T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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859.1 | A Regal Delight .. the crown roast | FSHQOA::PMCGAN | Phil McGan WA2MBQ | Tue Dec 08 1987 11:11 | 28 |
|
ROAST PORK
A "cheaper" roast pork is done very nicely in the crockpot.
A wide variety of seasonings can be used ... use *lots* of
garlic ... but then I use *lots* of garlic in most every-
thing. If you use a CP, make sure you have a rack under
the roast. Cook for several hours ...
A bit more exotic ... same as above ... but make several
pockets in the roast (slit with very sharp knife) and fill
with stuffing ... any variety ... and proceed.
My favorite ... but a bit more expensive ... buy a rack
of pork from your local butcher and have him/her build
a Crown Roast of Pork for you. Fill with stuffing and
bake. You can find the little "paperfeet" for table
presentation at a good gourmet shop ... i.e., "JOY OF
COOKING" ... Surround with some steam veggies of good
color and broasted potatoes ....
Bon Appetit!
/phil/
|
859.2 | prune stuffed pork roast | THEBAY::WILDEDI | DIGITAL: Day care for the wierd | Tue Dec 08 1987 13:48 | 21 |
| Marinade pitted PRUNES (yeah, I know, but trust me..its good) in
port wine for approx. 6 - 8 hours or overnight.
Slit pockets into a good pork roast (I use the cut they make center
cut pork chops out of - whatever that's called) and stuff with
lots of prunes..rub the whole roast down with a paste made of
garlic puree, pepper, and enough lemon juice to make it rubbable.
You can also add salt to taste.
Roast as cookbook instructs, basting with the port wine you soaked
the prunes in approx every 30 minutes.
Serve with stuffing, gravy made from pan juices and a nice elaborate
salad.
Voilla (as the French say)!!
P.S. garlic puree is best made by baking the whole garlic head, wrapped
in foil, in a slow oven until it is soft to the touch, cool, and
snip the end off each clove and squeeze the puree out. store in
fridge in small jar covered with olive oil...keeps for weeks.
|
859.3 | Easy and Pleasing Roast Pork | VENTUR::LIBRARY | Speak dog speak, bark don't GROWL! | Tue Dec 08 1987 15:18 | 17 |
| ZWODEV::WERENCHUK
The best results in cooking a roast pork, is using a brown in bag.
That way you can cook potatoes, and carrots with it and have a meal
all done at the same time and use only one pan.
Peel and cut potatoes into quarters, peel and cut carrots length
wise, place roast in middle of bag, placing carrots and potatoes
around it. Take Liptons onion soup mix (1 or 2 packages depending
on the size of the roast, add 1 to 1 1/2 cups water. Place in oven
at 350 and bake approximately 40-45 minutes per pound. When done
place on platter with vegtables around, serve with salad and rolls,
it is great when serving a crowd, not a lot of fuss, but always
gets compliments.
|
859.4 | ...keeping it simple... | SALEM::MEDVECKY | | Thu Dec 17 1987 12:38 | 7 |
| ...but if you simply want a Pork (loin) roast, just preheat the
oven to 350.....heavily pepper the pork....put it on a rack in
a cooking dish...insert a meat thermometer and cook until it
registers 160 degrees....Serve with applesauce and ano other of
your favorite veggies
Rick
|
859.5 | Pork with Wine and Grapes | WAGON::ANASTASIA | Patti, VWO/C02, DTN 285-6061 | Fri Dec 18 1987 08:55 | 9 |
| Have you tried the Prok with Wine and Grapes recipe in the Frugal Gourmet
Cooks with Wine cookbook? It is luscious! You marinate the roast in a mix of
brandy, onions, and garlic, then simmer on th etop of the stove for a few hours
in dry white wine. just before you serve it you add seedles while grapes to the
pot for a few minutes. Serve it with Potates Anna, homemade apple sauce, and
asparagus or green beens. Yum yum. Do you want me to post the real recipe?
