Recipe

Marias Authentic Mexican Pork Carnitas Using Wild Hog Or Domestic Pork Recipe


Marias Authentic Mexican Pork Carnitas Using Wild Hog Or Domestic Pork Recipe
Authentic carnitas are "boiled" in lard - not braised, not baked, and not roasted. We have made this several times and it is fantastic. The technique is the most important part. It is what gives this dish the moist and tender inside with the authe... More

Txgreg

 Does this look good? Yeah! / Nope
Fans
Ingredients
  • 3 lbs. Pork, cut into 2-3" pieces (uncured domestic or wild)
  • 3 lbs. Lard (or enough to cover meat by at least half)
  • 3 cloves Garlic, minced
  • Juice of one Orange
  • Juice of one Lemon
  • Salt to taste
  • 2 Tbs. Milk

Directions
  1. We cook this outside on a gas burner in an aluminum caldero (cauldron). The smell will linger for days if cooked inside.
  2. Add the lard to the caldero and place over medium heat.
  3. While the lard is melting and coming to heat, blend the garlic with the orange and lemon juices. Taste and add salt to taste.
  4. Add juice mixture to lard and wait for lard to begin to bubble.
  5. When lard begins to bubble, immediately add the pork and increase flame to just above medium.
  6. Note: Bubbles are formed by the liquid boiling out of the lard. Visualize water splashed into hot oil. The liquid keeps the temperature of the lard down, allowing the inside of the pork to be cooked through. As the liquid cooks out the temperature of the lard will rise. THAT is what forms the crispy crust on the outside once the inside is cooked.
  7. Cook the pork until tender, turning occasionally. About 1 1/2 hours for wild hog, or up to 3 hours for domestic.
  8. Note: If pork is cooking too quickly on the outside, either the heat is too high OR the liquid has cooked out and needs to be replenished. If the lard is bubbling and the pork is cooking too quickly, then the heat is too high. If the lard is not bubbling then the liquid is gone - add some more. Remember, the idea is to keep the temperature of the lard down so that the pork slow cooks all the way through and becomes tender.
  9. Once the pork is tender, start watching for "the change." That is when the liquid has cooked out of the lard, the temperature begins to rise, and the pork just starts to brown. At "the change" add the milk and allow the pork to brown on the outside.
  10. Remove the pork to a platter. You should have juicy tender pieces of pork with a crispy golden brown crust.
  11. When cool enough to handle, shred the pork.
  12. Serve as tacos with homemade corn tortillas, crema, shredded cabbage, and lime. Or, this can be used in enchiladas, tamales, chimichangas, totastadas, or nachos.

Recent Gawkers
Not quite what you're looking for? See more Main Dish / Pork
Comments


Wonderful post! You have my 5! Welcome to GR!


Wow! This sounds great.


Add a Comment
You must be logged in to comment on a recipe. Login
Alterations
No alterations yet


Suggest an Alteration
You must be logged in to suggest a recipe alteration. Login
Viewing Marias Authentic Mexican Pork Carnitas Using Wild Hog Or Domestic Pork Recipe

Tool Box

url
Print Recipe
Email it
Send Recipe to Cell Phone
Login to Add a Note [?]
Login to Save this [?]
Subscribe to txgreg [?]
Flag as Interesting/Unique [?]
Add to Comparison Queue [?]

Flavors

Login to Add Flavor Tags [?]

Ratings & Honors

5

You need to be logged in to rate a recipe.

Groups

You need to be logged in to add a recipe to a group

Related Menus

Related Tags