How do you separate the skin from pork?

How do you separate the skin from pork? - From below of crop multiethnic team of professional basketball players gathering and putting hands together while standing on playground before game

I cure my own bacon with the skin still on the pork belly because I do not know how to remove it. I tried slicing it off with a knife (type unknown) but quickly lost patience. What is the best way to accomplish this task?

Also, I have 50 pounds of pig fat with which I intend to make lard, but I must removed the skin from it as well.



Best Answer

A technique that I've seen is to score the skin in strips on the outside and then cut and peel the skin like a band-aid with a sharp knife (paring or boning) aiding the separation. I'm not a butcher, but last time we cured meat, we (two people) went through 100 lbs of fresh meat meticulously in about 20 minutes using this method (the other person was a southern Italian gentleman who was an old-hand at this).

You use the knife to cut and separate the skin from the meat and end up with long strips of fat. The skin separates from the meat nicely if you work at the interface layer of the skin and the meat.

With fat, you do a similar method. Except this time you place the skin on the cutting board (fat side up) and essentially scrape the fat off the skin (almost like a fillet action).

In both cases, you grab the skin with one hand and use the knife to separate/wedge the skin from the meat/fat with the other (see the safety note below).

Important safety note: always make sure the knife blade is pointing away from you and you're "cutting away" from your body. Also make sure the hand that is holding the skin is behind the blade and not in the path. This is to make sure that if your hand and knife run away, injury does not occur.




Pictures about "How do you separate the skin from pork?"

How do you separate the skin from pork? - Two Women Sitting in Chairs Using Laptop Computers
How do you separate the skin from pork? - Two Persons Holding a Wine Glass With Red Wine
How do you separate the skin from pork? - Faceless ethnic woman depilating leg with razor in bathroom



Do you remove skin from pork?

Whether or not you leave the skin on the pork shoulder depends on what you plan to do with it. For pulled pork, it's a good idea to remove most of the skin. For other dishes that would benefit from the crispy texture, though, you should leave it in place.

How do you remove fat from pork skin?

Instructions
  • Preheat oven to 250F and set a wire rack over a baking sheet.
  • Using a very sharp knife, cut pork skin and fat into long strips, about 2 inches wide. ...
  • Once that first part of fat is removed, you can hold the skin in one hand as you slide the knife down the strip to remove the majority of the fat.


  • How do you remove the skin from a pork roast?

    Ask your butcher to remove the spare ribs and leave the skin on (unless you are making your own bacon, in which case you'll want to remove the skin). Have your butcher score the skin for you in a cross-hatch pattern, which will help the fat render and the skin crisp up.



    HOW TO REMOVE THE SKIN FROM A PORK BELLY JOINT - Cooking with Chef Dai




    More answers regarding how do you separate the skin from pork?

    Answer 2

    I think this sort of physical skill is very difficult to describe in text.

    You may wish to search for video demonstrations, such as this one. He is essentially flaying the skin from the pork belly, by running the knife under the skin, angled away from the meat (toward the skin) in short passes, slowly pealing it back. Note for safety the knife movement is always away from the body of the person doing the work.

    The speaker recommends using a very sharp, curved, non-pointed knife to make it easiest to remove the skin.

    Answer 3

    Cure bacon with skin on. Hot smoke (or use oven)- skin still on. When internal temp reaches 150 the bacon is done. Remove from smoker (or oven) and easily slice the skin off.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Andrea Piacquadio, Visual Tag Mx, KoolShooters, Sora Shimazaki