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  #1   ^
Old Tue, May-06-03, 18:59
gotbeer's Avatar
gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Default "A Futures Market in Flavor: Pork Bellies Are Just the Start"

A Futures Market in Flavor: Pork Bellies Are Just the Start

By JULIA MOSKIN NY Times 5/7/2003


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TEN years ago, pork bellies were about as likely to appear on a fancy New York restaurant menu as sorghum or feed corn. Bacon in its raw, uncured state, pork belly is the fattiest part of the mature hog, thick stripes of pure white fat and rosy meat. New York chefs have, of course, long used bacon (and its European cousins pancetta, lardons and ventrèche) discreetly, or as a garnish. They have been even more discreet about pork bellies. But now, pork bellies, along with other rich, unabashedly fatty cuts of the pig, have landed right on the menu. The futures market looks fat and happy.

Whopping chunks of pork belly are being served at WD-50, Alain Ducasse, DB Bistro Moderne, Zoë, 66, Brasserie 8 1/2 and 11 Madison Park. Filmy slices of lardo — pure white pork fat — are proudly presented at Le Cirque 2000 and adorn a buzzed-about pizza at Otto. Roast suckling pig, with a pillow of soft fat left intact under crackling skin, has been the most popular main dish at Pico and Chicama since each restaurant opened, and connoisseurs are mourning Christian Delouvrier's suckling pig confit at the late, lamented Lespinasse. Niman Ranch, the esteemed Colorado meat producer, is developing a pure lard in response to consumer demand.

Apparently, connoisseurship of fat, long a competitive sport among chefs and food enthusiasts, has finally trickled down to the culinary cognoscenti. Americans have always had a national weakness for pork at breakfast time, but if you prefer your bacon crisp and your sausages cooked through, you don't belong to this new club. This unctuous pleasure is reserved for those who enjoy the velvety limpness of prosciutto, the soft shreds of a country ham. A taste for pure pork fat, long restricted to a furtive devouring of the white nubbin in the can of baked beans, can now be worn as a badge of honor.

It was Daniel Boulud who first smuggled pork belly onto the main dish side of a menu, in 1993, at Daniel. However, Mr. Boulud admits that in French tradition, it is not eaten at fine restaurants. "You eat it sliced, with mustard and bread, for lunch," he said. "It's cheap. Children love it."

In other words, it's French bologna. Called poitrine de porc, or breast of pork, salted pork belly is a key ingredient in earthy French classics like potée from the Auvergne, Alsatian choucroute and the bistro salad of frisée aux lardons.

By poaching it at low temperature, Mr. Boulud left the cut's thick streaks of fat intact. Then he tricked it out with an exotic spice cure and black truffle jus, crisped the top and sent it out in a charming copper saucepan to favored customers and visiting chefs. With its unabashed stripes of juicy fat and toothsome meat, pork belly became all the rage among Mr. Boulud's colleagues, who busied themselves reinventing the dish.

Chefs love nothing more than a new challenge, and traditional recipes, which often call for curing, poaching, roasting and searing the pork belly, offer plenty of scope for personal variations.

Example: Mr. Boulud's bellies are salt-cured for just a week, but at the restaurant Alain Ducasse, Didier Elena, the chef de cuisine, leaves them hanging (from strings tied to the kitchen ceiling) for at least two months. Julian Alonzo has evolved his pork belly dish at Brasserie 8 1/2 from a tender chunk served with lentils and a poached egg (a worthy bacon-and-egg variation) to an excessively luxurious plate of pork belly topped with osetra caviar and cauliflower foam. Earthily appropriate lentils are the most common sidecar for pork belly (see Patroon, DB Bistro Moderne), but the best dishes also play off the fattiness of the meat with astringent vegetables like endives, leeks or mustard greens.

Fast-forward to this year's model. Just out of the gate at WD-50, Wylie Dufresne is already serving the best high-end pork belly in town, with turnips and a spicy-sweet gingerbread-inspired garnish for contrast. The thin layer of pure fat he leaves on the top is the icing on the cake — extra, but integral to the full effect of the dish. Rachael Carron, the restaurant's assistant manager, said, "I see people cutting off the fat and it just breaks my heart."

Habitués of Chinatown restaurants know that pork belly is nothing new under the pig. It is on the menu at Shanghai restaurants all over the city, and is treated like other fatty, cartilaginous pieces of meat: it is braised with copious garlic, simmered with a sauerkrautlike preserved vegetable or red-cooked in soy, rice wine and brown sugar. In tong po, the ultimate Shanghai pork belly preparation, the meat becomes incidental and the fat is supreme. "The goal when you're making tong po is to get the fat really custardy," said Ed Schoenfeld, a restaurant consultant and expert student of Chinese cooking. At Yeah Shanghai Deluxe on Bayard Street, the tong po pork is cooked soft and then sliced into petals for serving. Mr. Schoenfeld explained that the flowerlike cut refers to pork bellies' name in Chinese — five-flower meat, for their three layers of fat and two of meat.

