Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Stuffed Pork Loin

Easy to make and delicious to eat! Thanks to my MOM for this great recipe!

Ingredients
1 pork loin or half, if too large
1 apple chopped finely
6 fresh sage leaves chopped finely
3 or 4 sun dried tomatoes chopped
2 or 3 fresh garlic cloves chopped finely
1 tbsp mango chutney, salt and pepper.

Method
Slit loin in half lengthwise, then slit again on either side of cut to extract a flap on each side. Beat gently with a meat hammer to flatten.







Mix all other ingredients together, spread over meat






Roll the meat and tie tightly with string.








Put in oven proof dish previously sprayed with oil. Drizzle a little oil over meat. Add salt and pepper as necessary.





Bake in a pre-heated oven at 375F. till an inserted thermometer registers an inner temperature of 170F. Take out of oven and cover with foil and let it rest at least 15-20 minutes. Slice and serve with desired sides.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Wiener Schnitzel

This is by far my favourite veal recipe. Veal is very easy to find in Europe - no that much in the USA it seems. You could substitute pork fillet - that would be the closest to veal. This is a really great dish!!

Wiener Schnitzel is originally made with veal. The meat is coated in breadcrumbs and fried in a pan. Schnitzel is found on all the menus in Germany and is a popular dish to be made at home.
You can also use this recipe to make a pork Schnitzel or a chicken Schnitzel if preferred.

A Wiener Schnitzel is only original when made from veal. When made with pork (Schweineschnitzel) is known as "Schnitzel Wiener Art".
Wiener Schnitzel is served with lemon slices that  you squeeze over the meat. Anchovies and capers can also be served.

Ingredients
4 veal fillets (approx each 200g) or use veal rib eye if fillet is unavailable
salt and pepper
1 cup flour
3 eggs
150g breadbrumbs preferably made from stale French or Italian bread
Butter or lard (clarified butter* is actually the best here)

Method
Flatten the meat with a rolling pin or meat hammer. It is very important that the meat is almost paper thin.It's best to have the butcher pound the meat thinly for you, but if you want or need to do it yourself, position the 5-ounce piece of veal between 2 sheets of wax paper or parchment paper. Gently at first, then more forcefully, use a flat-bladed meat pounder to pound the veal into a fairly round shape 7 to 8 inches in diameter.
First coat the seasoned meat in flour, then dip into beaten egg. Lastly coat in breadcrumbs.
The schnitzels can be covered and left for 1 to 2 hours at a cool room temperature before cooking.
Heat oil in a pan and then fry the Schnitzel on both sides until brown and the meat is cooked through. Use enough butter or lard.During cooking, press the Schnitzel lightly with the back of a spoon. Cook for aprox. 2-4 mins on both sides.
Once cooked serve straight away.

*To clarify a pound of butter, heat it slowly over low heat in a medium saucepan. After it has melted, let it stand for 10 minutes, then use a spoon to skim off the foamy solids on the top. Pour off the clarified butter, leaving the watery residue in the pan (a fat-separator cup can be helpful for this). Pour the cooled butter into a plastic container, cover and refrigerate. The butter may be used a second time after frying a batch of schnitzel: Pass it through a fine-mesh strainer to eliminate any solids, then cover and refrigerate as above. Use within 1 month.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Bollito


Boiled meats...hmmmm....doesn't sound very appetizing but when accompanied with Mostardo di Cremona it is a unique and really good dish - as well as being dead easy to make!

I first tasted it in Lugano, the Italian part of Switzerland. We bought the mostarda the first time then made it ourselves!

The variety of meats used is important because each compliments the other, producing the unique concoction.You should include beef, veal, pork, chicken, tongue, zampone or cotechino, and feel free to add whatever other cuts of meat you feel might work. The pieces should be from older animals, because they will be more flavorful, and should also be large - this means that a good bollito misto is ideal for a convivial meal with friends, or for when you want to make something that will provide leftovers for several meals. In terms of cooking technique, preparing a bollito misto is extremely simple.

Bollito =Boil - and that’s it!


INGRIDIENTS

2 1/4 pounds beef -- the cut used in Italy is shoulder; beef brisket should do
2 1/4 pounds neck or breast of veal
1 lb lean pork
1 veal's tongue, weighing 1 1/4 pounds
1 chicken, weighing about 2 1/4 pounds
1 cotechino weighing about 3/4 pound (pork sausage, available in Italian delicatessens.You can also use a zampone, which is a stuffed pig's trotter.)
2 carrots
2 sticks celery
2 onions, stuck with 2 cloves each
Salt

METHOD
Cut meats into large chunks
Fill a large pot with water sufficient to cover the meat.
Lightly salt the water, add the vegetables, bring the water to a boil before adding the beef (the heat will seal in its juices).
Reduce the flame to a simmer, and after about an hour, add the breast of veal, pork and chicken

In the meantime, set a second pot of lightly salted water on the fire, bring it to a boil, and begin simmering the tongue when you add the veal and chicken to the beef.
If you are using a fresh cotechino or zampone set it in a pot of cold lightly salted water at this time (prick the cotechino all over, or loosen the string of the zampone first) and begin simmering it. If you instead buy precooked sausage, follow the instructions on the package. The meats will be done when they are fork-tender, this will take about an hour or slightly more from when you add the veal and the chicken to the beef.

This should be served with Mostarda di Cremona (see recipe) boiled potatoes or other vegetables and Italian-style bread.

Mostarda di Cremona is what most Italians think of when they hear the word mostarda. It has a very particular taste but can end up being really addictive. Mostarda is a must with Bollito

Ingredients:

12 ounces (300 g) pears
8 ounces (200 g) quinces
6 ounces (150 g) cherries
8 ounces (200 g) apricots
10 ounces (250 g) figs
8 ounces (200 g) peaches
3 tablespoons powdered mustard seed
3 1/2 cups (800 g) sugar
2 cups white wine vinegar

Preparation:
Wash and Dry the fruit and cut in quarters.
Heat about a quart of water in a large pot, and when it begins to simmer slowly stir in the sugar. When it has all melted, add the quinces.
Simmer 20 minutes, then add the pears.
Then the peaches, apricots, and cherries & figs, at five minute intervals.

When you've added everything, simmer the mixture for 10 minutes, then turn off the flame and let it cool.
In the meantime, heat the vinegar, and stir in the mustard, then let the mixture cool.
Transfer the fruit from the syrup to sterile jars with a slotted spoon. Mix the syrup and the vinegar mixture, pour the resulting sauce over the fruit, seal the jars, and store them in a cool dry place.

Serve with the bollito!