6 pounds pork shoulder or boneless country style ribs* 1 tablespoon garlic salt 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, divided 1 large onion, finely diced 4 medium cloves garlic, minced (about 2 tablespoons) 2 28 ounce San Marzano tomatoes*** 1 6-ounce can tomato paste 2 tablespoons dried oregano 1 tablepoon dried basil 1 teaspoon kosher salt 2 14 1/2-ounce can diced tomatoes****, well-drained ¼ cup chopped fresh basil leaves
instructions
Preheat oven to 300˚F. Combine garlic salt and pepper in a small bowl. Stir to combine. Set aside.
On a large cutting board, cut pork into 4-5-inch pieces and trim as much of the visible fat as possible. It’s fine if some of the pieces end up a bit smaller. You definitely won’t be able to remove all of the fat and you don’t want to at this point. (I started with 6 pounds of pork shoulder ribs and ended up trimming a little over a pound of fat.)
Later you’ll be able to remove more of it. Lay pork pieces out on the cutting board* and sprinkle with half of the garlic salt mixture. Flip pieces to opposite side and sprinkle with remaining seasoning.
In a large Dutch oven or large heavy duty soup pot, heat 1 tablespoon olive oil over medium-high heat.
When hot, add enough of the pork to cover the bottom of the pan.
Reduce heat to medium and brown pork on both sides (a tongs work great for this) then remove to a large bowl and repeat with the rest of the pork.
Depending on the size of the pot, you may need to do this in 2-3 batches. Add about a teaspoon of olive oil to the pot before adding another batch of pork.
When all the pork is browned and removed from pot, reduce heat to medium low and add 1 tablespoon of olive oil to pot. (Don’t wash the pot. The “frond” or brown stuff on the bottom of the pot, will add lots of delicious flavor to the sauce.)
Add the chopped onions and cook for about 6-8 minutes, stirring occasionally.
After a couple minutes of cooking, the frond (or brown stuff) on the bottom of the pot, will begin to release into the onions.
When onions are soft and translucent and most of the frond has been release, add the garlic. Cook for one more minute, then return the pork to the pot.
Pour the San Marzano tomatoes into the bowl which held the pork and break tomatoes apart with your fingers. Add tomatoes tomato paste, dried oregano, dried basil and the salt to the pot with the pork/onions. Stir well and bring to a simmer.
Cover pot and place in preheated oven. Roast for 3 hours covered, then remove cover, add well-drained diced tomatoes and roast for another hour, uncovered. Stir halfway through the last hour.
With a slotted spoon, remove pork from sauce to a clean bowl and allow to cool about 20 minutes. Add chopped, fresh basil to sauce in pot and bring to a boil. Reduce to a low simmer and cook for 20 minutes while pork is cooling. (This will thicken the sauce a bit more.)
With two forks or your fingers, shred pork into large pieces. I just break the pieces apart a bit and leave the smaller ones intact. Or leave it in chunks! I had mine with pasta noodles!
bon appetit
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