Rich, succulent, fatty pork combines with sweet white corn hominy in red pozole, an incredibly comforting, classic, cold weather dish that's usually served at New Year's. Whether you call pozole a soup or a stew, it's a satisfying bowl of food, with or without any fixings. Serve with finely sliced cabbage, diced onion, chopped avocado, sliced radishes and peppers, fresh cilantro, lime wedges, and chips or warmed corn tortillas.
Preparation Time
20 mins
Cooking Time
6 hr
Total Time
6 hr 20 mins
Calories
819 Calories
Recipe Instructions
Step 1
Place pork shoulder in the refrigerator. Transfer pork shanks and feet into a large pot on the stove. Add onion, carrot, and celery, salt, pepper, cumin, and bay leaves. Pour in 3 quarts water. Turn heat to high and bring to a simmer.
Step 2
Skim foam from the surface and add Mexican oregano, rubbing it between your hands as you drop it into the pot. Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer gently until pork is tender and will easily come off the bone, about 3 ½ hours.
Step 3
While the pork is simmering, place unpeeled garlic cloves in a dry pan over medium heat. Roast the cloves, shaking the pan occasionally over the heat, until slightly charred on the outside and just starting to get soft on the inside. Remove from the heat and transfer into a bowl to cool.
Step 4
Place guajillo and ancho chile peppers into a 4-cup liquid measuring cup and set a strainer over the top. Ladle some simmering broth from the pot into the strainer until chiles are covered. Let soak until the pork is finished simmering.
Step 5
When pork is finished cooking, set a strainer over a large bowl. Remove pork and vegetables with a slotted spoon and place in the strainer.
Step 6
Meanwhile, peel the cooled garlic cloves and add them to the chile pepper and broth mixture. Puree chile mixture with an immersion blender until smooth.
Step 7
Pass pureed chiles through a strainer into the pot of broth. Add a spoonful or two of the broth to the pureed chiles to help it pass through the strainer if needed. Pour the remaining 1 quart of water through the strainer, then add the pork shoulder to the pot. Simmer over medium-low heat.
Step 8
While the pork shoulder simmers, remove bones from pork shanks, then cut shanks and feet into smaller pieces.
Step 9
Once the pork shoulder has simmered for 1 ½ hours, add diced shanks and feet to the pot. Stir in hominy and continue to simmer until pork is very tender, about 1 more hour. Skim any fat from the surface as it cooks and season with more salt if needed.
Ingredients
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 teaspoons ground cumin
2 ½ pounds pork shoulder, cut into 2-inch chunks
3 large bay leaves
4 quarts water, divided
2 stalks celery, cut in half
2 ½ pounds pork shanks
1 ½ pounds pork feet
1 medium yellow onion, peeled, but left whole
1 medium carrot, peeled and cut in half
2 tablespoons kosher salt, or more to taste
2 tablespoons dried Mexican oregano
12 medium garlic cloves, unpeeled
3 ounces dried guajillo chiles, stemmed and seeded
1 ounce dried ancho chiles, stemmed and seeded
2 (30 ounce) cans white hominy, drained and rinsed