Asian Pork Roast

"This makes for a delicious Sunday dinner. I serve it with rice (sometimes mashed potatoes, though) and broccoli."
 
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Ready In:
9hrs
Ingredients:
12
Serves:
12
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ingredients

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directions

  • You'll need 2 heavy-duty large plastic bags; place one inside the other, then place roast inside inner bag.
  • In bowl, combine all other roast ingredients and mix well; pour over the roast in the bag.
  • Press out any air, tie it up with a twist-tie or elastic band, and place in a large bowl and stash in your fridge.
  • Marinate for about 6 hours, occasionally squishing bag to make sure all the meat gets contact with the marinade; you can get away with 3 to 4 hours though.
  • Preheat oven to 325F degrees.
  • Remove roast from bag, discarding marinade.
  • Place roast on a rack in a roasting pan and roast until pork reaches internal temp of 170F (75C) and juice is no longer pink-- about 3 hours.
  • Let stand for about 15 minutes before carving to allow juices to settle back into meat.
  • To make the sauce, combine all sauce ingredients in a small saucepan and heat over medium heat until jelly melts.
  • Stir well and serve with pork.

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Reviews

  1. I had plans on making this for our Christmas dinner, but we had been given a lovely ham on the bone so we ate that instead. Decided to make this delicious pork recipe today for a family Sunday roast. I used a shoulder roast (bone in) and the meat was the most tender of any I have ever made. Plenty left for sandwiches tomorrow too, which is a bonus! Thanks for posting and to anyone wanting a delicious roast give this one a go!
     
  2. This was Wonderful,I would,t change a thing.I served it with some Steamed broccoli and a bowl of mashed potato,s.
     
  3. I used a boneless shoulder pork roast and marinated it overnight. I think modern pork is too lean, so it's easy to have "dry" pork. But the slow-roasting helped keep it from getting too dry and the flavor was good. I used orange marmalade instead of currant jelly in the sauce, just what I had, but I liked it very much. I shredded the left-over meat and simmered in the remaining orange sauce and a 1/2 cup bottled bbq sauce - made GREAT sandwiches the next day! Thanks for a great recipe, Lennie
     
  4. A little on the dry side, I used a pork tenderloin. The sauce is sweet and tangy all at the same time, but it couldn't hide dried out meat. This recipe might be more suited to a fattier piece of pork. I am using the leftovers sliced very thin with Open Pit BBQ sauce - nice firm textured meat with a bit of spice.
     
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I have been sharing recipes here at Recipezaar since October 2001. You won't see me around anymore, although if you're an old-school Zaarite you'll remember that in the past, you couldn't shut me up!
 
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