Hog: Proper Pork Recipes from the Snout to the Squeak by Richard H. Turner

    • Categories: Stuffing; Main course; Cooking for a crowd; Entertaining & parties
    • Ingredients: lard; onions; garlic; pork offal; apples; sausagemeat; bread; suckling pig
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Notes about this book

  • Foodycat on October 14, 2015

    The pork vindaloo is wonderful - it takes a LOT of garlic but the end result is quite subtle.

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Fried pork chops in a Parmesan & garlic crust

    • etcjm on May 18, 2020

      Gorgeous. We cut some over-sized chops from a joint we were unable to cook in the outside oven due to the weather. Because of the depth of the chops, I started them on the hob and then finished in the oven. They probably weren't as crispy and they would have been just fried, but the taste was excellent. Very simple. A do again for a weeknight supper. Served with basil pesto pasta and lots of veg!

  • Pork saurkrausen

    • FJT on October 21, 2018

      Proper delicious! This is a very unassuming recipe which scores highly on the effort:reward scale. I wasn't expecting this to be that good, but it really was. The only changes I made were to use a whole red onion (I don't need half an onion hanging around just before we go away!) and I added a handful of peeled cherry tomatoes that needed using up rather than the fraction of a tomato called for in the recipe. No regrets - it all worked out just fine. My husband virtually licked his plate clean and has requested this again sometime!

  • Goan pork vindaloo

    • Foodycat on November 25, 2015

      I followed the ingredients but not the method (because I didn't have 24 hours). So I fried the mustard seeds & curry leaves, then added the onions and garlic, then all of the other ingredients, and simmered for 2 hours. I don't honestly know what the marinading would have added, as it was intensely flavoured and falling-apart tender. Delicious.

    • FJT on May 17, 2020

      This is a lovely curry. I did marinate it for 24 hours, then cooked it and left it for another day before eating. I didn't have dried Kashmiri chillies so, after some research, I substituted 1 tsp of paprika and 0.5 tsp of cayenne pepper. I cooked this in the pressure cooker for 45 minutes with less liquid than the recipe stated and then on the day of eating I simmered it for about half an hour to reduce the liquid further. We really enjoyed it and I will make it again.

  • Korean-style pork belly with lettuce wraps ... & the best hot sauce ever

    • Foodycat on April 16, 2018

      I just used pork belly rashers, because I couldn't get the proper, thinly sliced stuff, and cooked it on a charcoal barbecue. Absolutely delicious. Not sure I would call it the best hot sauce ever, but it was really very good.

  • Souvlaki

    • debkellie on April 07, 2019

      Sous-vided the pork belly slices for 16 hours @ 70 degrees C. Then marinaded a couple of hours, skewered & finished over charcoal. Tzatziki was a nice accompaniment.

  • Spicy pork salad

    • Foodycat on March 17, 2020

      Not the best salad of this type I have tried, but pretty good.

  • Albondigas Mexicanas

    • FJT on September 24, 2020

      Easy to make and tasty. My egg was a little on the large side which made the meatball mix a bit claggy so I added a handful of breadcrumbs which sorted it out nicely.

  • Potted ham

    • tekobo on April 14, 2017

      Didn't quite do it for me. It could be because the home made ham that I used was too salty. Very simple to make - will try again.

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Reviews about this book

  • Gourmet Chick

    A whole book devoted to cooking with pigs – complete with a slightly furry cover? Hog is all about pork and the book has a nose to tail focus including lots of offal.

    Full review
  • ISBN 10 1784720011
  • ISBN 13 9781784720018
  • Published Apr 07 2015
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 352
  • Language English
  • Countries United Kingdom
  • Publisher Octopus Publishing Group
  • Imprint Mitchell Beazley

Publishers Text

Hog is a love letter to all things pig - with more than 150 proper pork recipes from the snout to the squeak. The book is a love letter to all things pig - with more than 150 proper pork recipes from the snout to the squeak, including Roast Haunch of Wild Boar, Fried Suckling Pig Chops, Porchetta Trevigiana, Fat Dirty Rice, Steamed Pork Buns, Stuffed Cabbage, Crispy Pork & Pickled Watermelon Salad, Candied Bacon Pecan Popcorn and so much more - via every cut you can imagine and every branch of pork cookery. It includes slow-cooked, one-pot suppers, weekend roasts, fresh and flavorful salads, breakfast treats, sausages, hams, bacon and charcuterie plus the smoky delights of barbecue. With features on breeds, butchery, buying pork and more, everything you could possibly want in a pork cookbook is here. Chef Richard H. Turner is a man of many meaty pleasures. Up past his forearms in the London restaurant scene - from London's celebrated Pitt Cue Co., to Hawksmoor, Foxlow and beyond, he's also one half of the independent butcher and supplier of the best-quality British rare breed meat money can buy, Turner & George, plus he's the man who established NYC's Meatopia festival in the UK, Spain and beyond. Meat is an on-going food trend. Pitt Cue Co. has sold over 18,000 copies since publication in June 2013 (Nielsen BookScan UK).

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