Craving a show-stopping roast that makes your kitchen smell like a five-star restaurant without the panic? Pork belly is the answer.
It’s indulgent, buttery, and with a little garlic-herb love it gets crispy on the outside and silky on the inside. But here’s the catch!
It’s surprisingly easy if you follow a simple plan and don’t rush the roast.
Contents
Equipment: Must-haves
- Oven (reliable and preheatable)
- Roasting pan
- Roasting rack (fits inside the pan)
- Meat thermometer
- Sharp knife
- Cutting board
- Mixing bowl
- Aluminum foil
- Tongs

Equipment: Nice-to-haves
- Kitchen twine (optional but tidy)
- Pastry brush (for glaze)
- Cast-iron skillet (for optional sear)
- Microplane or fine grater (for lemon zest)

Ingredients
- 1 pork belly, skin on (about 2.5 pounds), single piece so you can brag about it
- 1 head garlic, cloves separated and peeled
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 tablespoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon black pepper, freshly ground
- 1 tablespoon fresh rosemary, chopped
- 1 tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
- 1 teaspoon fennel seed, lightly crushed
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
- 2 tablespoons honey or maple syrup
- 1 tablespoon soy sauce (or tamari)
- 1 lemon, zest and juice
- 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard (optional, for punchy edge)
- Aluminum foil (for tenting and cleanup)
- Fresh parsley, chopped, for finishing (optional but pretty)

Instructions
- Preheat the oven and make sure it’s hot and ready; set to a high roast temp then plan to lower it later for gentle rendering.
- Pat the pork belly skin dry with paper towels until you feel proud about the dryness; dry skin = crispy skin, that’s why we do this.
- Score the skin in a diamond pattern with a sharp knife, cutting just through the skin and not deep into the meat; be careful and go slow.
- Salt the skin generously and let the pork rest uncovered in the fridge for at least an hour or overnight to dry the skin further, which helps it crisp.
- Make a paste by crushing the garlic in a mixing bowl, then stir in olive oil, rosemary, thyme, crushed fennel seed, smoked paprika, black pepper, Dijon if using, lemon zest, and a pinch of salt; mix until fragrant.
- Flip the pork belly and spread the garlic-herb paste over the meat side only; rub it in like it owes you money, not on the skin.
- Place the pork belly, skin side up, on the roasting rack inside the roasting pan so the fat can drip and the air can circulate.
- Roast at a high temperature to kickstart the crackle; after the initial high-heat sear, reduce the oven to a lower temperature to render the fat slowly and tenderize the meat.
- About halfway through the low roast, check the pork and if the skin is not yet blistering, increase the heat briefly at the end to finish the crackle; watch closely so it doesn’t burn.
- When the meat feels tender and the thermometer shows that the connective tissue has softened, remove the pork from the oven and tent loosely with foil; let it rest so the juices settle.
- While the pork rests, whisk honey, soy sauce, and lemon juice in a small bowl to make a glossy glaze that will balance the richness with sweet and bright notes.
- Slice the pork belly with a sharp knife into single-serving slices, using steady strokes so the skin stays intact and crispy where possible.
- Brush the warm slices with the glaze right before serving so the sweet notes shine without making the skin soggy.
- Check the internal temperature during cooking with a meat thermometer to ensure tenderness; aim for a temp that indicates rendered fat and tender meat rather than just the minimum safe temp.
- Carve and serve on a warm plate, garnishing with chopped parsley and a little extra lemon zest for brightness; enjoy the applause or the delighted silence.

What Else You Should Know
A few quick truths before you roast: drying the skin is the secret to crispy perfection, so don’t skip the fridge rest. Garlic-herb paste flavors the meat deeply, while a two-stage roast gives you both a crunchy top and melt-in-your-mouth interior.
If your skin refuses to crisp, blast it under a hot broiler for a minute or two—but watch it like a hawk, because burnt skin is a one-way ticket to disappointment. For a shortcut, you can sear the meat in a hot cast-iron skillet before roasting to add extra caramelization, but it’s optional.
Leftovers reheat gently in a hot oven to preserve crispness. Swap honey for maple syrup if you want a smokier sweetness.
Serve with pickled vegetables or a bright salad to cut the richness, and always rest the meat so your first bite isn’t a geyser of hot fat.