Pasta Bolognese with red wine and smoked pork belly
DESCRIPTION
Hearty, rich Bolognese with red wine and smoked pork belly! Everyone probably has their own unique way of cooking this dish, where there is no such thing as a “correct” recipe. It all depends on personal flavor. I want mine to be rich, umami packed and have a distinct tomato and herb flavor. Key to achieve this:
Fry the mince separate from the onion since the mince requires high temperature to crisp up, while the onion needs medium/low heat to caramelize without burning
Use good quality canned tomatoes and lots of tomato puree
Use generous amounts of wine
Add Chinese soy and beef stock cube for extra umami
Use a combination of dried and fresh herbs for extra herb umpf
Here’s how you make my version!
INGREDIENTS (6-8 Portions)
Bolognese
2-4 yellow onions, depending on size
A couple of spring onions, optional
4 garlic cloves
One small carrot
100 g celeriac root or celery
500 g beef mince, preferably chuck with high fat% that you grind yourself
100 g of smoked pork belly
0.5 dl tomato puree
1 tbsp dried oregano
1 tbsp sweet paprika powder
1 tsp thyme
3-5 dl of wine, red or white (generates different flavor, but both are good)
1 beef stock cube
2x400 g of whole canned tomatoes
Salt, freshly ground black pepper
Some fresh parsley
Lots of fresh basil
Butter and oil for frying
White/red wine vinegar (potentially)
For serving
100-125 g pasta/person
Freshly ground black pepper
Olive oil
Generous amount of grated parmesan
Finely chopped basil or some chervil stalks
INSTRUCTIONS
Cut the pork belly in really small cubes. Fry in oil until the fat renders and it becomes really crisp. Remove the meat from the pan but keep the fat.
In the same pan, add some more oil and fry the mince on high heat until crisp. Don't overcrowd the pan, you might need to fry it in two batches. Put on a plate.
Finely chop the onion, garlic, carrot and celeriac root/celery (save the green parts of the spring onions). Fry on medium heat in oil and butter for 10-20 min, or until the onion starts to caramelize. Season with salt and pepper in the beginning.
Add the herbs, spices and the tomato puree. Fry a few min on high heat, then add the wine. Let reduce by half.
Add the beef stock cube, canned tomatoes, beef and pork. Let come to a boil, then simmer for 15 min - 24 hours. More time, more complexity and richness. Less time, more fresh and simple flavor. If you're going for the long haul, cook the Bolognese in a cast iron pot and put the whole thing in the oven with a lid at 100 degrees for 12-24 hours.
When it's done cooking, adjust seasoning with more salt, pepper and potentially some vinegar for acidity. Finely chop the parsley and basil and add it, along with the green parts of the spring onion.
Serve with pasta and top with lots of parmesan and fresh basil!
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