Recipe: Pork Belly Adobo

Truly the most decadent, richest part of the pig…pork belly usually stars in recipes that evokes the guilt of eating such a fatty piece of the beast. Ever since I cooked up this adobo dish, I’ve been trying to find more ways to cook pork bellies. Filipinos have a love affair with all things pork, and to serve it up in one of their staple dishes, only reinforces this idea.

1 pound of pork belly with skin
12-15 cloves of garlic, crushed or chopped
1/2 cup of apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup of dark sweet soy sauce
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 teaspoon of peppercorns
1 bay leaf
water

Slice the pork belly into 1-2 inch cubes. Cook skin-side down in oil over medium to high heat until slightly crispy and a little fat has rendered out. Add vinegar, peppercorns, garlic and bay leaf. Boil until dry, then add sweet soy sauce. Add water to your preference (depending on how much liquid you want in your adobo). Lower the heat and let simmer for about 30 minutes to an hour, making sure that the pork remains tender. Continue to add water if the stew becomes too dry. After removing from heat, served with plain steam rice.

Going nuts for almonds

I have to profess admiration for the folks at Blue Diamond. They have come up with some daring tastes in their Bold flavored almond products. One particular standout which has me running down to the local drugstore regularly is their Wasabi and Soy Sauce flavored almonds. Yes, I was initially skeptical…but after being unable to stop popping these things, I can safely agree with them–what a great combo. Affecting and addicting!

I also sampled their Jalapeno Smokehouse almonds, and while it had a distinct mildly spicy-smoky taste, it doesn’t grab me as much as the Wasabi/Soy Sauce flavor.

Vista with a cleaner face

After fooling around with Vista, I decided to try my luck with Windows 7 beta…and no surprises here, it’s just Vista with a cleaned up act. Unfortunately the same error occurring in Vista (Nvlddmkm stopped responding) is still present in Windows 7. I finally had to suck it up and down-clocked my rig back to stock settings, at which point, Windows 7 happily obliged and behaved itself. What a bummer!