Patti
(who's mouth is watering just thinking about it)
|
859.6 | Stretch your imagination, try variants | HARDY::KENAH | Virgins with rifles... | Fri Dec 18 1987 11:26 | 5 |
| re .5 Prunes are a wonderful flavor complement for pork.
You don't like prunes? Experiment: try dried apricots.
andrew
|
859.7 | Pork with Grapes and Wine Sauce | WAGON::ANASTASIA | It's in every one of us | Thu Dec 24 1987 08:52 | 62 |
| Pork with Grapes and Wine Sauce
(from The Frugal Gourmet Cooks with Wine)
I'll enter the recipe from the book, then add editorial comments.
3 lb. pork butt roast
Marinade:
1 onion
2 cloves garlic
1 tsp whole thyme
1/4 tsp whole rosemary
1 bay leaf
1/4 tsp black pepper
2 tbl olive oil
1/4 c brandy
Sauce:
2 tbl butter
2 tbl olive oil
1 c dry white wine
2 lb seedless white grapes
1/2 c whipping cream
Slice onion in rings. Crush garlic. Mix all marinade ingredients. Marinate meat
for 2-3 hours, turning often. Remove meat from marinade. Reserve marinade. Pat
meat dry.
Heat a dutch oven or stove top casserole that is big enough for the roast. Melt
the butter. Add oil. Brown roast on all sides. Strain reserved marinade into
pot. Discard solids from marinade. Add wine. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat.
Simmer (covered) 1-1/2 to 2 hours, or until the roast is tender. Add wine as
necessary.
Remove 3/4 of the grapes from the stems. Reserve "stemmed" grapes for garnish.
Add grapes to pot. Cover and cook for 5 minutes. Remove roast. Stir cream into
pan. Cook 2 minutes, stirring.
Slice meat. Arrange on plater. Pour grapes and sauce over meat. Use remaining
grapes for garnish.
Serve with Red Burgandy.
Editorial Comments:
- The pork butt roast looked ugly, I use a pork loin roast.
- I double the marinade ingredients.
- I end up using about 3/4 of a 1 liter bottle of wine. I use Fetzer Premium
White.
- I can't afford Red Burgandy, I serve Pinot Noir.
- I use seedless red grapes.
- Serve with Potatoes Anna. One potato per person. Peel and slice into thin
slices. Arrange in a pie pan. Drizzle with butter. Bake at 425 for abou 1
hour. Uncover, bake for 1/2 hour. (I sometimes nuke these for a while so they
don't take so long to cook.)
|
859.8 | How about Porketta? | MEMORY::UNDERHILL | | Tue Feb 02 1988 08:13 | 11 |
| Does anyone out there know the recipe for Porketta? I believe it's
an Italian roast pork that is rolled up in a jelly-roll fashion
and has fennel, pepper, and garlic. That's about all I can remember
about it, and I do know it's hot and spicy. Usually I buy it with
the spices already in it, but I would like to try to make it myself.
It's a delicious roast, and any help would be appreciated.
Thanks
Patty
|
859.10 | Amish tradition - Pork and Sauerkraut | 3D::TBLAKE | Blessed are the piecemakers | Fri Jan 13 1989 12:59 | 14 |
| Anybody for pork and sauerkraut? My husband's family is from
Pennsylvania and his mom always makes pork and sauerkraut on New
Year's Day for good luck; I guess it's an Amish or Pennsylvania
Dutch tradition. Anyway, I made it for the first time this year.
It's quite simple--cook a pork roast following basic directions
for seasoning, placing on a rack in a 325 degree oven for several
hours and add sauerkraut (doctored to your liking) around the roast
during the last hour of roasting. Serve with mashed potatoes.
I'm not a big sauerkraut fan (I enjoy it in small quantities) but
this stuff was like candy. Good thing. A 9-lb roast for two people
lasts awhile.
