
I recently found some awesome looking rhubarb at a roadside farm in Concord, MA near my sister Elise’s house. I bought it with the thought that I didn’t just want to settle and make the standard ‘strawberry rhubarb’ desert that is delicious but oh so common. ‘There has to me more uses for this stuff than just deserts’ I thought to myself. So through the cookbooks I went for ideas and happened upon a Jamie Oliver recipe that combined the rhubarb in a Chinese sauce that went over pork and then got braised. The pork is served over cold noodles with elements of a salad, in which I included watercress, cilantro, habanero, scallion and of course some of the reduced braising liquid.
If you aren’t familiar with rhubarb (as I wasn’t really) in its raw state, it’s very tart and a bit bitter, almost to the point of a lime flavor.

Rhubarb is in a family of plants that doesn’t include any other popular vegetable really, but lots of flowering plants. Interestingly, the leaves of the rhubarb plant are poisonous, while the stalks are edible (so if you are growing rhubarb, don’t eat the leaves! The plant itself is indigenous to Asia, but grows well in most all temperate climates (and any climate really), and is easy to grow.
This dish worked with the tartness of the rhubarb, but also combines many other flavor profiles into the super savory pork (the word umami came to mind). I’ll start with the sauce and go from there – you can make this ahead of time if you want, and would probably be better. Keep in mind that the pork has to cook for at least 90 minutes, but would be better left in for at least 2.5 hours.
Here’s the sauce for ya:

Here’s the ingredients you’ll need for the rest of the dish:

To make the sauce: toss all of the ingredients into the food processor (it’s fairly necessary for this) and blend for a couple minutes until the mixture becomes the consistency of thick salsa. It will certainly smell strongly.
Preheat your oven to 350 F. Now for the pork, the main event of this dish. You want to use a sharp knife first of all. Remove any bones out of the pork and cube it into 1-2 inch pieces. Place the pork pieces into a roasting pan or dutch oven and dump the sauce all over the pork along with about a cup of water and mix all together. Cover with a lid or tin foil and put the pan in the oven for around 1.5 hours, taking out and stirring the pieces every 30 minutes. You can let this go for longer if you want (I recommend it!)
Next, start a pan of boiling water. Taste the pork after it’s been cooking for a while, it should be really tender, but not totally falling apart.

When it’s to your liking, remove the pork from the sauce and set aside. Get a pan going over medium high heat and add a bit of vegetable oil. Put the pork in the pan and brown until it’s crispy. When the water is boiling, salt it and add the noodles and stir a little. You should also add the pan with the sauce still in it to a burner and reduce until it’s about the consistency of ketchup.
Chop up the rest of the vegetables listed in the ingredient list above. Once the pork is nice and crispy and the noodles are done, strain them and get some plates or bowls out. To assemble, add some noodles to the plate, then the pork and top with the sauce (about 2-3 Tbsp. per plate, but you can estimate of course). Finish with the scallion, watercress, peppers, cilantro on top and serve with a half a lime to squeeze on top. Enjoy!
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