Wednesday 14 May 2014

Pork Sorpotel (Goan style)

Today's post is truly special. I am posting the recipe of my most favoritest pork dish. SORPOTEL. I have eaten pork sorpotel for every Christmas for the last eight years. And of course on other special occasions too, like a wedding in the family, Easter and a loved one visiting after a long time. The credit for this recipe completely goes to my dearest mum in law (MIL). She laboriously cooked it year after year on every special occasion and she has been kind enough to share the exact details not only of the ingredients but the method too. She in fact made a smaller quantity once, no special occasion, just so that I could watch and learn. How great is that! I learnt to cook this about two years ago when my MIL was visiting her daughter in Dubai for Christmas and we would be without sorpotel. I took this opportunity to put my notes to good use and voila....

Just to give you a background, Sorpotel has portugese influence, and is made by the Goan, Manglorean and East Indian Christian communities. This dish is made in large quantities since it is mostly served on special occasions like weddings, birthdays and parties. The best part about this dish is that it can be cooked well in advance. In fact it tastes better, more pickled with each passing day. Each community makes it differently, for instance the Manglorean community cook sorpotel with the pork offals, and parts of the pig that are otherwise usually discarded. They also add pig blood to the preparation. I have never eaten this dish, as it is not available commercially. So unless you get invited to someone's house for a meal, where this dish is prepared and served, there is a slim chance of you getting to taste this. The East Indian community, on the other hand, has two versions of the sorpotel, one red preparation, where they  use their famous bottle masala and the green sorpotel, where they use whole ingredients i.e.without being ground. And finally the Goan community cook this dish with pork meat and pig liver. The method is mostly the same, where the meat is par-boiled and then chopped into tiny pieces and fried in its own fat, and after which the masala or sauce is prepared and the meat is added and allowed to soak in the spices. This dish best tastes a couple of days after it's made.

So brace yourselves for some hard work, and no shame in asking for help, specially when it comes to chopping the meat. But you will love the dish and when you see your loved ones enjoy it, all the hard labor just seems worth it!

IMPORTANT NOTE :
  • The ingredients in the recipe are for half kg meat only. Please adjust ingredients as per the quantity of meat you will cook.
  • It is recommended that for every 1 kg of pork meat, add 1/2 kg pork liver. This combination tastes best. 
  • Use pork belly for this dish, as the belly has the best distribution of meat, fat and skin.
The delicious fiery SORPOTEL!
Spice Mix:
  1. Kashmiri Cilly - 5 nos
  2. Cumin seeds - 1/2 tsp
  3. Black peppercorns - 20 nos
  4. Cinnamon - 1 inch stick
  5. Cloves - 5
  6. Cardamom - 2
  7. Turmeric powder - 1/4 tsp
  8. ***Vinegar - as required
Dry grind the above ingredients to a fine powder. Add vinegar last to make a paste. Use as much vinegar as needed but be careful as too much will make the dish too sour.

1) Pork meat and liver boiled
2) Chopped liver

1) Fried meat
2) Fried chopped ingredients

Ingredients for chopping:
  1. Onion - 1 medium (finely chopped)
  2. Garlic - 5 medium flakes (finely chopped) 
  3. Ginger - 1/2 inch piece (finely chopped)
  4. Green chilly - 1 no (finely chopped)
Method:
  1. Wash the meat well. Place the whole chunk of meat in a sauce pan and add 1 cup of water. Let the meat cook for ten to fifteen minutes. 
  2. Set the meat aside for cooling. Reserve the water. Cool the water and refrigerate.
  3. Once the meat has cooled, cut the meat into quarter or half inch cubes. Keep the meat and liver pieces separate.
  4. Heat a pan, pour little oil, fry the chopped meat first. Fry till it changes color. Use oil initially, later the pork will release its fat and you will not need to use oil. Fry the liver till it turns black. Note that the liver needs to be fried longer than the meat. Set aside the fried meat.
  5. Heat a sauce pan, fry the onions till they turn golden brown, then add the remaining chopped ingredients. Fry well. 
  6. Add the ground red masala and meat. Fry the masala well. 
  7. Add the meat and liver, and salt, mix well. Put off the flame. Note: No cooking.
  8. Let the meat marinate for four to six hours. 
  9. After six hours, cook the meat with the reserved water, on slow flame for thirty minutes. 
  10. Since the meat is to be consumed after a few days, don't refrigerate on the same day.
  11. Refrigerate after two or three days.
  12. During those two to three days when the meat is not refrigerated, heat the meat twice a day on the flame, preferably once in the morning and once at night. 

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for sharing the article. It is really nice recipe post. Goan Pork Sorpotel is a critical Indian red meat Curry from the previous Portuguese colony and West Indian state of Goa. Sorpotel is a spicy favorite for the duration of Christmas. http://bit.ly/2uqpfyZ

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