Tammy
|
859.18 | Use BBQ grill like an Oven ! | WJO::BLOOD | | Mon Jul 31 1989 12:49 | 14 |
|
I cooked a boneless pork roast on the gas BBQ grill
this weekend. Both sides of the grill were on LOW and I put a
meat thermometer in it (because I can never figure out when
Pork is 'white' and not 'pink').
I also had a cover on the roasting pan.
It was juicy and delicious. I believe it takes less
time on the BBQ than in the kitchen oven. I cook
turkey, beef and pork roasts, meatloafs etc. on my grill.
I use it like an oven.
Good luck
Joanne
|
859.19 | BBQ does indeed work great ... | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | We're all bozos on this Q-bus | Tue Aug 01 1989 10:52 | 15 |
|
I cooked a pork roast on my gas grill the same way a few weeks ago
and it was *real* tasty. After 1 1/2-2 hrs cooking, it had only
reached 160 deg. so I threw it in the microwave for a brief period
and let it stand afterwards about ten minutes and came up to temp
nicely (170 deg for well done pork).
I've been using this stuff made by the House of Tsang called Korean
Stir Fry Sauce. It's sort of a thick soy-sesame seed mixture, and
I use it as a baste/marinade instead of a stir fry sauce. It tastes
great on pork and chicken dishes when basted on periodically while
they're cooking on the grill.
- Larry
|
859.20 | My FAVORITE leftover | THE780::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Wed Oct 25 1989 14:59 | 32 |
| Ah Ha! One of my favorite leftovers.....
cut all fat off pork. Place in food processor or meat grinder or simply
chop up very fine. Add diced sweet pickle, mayonaise and make a pork
salad for sandwiches. You can add a hint of dijon mustard, some chopped
black olives, etc. Whatever you like in a salad. Serve on rye bread.
Great stuff.
Shread the pork meat with two forks (no fat or gristle). Stir into
a good commercial enchilada sauce (canned - usually available in any
market in the U.S. these days)...using enough sauce to thoroughly
moisten meat, not make it soupy. Heat through on the stove over
medium heat. Use this as a filling for burritos with diced onion,
grated cheddar/jack cheese, chopped avocado, etc. OR Make enchildas
by rolling a flour tortilla around some pork filling and grated cheese.
Place in baking pan just large enough to hold the enchilada rolls.
pour additional enchilada sauce over the top. Generously top with
grated cheese. Bake until bubbly in a 350 degree oven. Use mild
enchilada sauce if feeding kids...they LOVE this stuff. Oh, and
yes I DO mean flour tortillas - corn tortillas are also good, but
you have to soften them first and when in a hurry, flour tortillas
work very nicely.
Shred pork, add to favorite barbecue sauce. Heat and serve on
buns. OR Use this barbecued pork in a casserole with cooked macaroni. Top
with jack cheese. Bake until hot and bubbly. Serve with tossed
salad and cornbread.
Is this enough to get you started?
Now, if you want to talk left-over roast beef.....
|
859.21 | Soup and stew | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Wed Oct 25 1989 16:55 | 27 |
| Throw out leftovers? I've NEVER thrown out anything unless it was
bad the first time or has been in the fridge so long it has a
personality. I consider it an obligation especially with meat;
if the animal had to die to feed me, the least I can do is use
its meat and not waste it.
Anyhow, just about any sort of meat or poultry leftover can be used in
a minestroni soup or a stew. If you have leftover gravy, stew is
very easy. Parboil one potato per person, chop into cubes. Add
cubed meat, gravy, enough water or broth or wine or a mixture to get
the level of soupiness you want, and various parboiled or sauteed
or microwaved veggies. Good veggies to use are onions, parsnips,
carrots, beets with beef, turnips if you like them, kohlrabi if
liked, etc. Add any herbs you want depending on the meat. Correct
seasoning (that means add salt/broth mix/gravy master/soy sauce/
pepper as desired). Cook until the flavors blend and the veggies
are tender.
There are good minestroni soup recipes in most cookbooks, or you
can probably find one here. You can also augment most store-bought
soup with leftover meat and veggies, which helps cut the salt level
per serving down to an edible level, and makes the soup into a
main dish - serve with nice crusty bread. MMmmmmmm. Wonderful
especially when you've just come in from clearing snow off the
driveway or walk.
