Ramen with Pork Belly

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When most people think of ramen in the US, they probably think of the $0.15 food that we all eat in college.  That’s actually pretty sad because ramen is one of the tastiest Asian noodles around.  Here is a great clip from a famous Japanese film that touches on how seriously people can take ramen in Japan (ok, so I’m pretty sure this scene is done tongue-in-cheek).

With this being my first attempt at ramen, I definitely can’t claim mastery, but it did turn out very tasty.  I borrowed heavily from David Chang’s Momofuku recipe (as far as I can tell, I don’t have the cookbook but I gleaned the internet for others who have tried it).  We even had some Japanese friends over and they gave me the thumbs up!  The fun thing about ramen is that it ends up being a mixture of a bunch of different components and you can choose how much you want to make from scratch or not.  For example, I made the ramen themselves but you could always use a ramen pack (just chuck the flavor packet!).

 Pork Belly

Pork Belly

8 oz – Pork Belly

1/8 cup – sugar

1/8 cup – kosher salt

Mix the sugar and salt and spread it all over the pork belly (if it comes with skin, remove it first).  Let it rest in the refrigerator overnight.  Pre-heat oven to 450 degrees.  Rinse well, pat dry, place in a roasting dish.  Roast for 1 hour, basting several times.  Drop oven temp to 250 degrees and roast for 1 more hour, basting as needed.  Let cool then wrap in plastic and refrigerate.  When the belly is totally cool, slice in thin slices.

Pork Shoulder

8 oz – Pork Shoulder

1/8 cup – sugar

1/8 cup – kosher salt

Mix the sugar and salt and spread it all over the shoulder.  Let it rest in the refrigerator overnight.  Pre-heat oven to 450 degrees.  Rinse well, pat dry, place in a roasting dish.  Roast for 1 hour, basting several times.  Drop oven temp to 250 degrees and roast for several more hours, basting as needed until the shoulder is falling apart.  Let rest then shred into pieces using two forks.  Reserve until needed.

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Pork Broth

2 lbs – Meaty pork neck bones

2 lbs – Chicken legs (or turkey legs)

9 sq inches – kombu

8 oz – smoked bacon

3 – large scallions

1 – knob ginger

1 – tsp fresh ground white pepper

Dark soy sauce/Kosher Salt

Place neck bones in large stock pot, cover with water, and bring to a boil.  Simmer for 3 minutes then dump the water, rinse bones and pot and re-cover with fresh water.  Bring to a simmer.  For a good clear broth, never let the broth simmer higher than a few bubbles at a time.  Add the chicken legs and kombu.  Simmer for 1 hour.  Remove kombu.  Simmer for 4-6 hours.  Skim scum often (every half hour or so).  After is has simmered for 5-6 hours, remove the chicken legs and add bacon, scallions, and ginger.  Simmer 1 hour more, skimming often.   Filter out all broth.  I do this by passing all broth into a different container through a fine mesh or cheese cloth.  I then clean out my stock pot, place the broth back inside, and return the broth to a simmer.  Add soy and salt to taste.  I found that the broth was better the second day.

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Ramen Noodles

3 1/2 cups – Semolina flour

5 – eggs

1 tsp – kosher salt

Mix all ingredients together and let rest 1-2 hours.  Knead by hand or using the roller attachment.  Roll out very thin (a 5 on our roller attachment).  Cut using a spaghetti cutter.  Boil in salt water until al dente.

Assembly

3 – green onions, thinly sliced

4-5 – slow poached eggs

4-5 – slices narutomaki

3 – baby bok choy

5 oz – shitake or tree mushrooms

4-5 – 3×3 inch nori sheets

Steam bok choy and mushrooms.  Place noodles into the bottom of the bowl, arrange pork shoulder, 3 slices pork belly, green onions, 1 egg, 1 slice narutomaki, mushrooms and bok choy on top of noodles.  Ladle in enough hot broth to cover noodles.  Garnish with nori.

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17 thoughts on “Ramen with Pork Belly

  1. That looks awesome. I need to find either a source for good refrigerated noodles or snag myself a pasta machine and start making my own. Have you seen the movie The Ramen Girl, with the late Brittany Murphy? She learns the art of Ramen from an old angry drunk master, which just sounds like it would be the most awesome thing to do. Pretty cute and this made me think of it.

  2. Mmmm….It was even better the second day. And yes–pasta machine is definitely useful in this situation!

  3. It looks nice, way yummy yet alot of extra work and very fancy for noodles. I’m afraid I don’t take that much time anymore. (except for special occations). Was it me that taught you to put all the extra into everything? Or should we blame your Dad? Doesn’t matter as long as you make it for me sometime.

  4. @mom, you taught me to use fresh and dad taught me to strive for the ideal. We should make this some time, it’s so yummy! At the very least, you have to try the pork belly. It’s amazing.

  5. Wow, this looks fantastic. My husband travels at least 4 times a year to Japan, and has done so for the past 3 years. These days he’s not crazy about all the travel, and the ONLY thing he looks forward to is having ramen from his favorite shop in Yokohama. I think I need to make this for him. Thanks!

  6. The belly itself was fresh and redder than many I’ve seen in the past. Also, I believe the salt/sugar helps it not to oxidize as much. Either way, it had an amazing taste. In the past I’ve always slow rendered it (or used sous vide) then seared it on the stove, but I think that roasting it ended up with a much better flavor.

  7. Cool, let me know how it goes. FYI, we found that the broth was better after a night in the fridge so you might want to make that a day ahead (you could probably make everything but the pasta a day ahead).

  8. Touche. I don’t have the momofuku cookbook so I’m not sure how close it is, but I did a mix of a bunch of recipes from different online sources (focusing on momofuku-esque posts). The pork is done the same (and it’s an awesome recipe that I’ll use over and over again!). The broth is done a bit differently (I didn’t roast the bones and I used a bunch of pho techniques).

    As for being in college, my hats to you, I couldn’t have afforded this kind of food in college. Lucky you!

  9. get a pound or 2 of chicken strips ,boil them in chicken broth when done boiling pull strips and cut into small pieces add them back to the broth then add extra wide noodles to the broth and continue to boil . taste broth, if not enough chicken flavor add chicken bullion to taste salt and pepper and when noodles are done enjoy.

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