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#JORDANS MOD MENU 2.30 HOW TO#
If you want to make the rolls I did from scratch (you’ll have the time, though probably not my tenuous grasp on how to use it sanely), you’ll need to add flour, an egg, some butter, milk, and yeast. This entire recipe, including the meat, slaw, and rolls, has ten ingredients. Most of all, I wanted this whole recipe to have an economy of ingredients and processes. Both sauces keep for what seems like forever in the fridge. We find it eliminates the need for a standard dark red barbecue sauce, but hey, if you’re nervous you’ll miss it, here is my simplest and a more elaborate recipe. I enlist a thin marinade known as a mop throughout the process - to initially baste the roast, to flavor the slaw, to dress the final roast as you pull it apart, keeping it moist, and then more at the table. Instead of a simple salt and white sugar rub, I channel barbecue flavors, keeping the salt but swapping in brown sugar, paprika (smoked is wonderful here) and cayenne. Chang’s Bo Ssam calls for a bone-in pork shoulder or butt but I prefer boneless - it’s smaller, cooks faster, and has a more dramatic collapse. I wanted the pulled pork recipe on this site to have all of that, but designed with barbecue-style sandwiches in mind, no smoker required. The ingredients couldn’t be simpler (got salt? sugar?), and in just a small fraction of the time that you’ve been liberated from any kitchen toiling while the pork slow-roasts and permeates your apartment with an unholy delicious aroma, you make the accompaniments. The masterful thing about this slow-roast is the way the exterior takes on a dark, glossy, crisp, varnished edge that collapses easily under the tines of a fork, revealing pale, perfectly cooked pulls of pork within, and that you did almost nothing to make this happen. For legions of fans, it quickly became a generation’s go-to dinner party dish: a spectacularly low-effort, high-reward way to feed a crowd. I’ve been Bo Ssam-ing since the David Chang recipe was published in the New York Times in 2012. This one, to us, has been worth the wait and it came from the most logical place. This site has been bereft of a giant pork roast for too long.