dish.