--Louise
|
859.22 | Here's 10 more ideas | NITMOI::PESENTI | JP | Wed Oct 25 1989 17:12 | 18 |
| Cut into large dice, add BBQ sauce, and put it in the crock pot till it falls
apart. Then make sloppy joes.
Or, dice it and add to your favorite chili recipe.
Or, dice it and add it to spagetti sauce.
Or, slice it thin, and warm it in boiling water for a few seconds, then serve
with applesauce, and stovetop style stuffing (homemade, using the leftover
boiling water, of course).
Or, julienne it and make egg rolls, or a stir fry, or fried rice.
Or, grind it and mix with ground beef for burgers, meatloaf, meat balls, etc.
Or, ...
-JP
|
859.23 | And low calorie too | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Wed Oct 25 1989 20:47 | 37 |
| Here's mine.
Pork Pot Pie
1 pie shell - Betty Crocker or any other works well.
1 10 oz package frozen peas and carrots
l cup water
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup snipped parsley
2 tblsp. cornstarch
2 tsp. instand chicken bouillon granules
1/4 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. grnd. sage
1/4 tsp. dried thyme, crushed
1/8 tsp. pepper
1 cup milk
2 cups cooked cubed pork
In large saucepan cook peas and carrots, water, celery, onion and
parsley for 5 to 8 minutes or till celery is tender. In a bowl
stir together cornstarch, bouillon granules, salt, sage, thyme, and
pepper, then stir in milk. Stir into vegetale mixture. Cook and
stir till thickened and bubbly. Stir in pork and heat through.
Turn hot mixture into a deep pie plate. Place pastry shell over
filling. Crimp pastry against edge of dish. Cut slits for escape
of steam. Bake in a 425 oven for 25 to 30 mns or till top is light
brown. Let stand for 10 minute before serving.
Recipe also said it could be made with leftover chicken, beef, turkey
and ham.
I've made this a few times and its one of my favorite
ways to use left over pork.
Flo
|
859.24 | for those with German blood . . . | GIAMEM::J_LYNCH | | Wed Nov 01 1989 16:56 | 4 |
| I cut the pork into cubes, chop up some apples (Mac's are my favorite)
and par boil a few potatoes cut into chunks. Stir them all together
with some sauerkraut and simmer for about 20 minutes.
|
859.25 | easy and yummy! | SALEM::SILVERIA | | Mon Dec 04 1989 14:01 | 9 |
| Whenever my Mamma cooked a pork roast, we knew what we would be
having with the leftovers the next evening.
She would cube the pork and saute it with leftover juices from the
pan with chopped onions and/or green onions, dash worcestshire sauce
and spices to taste. Then she would mix in cooked rice. Very simple
and hearty with a salad or vege.
|
859.9 | Roast Pork With Rosemary & Wine | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Tue Apr 17 1990 15:11 | 42 |
|
I made a Pork Loin Roast yesterday that was fantastic. Here it is.
3lb - 4lb boneless pork loin roast
1 tsp Rosemary
2 cloves of garlic crushed
2 carrots split lengthwise
Salt & Pepper
Wine Gravy - see recipe
Place the split carrots on the bottom of a roasting pan. Place the
pork roast, fat side up on top of the carrots. The carrots act
as a rack. Rub the roast with the rosemary and garlic. Insert a
thermometer into the thickest part of the roast. Place roast into
a 350 degree oven. Roast uncovered until the thermometer reads
170 degrees Fahrenheit. Approximately 2.5 hrs.
For the gravy:
1/4 pork drippings
1/4 flour
1 3/4 cup water
1/4 white wine
salt & pepper to taste
Remove the roast and place onto a serving platter. Discard the carrots.
Discard from the roasting pan, all but 1/4 cup of drippings. Place
the roasting pan on the top burner of the stove and bring to a boil.
