Brawn
A tasty, economical terrine made from the meat of a boiled pig’s head
Recipe Meta
Prep
1 hour
Cook
3-4 hours (plus 2 x 8-hour chilling stages)
Serves
8
Difficulty
Hard
Ingredients
- 1 pig’s head (4-5kg)
- 1 pig’s trotter
- 1 large onion, halved
- 3 star anise
- 4 bay leaves
- 8 sprigs of tarragon, leaves picked
- 2 tsp of red wine vinegar
Method
First, use a cloth dampened with hot water to wipe down the pig head, taking care to wash any mud, grime and wax off. Cut the ears from the head using a sharp knife, and put these and the trotter in a bowl full of warm water and again wipe to ensure the wax and dirt is removed. Use a disposable razor to shave any whiskers and stubble from the head. Cut the flesh attaching the eyelashes away with a sharp knife.
That’s the visceral stuff done. Have a coffee or a stiff drink.
Put the head into a large stockpot and cover with cold water. Add the trotter, ears, onion, star anise and bay leaves. Bring to the boil and then reduce to a simmer for 3-3½ hours, when the flesh will be soft and pull away from the head if you prod it.
Remove the ears after 2 hours, rinse and leave to cool. You will need to spoon scum from the surface of the simmering water from time to time.
Once cooked, pour the stock through a colander into another large container. Carefully lift the head out and leave to cool on a platter for 20 mins.
Tip about 2 litres of stock back into the stockpot and reduce by half. Tip into a container and leave to cool, then refrigerate overnight. This allows the stock to settle – leaving gristle at the bottom, fat on top. We want the jelly-like middle bit.
Meanwhile, return to the head and pick the meat from it. It’s best to use your hands. You’ll find plenty of meat in the cheeks, behind the jaw, in the tongue if it’s there (you’ll need to peel). Put all the meat in a container.
Chop one of the ears into very thin slices. Add to the picked meat. You can fry slices of other ear for crackling like salad toppings.
Locate the jowls, the firmer fat that was around the cheeks and has striations of meat throughout. Remove the skin and cut the fat into 1cm dice.
The snout has a kind of firmer, fleshy quality too. Include that in your meaty mix, cover and refrigerate.
The next day, scrape the fat off the top of the jelly-like stock and decant all but the bottom sediment into a saucepan. Gently warm and season with red wine vinegar and a good pinch of salt and pepper.
Chop the tarragon, stir through the pork meat, then tip this into a 2lb/900g terrine mould or loaf tin that’s been lined with clingfilm. Pour the stock over the top – so it covers the meat by about 1cm. Leave to cool for 30 mins, then cover with clingfilm and refrigerate for at least 6 hours.
Image: Issy Croker