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Cuba and Puerto Rico (Spanish colonial whole-pig tradition adapted to Caribbean flavours) Techniques

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Cuba and Puerto Rico (Spanish colonial whole-pig tradition adapted to Caribbean flavours)
Lechón Asado
Cuba and Puerto Rico (Spanish colonial whole-pig tradition adapted to Caribbean flavours)
Lechón asado is Cuba and Puerto Rico's most celebratory preparation — a whole pig marinated overnight in mojo (sour orange, garlic, oregano, cumin, and olive oil), then roasted on a spit over a wood fire for 6–12 hours until the skin crackles to a golden, brittle shell and the interior meat steams in its own fat until falling-tender. The pig must be marinated inside and out, with the mojo injected into the thickest muscles. The spit rotation is constant — each rotation is approximately 2 minutes — ensuring even heat exposure. The defining moment of lechón asado is the 'chicharrón skin strike' — the crackling skin is struck with a wooden mallet immediately after removal from the spit, shattering it into manageable pieces. The fat renders completely during the long cook, basting the meat from the inside.
Caribbean — Proteins & Mains