On the semi-Chinese menu at Jean-Georges Vongerichten's 66 in TriBeCa are thick batons of pork belly called lacquered pork: diners who expect to find Mr. Vongerichten's signature elegance on the plate will be surprised by the blatantly fatty dish, napped in a sticky-sweet marmalade of ginger and shallots.

Far beyond fatty is a delicacy known in its native Tuscany as lardo; it is, quite simply, pure fat, savored in melting-thin slices as if it were a fine cheese. Though lardo has recently made a splashy landing on the New York restaurant scene, Sirio Maccioni has been serving it at Le Cirque since 1974 and, more recently, at Osteria del Circo, shaved into thin slices and draped on warm toast. In truffle season, a truly intoxicating variation will have white truffle on top; like butterfat, pork fat has a stunning way of making flavors bloom in your mouth.

"I grew up on lardo," Mr. Maccioni said last week, adding that it is most famously made near Forte dei Marmi, where he lived as a child. To make it, the thick streak of fat that runs down the animal's back (the belly is too meaty!) is rubbed with spices, salt and rosemary. The lardo is then aged for at least six months in the dark, cool caves of nearby Carrara, where the favorite white marble of Caesars and sculptors has been quarried for at least 2,000 years.

In the absence of ancient marble caves, you can age your lardo in plastic tubs in the basement, as Mark Ladner, the chef and an owner of Lupa and Otto, does. When his partner Mario Batali proposed putting lardo on the menu, Mr. Ladner was dubious about serving it, and even more dubious about making it. But, he said, the lardo pizza that is now on the menu at Otto is shockingly popular. It is also ridiculously simple — the combination of yeasty crust, lardo melting in the heat and fresh rosemary makes for a perfect combination.

Americans, especially if they couldn't afford the meatier cuts of pork, used to be well aware of the incomparable flavor of the fat. According to Shirley Corriher, a food scientist, every icebox in the South had a chunk of streak-o'-lean, or fatback, in it. A piece of fatback was always tossed into simmering pots of greens and dried beans, melted fatback made the ideal cooking medium for cornbread, fatback stuffed into a leftover breakfast biscuit was a filling lunch.

Fatback, salt pork and lard have almost disappeared from New York restaurants and food markets since what might be called the Great Fat Panic began in the 1970's. The success of the pro-fat Atkins diet, among other factors, has done something to diminish this trend, particularly lately.

"Lard is one of the soapboxes I like to get on," Ms. Corriher said. "Yes, lard is 100 percent fat. So is olive oil." And according to the Agriculture Department, lard is lower in saturated fat, and higher in mono- and poly-unsaturated fats than butter. The department's nutrient database also reports that it is lower in cholesterol.

Dr. Frank B. Hu, an associate professor of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, said research shows that lard and butter "aren't public enemy No. 1 any more." It is instead the hydrogenated fats — margarine, for instance, the so-called healthy fat of the 1970's — that have turned out to be the real bad guys of fat, he said.

Still, as the American people grew fearful of lard, American pigs grew noticeably leaner. According to the National Pork Board, which regards this statistic as cause for celebration, today's pigs are 31 percent less fatty than those of 1983. Chefs agree that commercial pork is now so lean that it is almost impossible to cook. They are lobbying artisanal pork producers, like Niman Ranch, Vermont Quality Meats and Valley Farmers, to keep their pigs layered with thick, firm, white fat.

As Josh Eden, chef de cuisine at 66, said last week, oblivious of the crowd eating dumplings in the dining room behind him, "When you want flavor, you want to see fat, right?"
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  #2   ^
Old Tue, May-06-03, 19:02
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gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Meanwhile, Back at the Market

By BRUCE HEADLAM NY Times 5/7/2003


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PORK belly futures — agreements to buy or sell at a set price down the road — have been bought and sold since the 19th century, to the mutual benefit of both farmers and food companies who want to hedge their bets against price swings. The frozen pork bellies, around 40 million pounds on any given day, sit in Agriculture Department-approved freezers, waiting to be turned into bacon.

A majority of the trading is done in the pit of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, where traders try to eke out profits playing the spread between the asking and selling prices.

Traditionally, Memorial Day was the beginning of the bull market for pork bellies — the B.L.T. season, as it's called — but demand is now driven year-round by fast-food companies. "Everyone wants bacon on their hamburgers," said John Textor, who has been trading in the pit since 1983.