Wisk in 1/2 the flour. Bring the drippings and flour to boil until
it reduces into a smooth paste. Add the wine and water and let it
bubble wisking it constantly. Cook and add the remaining flour until
it thickens to your own desire. Pour gravy into a gravy serving bowl.
Slice the roast and serve.
Serve with mashed potatoes and your favorite vegetable.
Serves 4 - 6 people
Enjoy !
Jim
|
859.28 | glazing and saucing pork roasts | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Sat Mar 16 1991 15:46 | 50 |
| a basic glaze for pork, ham, or "corned" roasts:
Mix 1 cup of preserves (apricot-pineapple work well with pork)
with 2 - 6 tablespoons dijon mustard (to taste) - grey poupon is
my favorite brand. Preserves can be any quality preserve...I have
used "American" marmalade, cherry, peach, etc. Whatever has a
strong, sweet flavor. Avoid a good marmalade, it will be too
bitter for this.
heat on stove over low heat, stirring to mix well. Mix 2 - 3
tablespoons cornstarch with 1/4 cup water, making a "cook's paste"
for thickening. Add the cornstarch and water mixture to the
preserves and mustard. Cook, stirring constantly until the
contents return to the translucent state, with no white showing.
Immediately spoon this glaze over the pork and continue roasting
15 - 30 minutes.
Remove roast from oven and allow to "rest" for approx. 15 minutes.
Slice and serve.
Note: this glaze works best on roasts without too much fat on them. If
you have a very fatty roast, then I would recommend trimming the
fat down to approx. 1/4 inch thickness before roasting.
Another idea for pork roast:
slit the roast all over and slide in slices of garlic. Rub a
mixture of Two Tblsp. each of flour, salt, sugar, black and white
pepper all over the roast; set the roast on a rack in a roasting
pan- trust me on the sugar. Roast as meat thermometer indicates.
30 minutes prior to finishing the roast, bring 1 packed cup pitted,
diced prunes and 2 cups of port wine to a simmer and cook for
10 minutes over low heat. Remove from heat. When you remove the
pork roast from the oven, set on a platter and cover with a loose
tent of foil to keep it warm. Pour off all but 2 tblsp. fat from
the roasting pan.
Stir in two tablespoons flour and mix well, browning the flour
a little over a burner on the stove. Pour port and prunes into
the pan and heat while scraping any browned bits off the bottom.
Simmer over low heat until the sauce is thickened a bit.
Slice the roast and serve with the port/prune sauce. Even folks
who don't like prunes will like this sauce....haven't had a reject
yet. Suggested side dishes:
buttered, parslied noodles or
mashed potatoes and mashed, cooked carrots, mixed 1:1 or
sweet/sour cabbage and dumplings
|
859.29 | additional note on pork glaze,etc. | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Sat Mar 16 1991 15:53 | 15 |
| I forgot two things on the port/prune roast pork:
baste your pork roast after 1 hour of cooking. I pour a little port wine
over it....you can also use cherry cider, apple cider, pineapple juice or
white wine.
and
> Stir in two tablespoons flour and mix well, browning the flour
> a little over a burner on the stove. Pour port and prunes into
> the pan and heat while scraping any browned bits off the bottom.
> Simmer over low heat until the sauce is thickened a bit.
If this sauce gets too thick, add additional port wine. To make a no-alcohol
version of this sauce, use cherry cider instead of port wine....not as good,
but it will work.
|
859.30 | Slow-simmered Chinese Pork Roast | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Mon Mar 18 1991 10:44 | 28 |
| I made the slow-simmered Chinese pork roast from the Frugal
Gourmet's ancient cuisines cookbook yesterday, and it was very good.
I'm not sure how low-fat this would be since you should use a pork
roast with some fat (like pork butt is recommended by Jeff Smith) to
achieve the desired tenderness...but if you remove the fat prior to
eating, the resulting meat should be fairly low-fat.
