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Steaming Ramen
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Steaming ramen

With pork belly

Steaming Ramen
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4 hrs plus marinating
Not Too Tricky

serves 8

nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

The cover of Jamie Oliver's Comfort Food cookbook

Jamie's Comfort Food

Ingredients

8 chicken wings

1 handful of pork bones (ask your butcher)

750g pork belly (skin removed and reserved)

2 thumb-sized pieces of ginger

5 cloves of garlic

sesame oil

1 heaped tablespoon miso paste

400g baby spinach

500g dried soba or ramen noodles

8 small handfuls of beansprouts (ready to eat)

8 spring onions

1–2 fresh red chillies

2 sheets of wakame seaweed

8 tablespoons kimchee

SOY SAUCE EGGS

4 large free-range eggs

200ml low-salt soy sauce

1 splash of mirin

4 star anise

1 thumb-sized piece of ginger

2 cloves of garlic

Method

Ramen is all about investing time to make an incredible steamy broth, using cheaper cuts of meat and bones for maximum flavour. The original Chinese ramen (meaning noodle) has evolved since it was embraced by Japan and beyond, with people all over the world taking the basic principle and experimenting, adding contrasting flavours, pickles and garnishes. Feel free to bend this recipe seasonally – that’s the spirit of it.

  1. To make the soy sauce eggs, boil the eggs for 5 minutes, then refresh in cold water and peel.
  2. Pour the soy sauce and 250ml of water into a small pan with the mirin and star anise. Peel, slice and add the ginger and garlic, then bring to the boil, remove from the heat, leave to cool and pour into a sandwich bag with the eggs.
  3. Squeeze out the air, seal, and pop into the fridge for 6 hours, then drain (this is important).
  4. Preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/gas 6.
  5. Put the chicken wings and pork bones into a large casserole pan. Bash and add the unpeeled ginger and garlic, then toss with a good drizzle of sesame oil.
  6. Put the pork skin on a baking tray and place both tray and casserole pan in the oven for around 40 minutes, or until the skin is perfectly crackled, then remove for garnish.
  7. This is also the perfect time to transfer the casserole pan to the hob, adding in the pork belly and miso. Cover with 3 litres of water, bring to the boil, then simmer gently on a low heat for around 3 hours, or until the pork belly is beautifully tender, skimming the surface occasionally.
  8. Lift the pork belly onto a tray and put aside, then sieve the broth and pour back into the pan. Return to the heat and reduce the liquid down to around 2.5 litres.
  9. While doing this, put a large colander over the pan and steam the spinach until it’s wilted. Let it cool, then squeeze out the excess moisture and divide into 8.
  10. In a separate pan, cook the noodles according to packet instructions, then drain and divide between 8 large warm bowls with the beansprouts and spinach.
  11. Slice and divide up the pork, then halve the eggs and place around the bowls. Trim the spring onions, finely slice with the chilli, and sprinkle between the bowls.
  12. Taste the broth and season with soy sauce, then ladle the steaming broth over everything.
  13. Tear over the seaweed and divide up the kimchee. Drizzle with chilli oil, then break over the crackling. Slurp away!

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