As promised, here is a recipe for a less-lazy Vietnamese sub, otherwise known as Banh Mi. If you live in a city that has Banh Mi, you are very lucky. When I was a kid, my mom used to be able to get them for a dollar each from Chinatown. She would buy them by the grocery bag full so that my brother and I could stuff our little faces when we got home from school. From my understanding as a non-Vietnamese face-stuffer, it seems that these subs have a few key ingredients: Vietnamese-style bun made with both wheat and rice flour, liver pate, mayonnaise, protein of some sort, pickled vegetables and fresh cilantro You can also hit it with some sriracha if you like it spicy.
I’ve decided to make mine with roasted pork belly as the protein.
Ingredients
1 Vietnamese bun
1 heaping teaspoon of liverwurst (the only pate in the store without dairy)
1 heaping teaspoon of mayonnaise
3 slices of pork belly (recipe to follow)
some pickled daikon and carrot
handful of fresh cilantro
Pork belly ingredients:
a piece of raw pork belly that was maybe 12″ x 6″
1 tbsp 5 spice powder
1/2 tsp salt
Let’s do it!
Pork belly takes about an hour and a half – two hours to cook. It’s worth it.
Take the pork belly, rinse and dry it with paper towel. Cut off some of the fat from the bottom (meat side) if you want. There is a ton of fat on the skin side, but we need it.
With a sharp knife, score the skin in a 1″ criss crossed pattern, but don’t cut into the meat. Make sure your knife is sharp, you probably want to use a chef’s knife, not a serrated one. This is a really annoying process, but necessary if you don’t want a big piece of hardened skin you can’t eat. Mix together the salt and spice powder, then rub into the meat.. all around it, into the crevices… Just get it in there. Place the meat on a pan and roast in the toaster oven (or oven). If you have the option, set it on broil (only the top burner going) at 400ºF. Roast for one hour. After one hour, check with an instant read thermometer to see if the meat is at 160ºF. If not, roast it for another 30 minutes at 350ºF. Keep doing this until it reads 160ºF.
Let it cool on the counter, then cut it into slices.
Lunch it up!
Cut the bun in half and take some of the inside bread out to make more room for deliciousness. Spread pate on one side, mayo on the other. Fill with cilantro and wrap up in foil. Put the pickled daikon and carrot into an airtight container. Put the pork in another container. I like to heat up the pork a bit before putting it in the sandwich. By all means, you can put this all together if you like, but I sort of like to keep things separate. I also only made pickled daikon because I’m not a huge fan of pickled carrots.
Enjoy!