The Happy Home Cook: Instant Pot Pork Pata Tim
/The Happy Home Cook features cherished recipes of Filipino dishes from well-known foodies and contributors. If you have a recipe that you are proud of and would like to share, please send it along with a photo of the dish, your two-sentence bio and your picture to submissions@positivelyfilipino.com.
Servings: 4
Pressure: 45 minutes
Pressure Level: High.
Category: Easy
Ingredients:
4 pounds pork pata or hocks, bone-in, cut into serving pieces
¼ cup soy sauce
1 Tablespoon calamansi (or lemon) juice
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
2 cloves garlic, peeled, mashed
1 white or yellow onion, chopped
3 star anise points (broken from 1 whole pod piece)
1 (4 ounce) disc panocha or substitute ½ cup dark brown sugar
2 bay leaves
½ teaspoon black peppercorns
1 teaspoon salt
6 cups organic beef or chicken broth
Procedure:
· In a large bowl, marinate the pork pata in soy sauce and calamansi juice. Cover and set aside in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour.
· Cover the bottom of the inside pot of the multicooker with vegetable oil.
· Add the pata, garlic, onions, star anise, panocha (or brown sugar), bay leaves, black peppercorns and salt. Pour the broth. Do not stir.
· Secure the lid. Check that the cooking pressure is on High and the release valve is set to Sealing.
· Select Manual High Pressure for 45 minutes.
· When cooking is complete, use a quick release. Open the lid carefully. Stir ingredients.
· Serve warm with steamed rice.
Note: It takes about 17 to 20 minutes for the Instant Pot to pre-heat before the High-Pressure cooking time begins. For other multicookers, please check the product manual. For safety, use accessories recommended only for the Instant Pot or most multicookers like silicone or metal. Do not use glassware. Read the manual for complete safety instructions.
Cook’s comments: Panocha is a raw sugarcane cake in the Philippines and some Asian countries. Reddish-brown in color, it is made from boiled molasses and molded into a round disc resembling a coconut shell. In America, they are sold in Asian markets or online sources.
Disclosure: Instant Pot is the brand name of a multicooker that cooks in high and low pressure. I was not paid by the Instant Pot company to mention the brand nor endorse it. My opinions are my own.
From Instant Filipino Recipes: My Mother’s Traditional Philippine Food In a Multicooker Po by Elizabeth Ann Besa-Quirino
Elizabeth Ann Quirino, based in New Jersey is a journalist and author of the “Instant Filipino Recipes: My Mother’s Philippine Food In a Multicooker Pot” Cookbook. She is a member of the International Association of Culinary Professionals and blogs about Filipino home cooking on her site AsianInAmericaMag.com.
More articles from Elizabeth Ann Quirino