From memory, you mix together the following in a bowl:
3 green onions cut "Chinese style" (thin 1-inch strips)
2 cloves garlic (sliced thin)
1 tsp fresh ginger (cut julienne)
2 tsp brown sugar
1/2 tsp white pepper
2 Tb light soy sauce
2 Tb soybean condiment (mein see)
1/2 cup dry sherry or Chinese rice wine
2 whole star anise
2 cups of water
Mix that together and find a casserole just large enough to
accommodate this and a 2-3 lb. pork roast. Put the roast in the
casserole and dump the above mix on top of it. Cover and cook at 275
degrees for 5-8 hours (after 5 hours we turned the oven down to 200 and
then to "warm" an hour after that).
Note: This did a NUMBER on the casserole. We ended up with
brown/black charred remains on the cover and casserole itself. I'm not
sure if the stuff will come off. Perhaps the heat was a little higher
than it needed to be.
|
859.31 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | Put it in Writitng.... | Fri Mar 22 1991 14:00 | 3 |
| My favorite way of eating a fresh pork roast shoulder is to run it with a
clove or two of garlic, put in about 15 - 20 cloves and salt and pepper,
place in oven and roast! Simple and great.
|
859.11 | FRESH PORK RECIPE | DECLNE::TOWLE | | Thu Mar 28 1991 12:22 | 13 |
| I have just recently cooked a fresh ham, which is a Cook-before-eating
ham that hasn't gone through a curing process, so it is just like a
regular pork roast, but larger! It was 14-3/4 lbs. I took off the
rind, leaving a thin layer of fat on the roast. I was looking for a
new seanoning method also, so I seasoned the roast with ground pepper,
fine sea salt, and rubbed it with Sweet Woodruff, which really has a
great aroma when cooking. I then cut the rind into thin strips and
placed them into a shallow pan, sprinkling them with the sea salt ass
well. All this went into a 325 degree oven for 4-1/2 hours. I had to
drain the pan of pork strips a couple of times, but when they were all
crispy/brown, it was time to eat!
Dress it up with Spagetti squash, baked potatos and have a ball!
|
859.12 | "fresh ham" is correct... | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Mar 29 1991 17:55 | 7 |
| the term "ham" indicates NOT a curing process, but a cut of the pig. The
ham is roughly the equivalent on a pig of the hip/buttock "cheek" region. It
is all large, smooth muscle and is considered one of the prime cuts of the
animal. In this case, the term "fresh ham" is correct usage. In the USA,
we generally refer to a "ham" as this same cut of meat AFTER it is cured, or
even to other cuts and/or formed meat segments that have undergone curing...
although it is common usage, it is not actually correct.
|
859.13 | Leave the Rind | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Fri Mar 29 1991 20:01 | 5 |
| Removing the rind of a fresh ham before roasting is a cardinal sin. You should
score the rind before roasting and then carve it off and serve it as cracklings.
It's one of the best parts of the roast!
--PSW
|
859.14 | USDA on Fresh Ham vs. Pork | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Mon Apr 01 1991 19:46 | 10 |
| The USDA, who have legal authority in such matters in the U.S., allow the
labelling of the thigh and buttocks portion of the pig, from the hip bone
to the knee, to be called "fresh ham" when sold uncured, or as "ham" when
cured.
This is the way one can find it sold in stores in New England, whatever that
cookbook might say. De facto, "fresh ham" exists, at least in this part
of the country.
--PSW
|
859.26 | Easy Sweet & Sour Pork | SHARE::JENSEN | To fly is to be free. | Tue Oct 29 1991 11:41 | 6 |
| When I have a roast pork I plan on having 1/2 left over. I make a
Sweet & Sour sauce with pineapple, green pepper & onions, cinnamon,
salt/pepper (whatever you like). Basically, instead of having to cook
the port it is all done and you just have to heat it up. Slice it
thinly in bite-sized pieces, stir around to coat & heat through. Much
faster.
|
859.27 | Sandwich w Cranberry Sauce | USWAV1::SNIDER | | Tue Oct 29 1991 16:05 | 4 |
| You all missed my favorite with roast pork. Sliced w cranberry sauce,
mayo and rye bread.
