What are the effects of resting (or not) carnitas meat after the initial braise
I just read a pork carnitas recipe and part of the workflow/steps went like this:
- braise meat (e.g. pork shoulder, pork butt) for 8+ hours
- remove meat, keep braising liquid available
- shred meat
- return shredded meat to braising liquid for another 30+ minutes
- remove meat
- broil meat for 5-7 minutes
In between steps 2-3, there was no mention of resting the meat. Perhaps that was implicit. Even if it was, it got me thinking. If you are returning the meat (post-shred) back to the braising liquid without ever having rested the meat, are you very likely compromising flavor and/or texture of the final product? If so, is that also a function of the animal and cut? Assume that any bled liquids from the shredding step are passed back to the braising mixture.
Best Answer
Slow-cooked meats that get shreddable (pork butt, beef chuck, etc) are a little different than other cuts, like steaks and rare roast beef.
As a pork butt (or similar cut) cooks and breaks down, it loses the structure that holds juices in. Instead, the braising liquid contains much of that "juice"--including gelatin & melted fat. This is essentially why the meat is even shreddable. The act of shredding/pulling the meat just separates the meat in the spots where the connective tissue has already released the muscle fibers from each other, compared to slicing where you are cutting the muscle fibers apart where they would not naturally separate.
As a general rule, shredded or pulled meats are shredded while still warm/hot, then dressed with the braising liquid, sauce, or gravy to keep the meat juicy. If a recipe calls for letting the meat sit a short period before shredding, it us usually related to allowing it to cool to prevent burning yourself, rather than allowing it to rest, the way we do for a steak.
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What is the purpose of resting meat after temping it?
The center of the steak becomes supersaturated with liquid\u2014there's more liquid in there than it can hold on to\u2014so when you slice it open, all that extra liquid pours out. By resting the steaks, you allow all that liquid that was forced out of the edges and into the center time to migrate back out to the edges.Does pork need to rest after cooking?
Whether it is a pork tenderloin or a large beef roast, we always let meat rest after roasting. One of the reasons we do this is that resting allows the meat fibers\u2014which contract when hot\u2014to relax and reabsorb juices they've squeezed out. If cut too soon, the roast will release these juices onto your cutting board.What does resting pork shoulder do?
Allowing almost any meat to rest\u2014whether thick steaks, thick chops, whole turkeys, briskets or pork butts\u2014helps keep meat more moist and improves the texture & tenderness of meat.Carnitas for Tacos - 1 Easy Step, No Frying | Christine Cushing
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