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Slow-Cooked Pork Shoulder With Braised White Beans

4.3

(6)

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Peden + Munk

Pork and beans—a match made in heaven. Coco nano beans from Tuscany are perfect for this recipe because of their creamy texture, but they're only found in speciality food stores; you can use cannellini instead.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 servings

Ingredients

Pork

6

pounds bone-in pork shoulder (Boston butt), fat cap trimmed to ¼ inch

3

tablespoons Diamond Crystal or 5 teaspoons Morton kosher salt, plus more

8

fresh bay leaves, divided

¼

cup sage leaves, plus 4 large sprigs

4

tablespoons olive oil, divided

1

head of garlic, halved crosswise

9

juniper berries

4

black peppercorns

3

cups dry white wine

¼

cup best-quality red wine vinegar

Beans

1

large beefsteak tomato, halved crosswise

1

head of garlic, halved crosswise

4

large sprigs sage

2

cups coco nano or cannellini (white kidney) beans, soaked overnight, drained

2

tablespoons plus ¼ cup olive oil

Kosher salt

Greens and Assembly

2

bunches mature spinach, tough stems removed

Kosher salt

2

tablespoons olive oil, plus more for drizzling

4

garlic cloves, thinly sliced

Flaky sea salt

Preparation

  1. Pork

    Step 1

    Sprinkle pork all over with 3 Tbsp. or 5 tsp. salt. Tear 4 bay leaves and ¼ cup sage leaves into small pieces and scatter over pork. Place pork on a wire rack set inside a rimmed baking sheet and cover loosely with plastic wrap; chill 12 hours.

    Step 2

    Let pork sit at room temperature 1 hour. This will help it cook evenly.

    Step 3

    Preheat oven to 450°. Heat 2 Tbsp. oil in a large heavy pot over medium-high. Cook pork, turning occasionally, until browned on all sides, 15–20 minutes. Transfer pork to a large plate.

    Step 4

    Remove pot from heat and pour off any fat. Discard fat and any leaves in pot; wipe out pot. Add remaining 2 Tbsp. oil to pot along with garlic, juniper berries, peppercorns, sage sprigs, and remaining 4 bay leaves. Cook over low heat until garlic just starts to brown around the edges, about 1 minute. Pour in wine and vinegar. Return pork to pot, placing fat side up, and cover with parchment paper, tucking edges down around sides of pork (this prevents it from drying out). Cover pot with a lid, transfer to oven, and cook pork 30 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 300° and cook, turning pork every 30 minutes or so and adding a splash of water if braising liquid is reducing too quickly, until meat is very tender and pulling away from the bone, 2½–3 hours.

    Step 5

    Let pork sit until cool enough to handle. Remove bones; discard. Shred meat into 2”–3” pieces, removing any excess fat (it should pull apart very easily but still hold together in pieces). Transfer meat to a large saucepan and strain braising liquid over; discard solids. Cover and keep warm over lowest heat until ready to serve.

  2. Beans

    Step 6

    Combine tomato, garlic, sage, beans, and 2 Tbsp. oil in a large pot. Pour in cold water to cover by 1½” and bring to a simmer over medium heat, skimming foam from surface as needed. Reduce heat so that liquid is at a very gentle simmer; cook until beans are almost tender but still slightly starchy in the centers (you want them to be about 75 percent cooked), 35–45 minutes. Preheat oven to 300° while the beans are still cooking.

    Step 7

    Remove beans from heat; season with several generous pinches of salt and add remaining ¼ cup oil. Transfer to oven and bake without disturbing beans (you want a film to form on the surface) until tender, 15–25 minutes. Finishing the beans in the oven ensures that they are evenly cooked and creamy. Turn off oven and leave beans inside to keep warm until ready to serve.

    Step 8

    Do Ahead: Beans can be made 1 day ahead. Let cool in liquid; cover and chill. Reheat gently before serving.

  3. Greens and Assembly

    Step 9

    Working in 2 batches, cook spinach in a large pot of boiling salted water until tender and no bite remains, about 2 minutes. Drain in a colander and let cool slightly, then squeeze out excess water.

    Step 10

    Heat 2 Tbsp. oil in a medium skillet over medium and cook garlic, stirring, until softened and barely golden, about 1 minute. Add spinach and stir just to coat leaves in oil and warm through.

    Step 11

    To serve, spoon beans plus a bit of their cooking liquid onto plates. Arrange several pieces of pork and spinach over beans. Drizzle with oil and sprinkle with sea salt.

Nutrition Per Serving

Calories (kcal) 1710
Fat (g) 108
Saturated Fat (g) 31
Cholesterol (mg) 370
Carbohydrates (g) 40
Dietary Fiber (g) 9
Total Sugars (g) 2
Protein (g) 109
Sodium (mg) 2840
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Reviews (6)

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  • This recipe got rave reviews. Didn't use juniper berries because I didn't have them. Started the beans while the pork did the initial roast, then let them sit on the stove until they got added to the oven the last hour the pork cooked. Cooked the wine and vinegar a bit before adding the pork back in and putting it in the oven. Very easy, very tasty.

    • SoozieQ

    • Brimfield MA

    • 12/20/2021

  • Although the recipe doesn't tell you this--you need to bring pot to a boil and cook for 3-5 min to burn off the alcohol in the wine--otherwise it will ignite in the oven creating a serious hazard.

    • Janet

    • Alna, ME

    • 12/9/2020

  • The pork was very tasty. I cooked it 3 hours and followed exact recipe. However beans didn’t come out creamy or extraordinary.. they were ok.. I will try again but maybe will cook beans longer.

    • briggitaz

    • 12/6/2018

  • FIRE HAZARD!!!! I'm surprised this isn't covered in the recipe. If you dump that much wine in the pot and don't boil off the alcohol, it has the potential to ignite in your oven. I know this because our oven blew itself open 3 times before we realized what was going on. On the third time we watched the oven blow open and like a flame thrower, fire spewing from the oven. Needless to say, the zeal for this recipe has waned significantly and we haven't even tasted it. If you're considering preparing this dish, I recommend boiling off some of the alcohol on the stovetop before packing it off to the oven. I'm surprised BA doesn't incorporate this into the instructions as it seems good practice.

    • pjoby

    • USA

    • 3/11/2018