Mmmmmm good
|
859.32 | Roast Pork | TIMBER::HACHE | Nuptial Halfway House | Tue Dec 17 1991 15:20 | 29 |
| <<< PAGODA::DUB19:[NOTES$LIBRARY]COOKS.NOTE;2 >>>
-< How to Make them Goodies >-
================================================================================
Note 2957.1 Pork Roast? 1 of 1
CALVA::WOLINSKI "uCoder sans Frontieres" 21 lines 15-MAR-1991 09:09
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rep .0
I put in a good recipe for a pork roast in the the note on mirpoix. If
you do a dir 2900-las command you should be able to find it. Another
thing I like for pork roasts is to take 2 slices of lean bacon, 2 green
onion, crushed garlic, thyme, sage, and a few turns of black pepper
and grind to a fine paste in a food processor. Then make small slits
about 1-2 inches deep in the roast and then fill with the paste. I have
a larding pin that I use to do this but a thin knife does just as well.
Then cover the roast with thinly sliced onions and bake at 350f for 30
min a pound. About 30 minutes from the end of the roasting add about 1
cup of dry white wine and 1 cup of chicken stock. Use the onions and
liquid to make a sauce for the roast. I would serve either steamed rice
or pasta and a steamed green veggie with this dish. For wine I would
think a nice red zinfandel or a Cotes du Rhone if you like reds or a
sauvignon blanc from Washington state if you prefer whites.
Do try the recipe with the orange juice it is also very good.
-mike
|
859.33 | Roast Pork w/ Peppercorn, Mustard and Cider Gravy | USCTR1::JTRAVERS | | Sun Jan 05 1992 14:45 | 59 |
| This is a terrific recipe - I hope to enjoy it as long as apple cider
is available!
ROAST PORK with Peppercorns, Mustard and Cider Gravy
1/4 cup + 1 Tbls. unsalted butter, room temp.
1 4 1/2 lb boneless pork roast, rolled and tied
2 Tbls. flour
2 Tbls. dijon mustard
1 Tbls. cracked black peppercorns
1 Tbls. whole mustard seeds
2 teas. brown sugar
2 teas. thyme
Gravy:
1 1/2 cup apple cider
3 Tbls. applejack brandy
2 Tbls. flour
3/4 cup chicken stock
1 Tbls. cider vinegar
1 teas. dijon mustard
(Basically what you'll be doing in this recipe is browning the roast in
a skillet, smothering it in a paste of butter and spices, cooking on
high, then on low and then preparing the gravy with a roux (sp?) It's
not a difficult recipe, but it looks like a lot of steps.)
1. Preheat over 475 degrees.
2. Melt 1 Tbls. butter in skillet over medium heat
3. Add roast and cook till brown, about 4 min each side
4. Remove and cool 10 minutes
5. Transfer to roasting pan
6. Combine remaining 1/4 c butter with flour, mustard, peppercorn,
mustard seeds, sugar and thyme in a bowl.
7. Spread paste over top and sides of roast
8. Roast 30 minutes.
9. Reduce heat to 325 degrees, cook approximately 1 hour 20 minutes.
10. Transfer roast to cutting board and tent with foil
11. Transfer 2 Tbls. drippings to small saucepan, discard remaining
drippings.
Gravy:
1. Heat roasting pan over med-low heat
2. Add cider and boil until liquid is reduced to 3/4 cup, scraping up
any browned bits, about 8 minutes.
3. Stir in applejack, boil 1 minute
4. Heat drippings in saucepan over med low heat
5. Add flour and stir till golden brown, about 2 minutes
6. Whisk in cider mixture and chicken stock.
7. Simmer till thickened, stirring occassionally, about 2 minutes
8. Remove from heat
9. Mix in cider vinegar and mustard
10. Carve and serve with some gravy on the platter and the rest in a
boat.
11. ENJOY!
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