Coconut Pork Stew With Garam Masala
Updated February 28, 2024
- Total Time
- 3 hours, plus overnight marinating and soaking
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE STEW
2 ½ pounds boneless pork butt (fat trimmed), or pork stew meat, cut into 1 ½-inch pieces
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 ½ teaspoons kosher salt, more to taste
1 ½ teaspoons garam masala
½ teaspoon cayenne
½ cup dried yellow split peas
2 ½ tablespoons coconut oil
1 large yellow onion, finely chopped
1 cinnamon stick
6 cloves garlic, minced
1 serrano or jalapeño pepper, minced
1 26- to 28-ounce can or package diced tomatoes
1 cup coconut milk, solids and liquid whisked together
Chopped cilantro, for garnish
FOR THE GARLIC-COCONUT OIL, FOR SERVING
⅓ cup coconut oil
1 teaspoon mustard seeds
6 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
3 hot red or green chiles, halved lengthwise, seeds scraped out with a spoon
Preparation
- Step 1
In a large bowl, combine the pork with the cumin, salt, garam masala and cayenne. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
- Step 2
Cover the split peas with boiling water to cover by 2 inches, and let soak overnight. Drain.
- Step 3
Heat oven to 325 degrees.
- Step 4
Heat oil in large Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add onion and sauté for 8 minutes, or until tender and golden brown. Add cinnamon stick, garlic and jalapeño. Saute for 5 minutes, until the jalapeño is tender. Add the pork and any juices from the bowl and sauté until lightly browned all over, about 7 minutes.
- Step 5
Stir in tomatoes, split peas and coconut milk and season with more salt, to taste. The pork should just be covered by liquid. If it’s not, add a little water until it is. Bring to a simmer over high heat.
- Step 6
Once the mixture is simmering briskly, cover Dutch oven, and place in oven for 2 to 2 ½ hours, or until split peas are tender and pork is falling apart and cooked through.
- Step 7
Meanwhile, prepare the garlic coconut oil: In a small saucepan, heat oil over medium heat. Add mustard seeds. Once they begin popping, add garlic and chiles, and fry until edges of garlic turn golden brown. Immediately remove pan from heat and reserve. (Do not allow entire garlic cloves to brown or they will taste bitter.)
- Step 8
Serve warm, drizzled with garlic coconut oil and garnished with chopped cilantro.
Private Notes
Comments
Could this be adapted for a slow cooker and/or pressure cooker? Seems like a fantastic weeknight dish if it can be done with one of those methods!
Doubling the yellow split peas quantity will thicken it further & adding additional diced tomatoes midway through the cooking will increase the vegetable to meat ratio. It can sustain the extra content and holds up without calling for rice.
Given the large difference in smoke points between refined and virgin coconut oils, and the way it's used in this recipe (hint: heated) I would wager that refined is the better of the two.
Delicious and easy, hit all of the right points for ease of preparation and high quality dinner return. On rotation from now on.
Made this tonight with leftover roast pork leg and it was one of the very best things I have eaten lately. Really, really delicious. Perfect dish for company (although my husband and I are going to eat all of it ourselves)
Worth the effort! In the oven, I also lost a lot liquid and it got a little burnt around the perimeter, but that didn't affect the delicious flavor. I cooked it the day before and then added a little water to loosen up the sauce. It actually ended up like a kind of ragù (the pork broke apart) but it was heavenly. Don't skip the garlic coconut oil! Really elevated the whole thing.


