How to make Gordon Ramsay's coffee-spiced pork shoulder with sweet potato and yuca
Gordon Ramsay: Going off the beaten track makes my cooking better
While we might be most familiar with seeing Gordon Ramsay cooking up a storm in a galley, he says he loves to “get out of the kitchen and get my hands dirty”.
That could explain why he’s filmed three series of Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted on National Geographic, giving him the opportunity to explore different experiences and dishes from all over the globe.
From snacking on alpaca meat 11,000 feet above sea level in the Peruvian Andes, to eating fish curry in Kerala, south India, Ramsay, 56, has been on a culinary tour of the world.
“I always love to get out of the kitchen and get my hands dirty,” he says. “It gives me time to embed into local food communities and get inspired.”Â
In the series, Ramsay switches positions – in many of his previous shows, he’s the teacher, but he’s very much the student in Uncharted. He says this “definitely made me more humble, especially when the locals don’t love my dishes”, but ultimately “experience helps me become a better chef”.
Now, the chef is releasing a cookbook-meets-travelogue as an accompaniment to the TV show, with the recipes reflecting the diversity of his travels.
Dishes include spicy grilled lobster with coconut and breadfruit from Hawaii, chicken pepper pot from the jungles of Guyana, New Orleans-style BBQ shrimp and spice-rubbed steaks with pele pele sauce from South Africa.
Ramsay breaks down his approach to travel and food…Â
“Having an open mind really helps you to bed in with the local community. For me, I get to better understand the importance of each dish and ingredient.
“It really helped me to craft some of the incredible dishes at our final cooks and now this amazing book. And trust me, I’ve taken all that knowledge and used it in my dishes at my restaurants around the world.”
“If you want to go off the beaten path, you’re not getting on the tube or M5 to get there. You have to have some adventure involved! And as I learned in Peru with the mango tree, some of the best ingredients come from being out of your comfort zone.”Â

“When I was a young chef, I wanted to have all the experience and knowledge to help me be the best. I wasn’t going to places like Laos or Tasmania, but I was travelling and taking in everything I could get from every city I went to.
“I may not have been rappelling a cliff or diving while learning in France, but trust me, some of those kitchens were just as intense!”Â
“I’d have to say the Pandi curry in India. I’ve made many curries in my time, but this one was truly unique since it used pork. I’ve been to India many times, but never to this region and getting in so in-depth with the local purveyors.
“I learned so much from the curry – to the coffee liquor to those spicy pickled vegetables – that said, the biggest challenge for me during that trip had to be getting the ants we used for the ant curry out of my hair!”
“Of course I’ve failed. I’ve lost fires, burned protein, disappointed the locals – but I’ve always picked myself up and tweaked and finessed my mistakes.
“Mistakes aren’t bad when it comes to cooking, it’s the perfect learning experience. So if you fail with any of the recipes, just learn and adjust and keep trying.”Â
“That’s so tough, that’s like choosing a favourite child. They were all so unique and beautiful, but I think Tasmania was really memorable to me. The culture of bartering and the incredible seafood really opened my eyes to the incredible bounty that island has.”Â
“Resourcefulness and making sure that we only take what we need. Those principles are very similar to what we are running and doing in restaurants, use what you need, take what you need. And making sure it’s seasonality at its best.”
Coffee-spiced pork shoulder with sweet potato and yuca
A hearty dish spiced with coffee and chilli.
Servings
4Preparation Time
35 minsCooking Time
1 hours 20 minsTotal Time
1 hours 55 minsCourse
MainIngredients
For the coffee-spiced pork shoulder:
2tsp ground cumin
2tsp sweet paprika
1tbsp kosher salt
1tbsp finely ground coffee
1tbsp granulated sugar
ÂĽtsp chili flakes, or more to taste
2tsp annotto seeds, finely ground (if you can’t find annatto seeds, you can substitute with 2tsp achiote paste)
½ boneless pork shoulder (about 1.3kg)
Extra-virgin olive oil
For the sweet potato and yuca:
1 red onion, diced into 1.3cm pieces
1 star anise
3 garlic cloves, crushed
Kosher salt
1 sweet potato, peeled and diced into 1.3cm pieces
1 yuca, peeled and diced into 1.3cm pieces
1 cup dark rum
3-4 cups chicken stock
Method
Prepare the pork shoulder: In a small bowl, combine the cumin, paprika, salt, coffee, sugar, chili flakes, and annatto.
Season the pork shoulder with the rub, rubbing it in with your hands to coat evenly. Set the pork shoulder aside to marinate at room temperature for at least 30 minutes.
Heat a large Dutch oven over high heat and drizzle the pork with olive oil. Place the pork shoulder in the pot and sear on all sides until caramelised and golden brown. Remove the pork from the pot and set aside.
Make the sweet potato and yuca: To the pot, add the onion, star anise, and garlic. Season with salt. Cook until all the ingredients begin to caramelise and the anise is aromatic, about seven to 10 minutes. Add the sweet potato and yuca and saute for five minutes longer, until they start to brown. Add the rum to deglaze the pot, scraping the bottom with a wooden spoon to release all of the brown bits. Simmer until the rum is reduced by half.
Finish the pork shoulder: Return the pork to the pot and pour in the chicken stock, making sure the stock comes halfway up the side of the pork, adding more liquid if needed. Bring to a boil, then cover and reduce to a simmer, cooking for about two hours or until the pork easily breaks apart with a fork. Remove the vegetables with a slotted spoon.
Once the pork is tender, remove it from the pot and set it on a large plate or cutting board. Pull the pork into large pieces using two forks.
Reduce the cooking liquid that remains in the pot by half until slightly thickened.
To serve, plate the pork and vegetables on a serving platter and drizzle cooking liquid over top.
- Gordon Ramsay’s Uncharted: A Culinary Adventure With 60 Recipes From Around The Globe, is published by National Geographic. Available now. You can stream all episodes of National Geographic’s Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted exclusively on Disney+.
