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Crispy Milk Braised Pork Belly


© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com




© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com


The key to great pork crackling is to ensure your pork rind is perfectly dry for maximum crackling. Blasting the pork in a very hot oven to begin with to get the skin crunchy, then slow cook it for a further 90 minutes in a bath of spiced milk (inspired by the Italian classic maiale all latte or pork in milk), which makes it really moist and tender. For the crispiest crackling, make sure you don’t splash milk on the rind when you add it. You can roast some potato wedges with the pork to help soak up the milk. Alternatively, serve them with a simple mashed potato or polenta to absorb the milk sauce. I served the pork belly with a radicchio salad tossed with a red wine vinegrette (Thank you, David, for this great idea), and used the milk to bake some bread
©angiesrecipes
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  • 1-1.2 kg Pork belly, skin scored
  • 1½ tsp Sea salt
  • Freshly milled black pepper
  • Lard or chicken schmaltz
  • 1 head Garlic, halved
  • A few sage leaves
  • 2 tsp Fennel seeds
  • 750 ml 3.5% Milk
  1. Preheat oven to 240C/460F. Pat the skin of the pork belly really dry and season the flesh side with pepper and half the salt.
  2. Place pork belly, skin side up, in a 28-32cm x 25cm metal baking tray. Rub the pork belly skin with lard or schmaltz. Rub the remaining sea salt into scored skin. Roast for 25-35 minutes or until skin starts to blister.
  3. Remove the tray from the oven. Reduce oven temperature to 180C/350F. Carefully pour the milk around the meat to come about half to two thirds of the way up the sides of the pork. Add garlic halves, sage and fennel seeds to milk. Roast for a further 1½ hours or until the meat is meltingly tender. If the skin needs more crisping, turn the grill on for 5 minutes but watch like a hawk as it can quickly catch and burn.
  4. Remove the pork from the oven, lift it out of the tray and transfer to a plate. Discard the excess liquid. You can roast some potato wedges with the pork belly to soak up the milk. Set aside to rest for 10-15 minutes before carving.

© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com



© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com



© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com




25 comments:

Linda's Relaxing Lair 24/5/26 00:33

This looks fantastic, Angie! I love roast pork!

[Reply]
Brian's Home Blog 24/5/26 01:23

I bet that is so good, juicy and tender, YUM!

[Reply]
J.P. Alexander 24/5/26 03:28

Gracias por la receta. Te mando un beso.

[Reply]
Modrina Neba - Blue Sky 24/5/26 06:07

Good food, of everything on the plate I would eat the salad, I am like a rabbit :)))
I wish you a nice Sunday, hug!

[Reply]
Margaret D 24/5/26 06:46

Looks and sound good, Angie. We are having the same for dinner this evening :)

[Reply]
Tandy (Lavender and Lime) 24/5/26 07:05

The crackling looks amazing! Time for me to get some pork belly again.

[Reply]
Lola Martínez 24/5/26 10:46

No elijo nunca estos cortes de carne y menos los preparo en leche como tú has hecho pero me ha gustado tanto esta receta que me la voy a guardar para hacerla en algún momento y probarla, esa costra crujiente llama mucho la atención.

[Reply]
MELODY JACOB 24/5/26 12:24

This looks incredibly rich and comforting, especially with the contrast between the crispy crackling and the tender milk braised meat underneath. I like that you included the details about keeping the skin dry because recipes like this really depend on technique as much as ingredients. The fennel, sage, and garlic probably give the pork such deep flavour without overpowering it. Serving it with the radicchio salad also sounds like the perfect balance against the richness of the pork belly. I recently shared a new post on my blog too and would love for you to stop by and read it www.melodyjacob.com

[Reply]
U zvijezdama piše 24/5/26 12:28

Vrlo lijepo i ukusno. Sigurna sam

[Reply]
eileeninmd 24/5/26 12:37

Wow, looks delicious Angie, thanks for sharing.
Take care, enjoy your day and happy new week.

[Reply]
Tom 24/5/26 12:55

...I can add this to the long list of things that I've never eaten.

[Reply]
David M. Gascoigne, 24/5/26 12:58

The visual appeal alone would have us all licking our lips!

[Reply]
DEZMOND 24/5/26 13:13

Wishing you a pleasant Sunday lunch! It is almost 30C here, had to take out shorts and short sleeves.

[Reply]
David Scott Allen 24/5/26 13:16

Just saw this on Instagram—it looks incredible.

[Reply]
Neil 24/5/26 15:10

Beautiful! I haven't had Pork belly in ages Angie and this looks like the perfect recipe for a leisurely Sunday dinner!

[Reply]
My name is Erika. 24/5/26 15:15

I've wanted to try making pork belly, and now I know how to go about it. This looks delicious Angie. Enjoy the rest of your weekend.

[Reply]
Lori 24/5/26 18:48

Angie this looks absolutely stunning!! You really nailed this one.

[Reply]
Granny Sue 24/5/26 18:53

What a beautiful dish! Almost too pretty to eat. But I bet it's delicious!

[Reply]
claire 24/5/26 19:38

It looks perfect! I remember I tried to prepare something like it long time ago but finally I made some mistakes and it was awful

[Reply]
Lowcarb team member 24/5/26 23:15

Looks great :)

All the best Jan

[Reply]
Cooking Julia 25/5/26 00:21

The crust looks totally fantastic!

[Reply]
Judee 25/5/26 05:11

I'm sure this is a wonderful dish that most people would enjoy.

[Reply]
Modrina Neba - Blue Sky 25/5/26 09:22

I wish you a wonderful Monday, HUG

[Reply]


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