Mr. Textor was surprised when he began seeing roasted pork bellies on the menu at Charlie Trotter's in Chicago about six months ago. "Pork bellies are about 50 percent fat," he said. "You would really have to be on the Atkins diet to justify eating that."
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  #3   ^
Old Wed, May-07-03, 11:48
Elihnig's Avatar
Elihnig Elihnig is offline
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Yum!

Pass the fat please!


Beth
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  #4   ^
Old Sun, May-11-03, 22:52
gotbeer's Avatar
gotbeer gotbeer is offline
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Default "Pork bellies: This fat is where it's at"

Pork bellies: This fat is where it's at

By PHILIP GAILEY, Times Editor of Editorials

© St. Petersburg Times published May 11, 2003


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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In case you missed the news, pork bellies are in. I'm not talking about the futures trading in pork bellies that Hillary Rodham Clinton profited from when she was the first lady of Arkansas. I'm talking haute cuisine - pork bellies on the menus of some of New York City's finest restaurants as Americans renew their love affair with the exquisite fat of the hog.

The story by Julia Moskin in the New York Times' Dining Out section last week began: "Ten years ago, pork bellies were about as likely to appear on a fancy New York restaurant menu as sorghum or feed corn. Bacon in its raw, uncured state, pork belly is the fattiest part of the mature hog, thick stripes of pure white fat and rosy meat. New York chefs have, of course, long used bacon (and its European cousins pancetta, lardons and ventreche) discreetly, or as a garnish. They have been even more discreet about pork bellies. But now, pork bellies, along with other rich, unabashedly fatty cuts of the pig, have landed right on the menu. The futures market looks fat and happy."

Glory be and praise the much maligned hog!

The story came with color photographs of some of the pork belly sensations served in the city's priciest restaurants - swell dining establishments such as WD-50, DB Bistro Moderne, Alain Ducasse, Brasserie 81/2 and 11 Madison Park.

One photo cutline read: "At WD-50 (I assume that's a restaurant and not a can of oil), the rich fat that tops slabs of pork belly is meant to be eaten rather than cut off."

Well, of course it is meant to be eaten, like everything else about a hog.

Another cutline read: "Pork belly, the raw form of the meat that could grow up to be bacon, is on menus all over town. Left, a slab of pork fat cures in a marble box at Osteria del Circo. Right, crispy pork belly with endive, frisee and apple salad at Daniel."

Moskin's prose is almost as delicious as the pork belly entres she describes. She writes: "Filmy slices of lardo - pure white pork fat - are proudly presented at Le Cirque 2000 and adorn a buzzed-about pizza at Otto." And this: "A taste for pure pork fat, long restricted to a furtive devouring of the white nubbin in the can of baked beans, can now be worn as a badge of honor."

I'd like to pass this article around some small-town cafes in rural Georgia at breakfast time.

I never thought I would see the day that the New York Times would celebrate pork bellies in its restaurant section. I suspect it may have something to do with the Alabama upbringing of the newspaper's executive editor, my old friend Howell Raines, who never met a pig he didn't like - barbecued or fried.

Southerners, of course, have long appreciated the succulence of pig meat, fat and lean. We know the best biscuits are made with pure lard, and that green vegetables taste like stewed grass without a slab of fatback or a ham hock tossed into the pot. Some of us preferred fried streak-o'-lean or fatback to bacon at breakfast. My grandfather used to fry thick slices of country ham. He'd trim the fat off and eat it and throw the lean ham to his dogs.

I have been on a low-fat diet for years, but I have never lost my craving for pig fat, anyway you want to slice it or cook it. The Atkins Diet, which is loaded with fat, may have helped break what Moskin calls "the Great Fat Panic" that started in the 1970s. Until recently, Americans were urged to maintain a low-fat diet. Fat was a bigger killer than cigarettes, the health nannies told us. People turned away from fat, even as they kept getting fatter on so-called healthy diets.

Meanwhile, pig growers tried to adapt their pigs to the times, and in the process they nearly ruined the taste of pork. According to the Times story, today's pigs are 31 percent less fatty than those of 1983, and chefs complain that commercial pork is so lean it's almost impossible to cook. The industry advertised this leaner pork as "the other white meat." It got to the point where pork tasted more like chicken than chicken tasted like chicken.

The war against fat is being lost on several fronts. Even health spas around the country have given in, if not up. According to a story in the Wall Street Journal last week, some luxurious spas have become fat farms where customers put on weight instead of taking if off.

"After years of counting calories and pushing health, spas are moving into comfort food in a huge way, with deli dishes, five-star desserts and all-you-can-eat pasta bars," the Journal reported. "At Texas' luxurious Lake Austin Spa, the chef recently launched a five-course tasting menu, while Canyon Ranch in Tucson, Ariz., has ditched its no-fat frozen yogurt for real ice cream."

Next thing you know, pork bellies will start showing up on the menus at these spas. That would be about the only thing that could lure me inside one.
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