So we have a new sous chef at work.  He saw a video on You Tube of Chris Consentino making Porchetta di Testa,  and wanted to try it at the restaurant.  What is porchetta di testa?   Well it is basically a pig's head that is boned out, marinated, then  rolled up, tied, and wrapped, then slow braised for 14 hours.  How  psyched was I when my sous chef ordered two heads and offered to let me  make one?!
DAY 1 - Deboning the head, face to face

I  arrived at work early for Day 1 of Project Porchetta.  My sous chef  demonstrated on one pig's head while I looked on and snapped some  photos.  As he turned the head upside down to get at its chin, some  blood spilled out of the snout.  There was no avoiding the reality of  the animal.  Here I was, staring at its bloody nose, and tongue hanging  out the side of its mouth.  The heads that we received from our meat  purveyor had some of the flesh around the eyes already cut away, but the  eyes were still there.  Some say they can't eat an animal that is  staring at them (like whole fish, head on), but really, there was no  life left in the eyes of this pig.  It wasn't staring at anything.   I  was transfixed, and my sous chef admitted to being a little surprised at  how un-squeamish I was about the process.   He cut his way from the  chin to the snout on the underside of the head, exposing the jowls and  teeth, then turned the head around and released the skin and flesh from  the crown down the top of the snout.  In about 15-20 minutes, the skull  was separated from the face, and the tongue from the skull.  Until then,  I had no idea what a pig's skull looked like. What came off of it,  aside from the fleshy underside of course, looked just like a halloween  pig mask.  Dares to wear it ensued among the prep crew.

Then  it was my turn.  The first thing I noticed was the weight of the pig's  head.  It was easily 20 pounds (by feel, it seemed heavier than my cat,  but lighter than my dog).  Using a disposable gillette razor, I shaved  remnants of bristle from its brow, cheek, and chin and cleaned debris  and wax out of the ears.  A brief once-over with a torch removed any  stubble left behind by the razor.  Then, as my sous chef had done, I  turned the head over (another bloody nose) and started cutting at the  chin.  Pulling at the flesh, I used the tip of my knife to slowly  separate it from the jawbone.  My goal was to leave the skull as clean  as possible, leaving most of the meat attached to the skin.  I was  thankful to have the other pig's skull next to me so I could see what I  was looking for underneath everything.  My sous chef left me to my work,  remarking to  the prep cooks that I was "mucha macho,"  as our house  butcher looked on approvingly.  I guess they weren't used to seeing a  woman so enthusiastic about butchering hog.  Anyway, there were several  different muscles and a lot of connective tissue under the jaw, making  it extra tricky to figure out where to cut. Cutting away the top of the  head was a little easier.  There wasn't a lot of flesh there except for  the cheeks, so I had to take it slow not to cut through the skin.  The  last step of taking the mask off the snout was definitely a two-person  job.  I tried to do it myself, but the pig mask was cumbersome -  just  flapping around - and there was no way to rest the skull steadily.  One  person needed to pull on the skull while the other pulled on the mask  and cut away at the cartilage of the snout.  After separating the mask  from the skull, I pulled open the jawbone to get at the tongue, then  pulled the tongue down through the jaw and separated it from the skull a  its base.
We  generously seasoned both masks inside and out, and the tongues with  salt, pepper, and herbs and wrapped them tightly in plastic.  Then they  were placed in the refrigerator to cure/marinate.  We marinated the  first one for only one day, mine for two days.
DAY 3 - Tie and Braise

After  two days of curing, I unwrapped my pig's head and removed all the herbs.   Unlike what was shown in Chris Consentino's video, we had left the  ears on on the pig face.  So before rolling the mask, we tucked the tips  of its ears into the eye holes.  We put the tongue inside the snout,  and rolled the whole thing up, tucking in the ends.

We  tied up the package, wrapped it in several layers of plastic wrap, then  in aluminum foil.  Finally we tied up the wrapped package and braised it  overnight for 14 hours in a large pot of water on an induction cooktop  set at 180-190 degrees.  We learned, from having braised the first pig  head the night before, that even if I filled the pot to the brim at  closing, by the time my sous chef arrived the next morning, so much of  the water would have evaporated that the porchetta would be only half  covered.  So this time we had to make sure that the night crew that came  in to clean would periodically check in and refill the pot if needed.
DAY 4 - Cool and Set
Although  I was happy about having a day off from work, I was disappointed that I  wouldn't be there to see this step through with the pig's head I had  started.  However I had seen the the porchetta that my sous chef braised  the day before hanging in the walk-in.  After braising, he removed the  porchetta from the liquid, cooled it down, still wrapped to let the  gelatin set back up.  In my absence, he would also take care of this  step for the second one.
DAY 6 - Slice and Serve

Ah, the day of reckoning. It  has been almost a week since I started out face to face with the pig's  head (more, if you count the time it took to defrost it).  On day three,  while we were rolling the porchetta that I had deboned, my sous chef  remarked "this is your baby too."  He had, inadvertently or not,  stumbled onto a very fitting metaphor.  In a way, it was my  baby (wait, does that make him my Lamaze partner?)  Here was this humble  pig's head, a part of the animal most Americans don't ever want to  associate with ham and cheese sandwiches or juicy pork chops.  I  lovingly and with much care, deboned it, seasoned it, and rolled it.  I  made sure that there was someone to babysit the entire 14 hours it  braised, then I entrusted someone else to take it out, cool it and hang  it.  In many ways the past 6 days have been like a gestation period.  I   had no idea what to expect.  Did I wrap it tightly enough? Would the  fat and gelatin set?  Would there be to many air pockets?  I was giddy  with anticipation, when today, we finally unwrapped that baby, sliced it  and tasted it.  Was it good?  Hmm-hmm, come to mama...

 
 
 
3 comments:
Sorry, but that was pretty gross!
I've had a reader, enthusiastic about trying this at home, ask where "regular people" can get a pig's head. Well, the ones we used came frozen from our meat purveyor, and I did ask about where we could get fresh ones. Apparently fresh ones are available at farmers markets. I doubt you'll be able to find one just strolling through on any given day, but I'm sure if you talk to one of the pig farmers in advance, they can get one for you.
This animal has been bred and been put through the abuse of your average slaughterhouse. Just to please you and your equally as apathetic cronies (sorry, 'chefs'). Then you dare each other to 'wear' it. I'm just an ordinary, everyday woman, but jesus you're incapable of respecting the tiniest little thing on this planet aren't you? Pathetic. Grow a pair and get a real job instead of running around getting excited over wearing a pig's face.
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