Showing posts with label Sauces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sauces. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2008

Okay, Okay, the New and Improved Pork Chop Dish

In continuation of the May 11, 2008 post, after the appetizer, and before the dessert I have yet to enticingly describe, I served pork chops in port wine cream sauce over whole wheat penne:

Pork Chops in Port Wine Cream Sauce over Whole Wheat Penne
Serves 4, especially after potato chips and brie

For the Pork Chops:
3 8oz boneless pork chops, each chop roughly 1 inch thick
Generous grinding of coarsely cracked pepper
salt
olive oil (optional)

For the sauce:
2 tablespoons butter
4 shallots, chopped
Handful fresh thyme, chopped
1 cup port, tawny or ruby
1 1/3 cups cream
salt to taste

1 lb penne, or any tubular pasta, whole wheat or not

Start a large pot of salted water to boil.

Crack pepper onto a large plate or platter and sprinkle over with salt. Press both pork chops into the salt and pepper on the plate and generously sprinkle more salt and pepper over the tops of the chops and press into the chops. Heat a large, heavy skillet (I used cast iron) on a fairly high heat. If necessary, brush the skillet with olive oil before. If it's a well seasoned pan, this may not be necessary. In batches, sear the pork chops: one minute on each side and then lower the heat, cover skillet, and cook pork chops 4 minutes each side. Remove pork chops from the pan onto a plate, cover with foil, and let rest for 5 minutes. The Pork chops will continue cooking until they are pink in the middle.

As the remaining pork chop cooks, add the pasta to the boiling water. Cook until al dente.

While the pasta is cooking, to the already warm skillet, add the butter. When the butter stops foaming, add the shallots and thyme and sauté for 5 minutes. Carefully pour the port into the skillet, increase heat, and bring to a boil. Simmer for 1 minute scraping the bottom of the skillet to release the bits of meat clinging to the bottom. Add cream and any meat juices that accumulate on the plate to the skillet, bring to a simmer, and simmer for 2-3 minutes or until thickened. Salt to taste.

Slice pork into strips. Drain pasta, toss with the cream sauce, and top with slices of the pork chops.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Tired and Saucy

I don’t want to think about chopping, simmering, or much less cleaning dirty dishes. I’m wiped. My limbs are molded from cast iron skillets. I am akin to the leashed Chihuahua whose owner is dragging it over ice and chill in all good intentions to make it doodle and potty Chihuahua-style. I’m shaking, I’m cowering from the cold, so just take me home and I can sleep in my sunbeam (only to growl at the occasional bug that walks across the floor, but that’s just a personality flaw).


And I still have to go grocery shopping.


Anticipating such days of laziness, I have started doubling sauce recipes that I can store in quart-size freezer bags. By squeezing out as much air as possible (without squirting the sauce out of the bag), and flattening the bag, I can stack my sauces in the freezer for lazy days’ quick bites. Of course there are times when I forget to label the bag, and I can’t always tell a beer-ready barbeque sauce from a wine laden Ragù, but what better way to set the stage for adventurous eating than by tossing silky and smooth pappardelle with a smoky barbeque sauce? Learn from me: take the time to label your bags. If your freezer has been around long enough to quote “Where’s the beef?” and you wonder the same as you root through its contents, I gently command you to include the date of freezing on your label.

Besides storing a basic, homemade tomato sauce, wonderful to keep on hand for last minute pizzas, I like to keep a variety of sauces within easy access. Over the past weeks, I have concocted batches of exotically inspired sauces that invite me to share their warmth and destinations. Ginger-infused spicy peanut sauce whose original intent was to dress a cold noodle salad works beautifully in an all vegetable stir-fry. S
outh Indian curry hints of sweet coconut milk and beautifully picks up the briny goodness of shrimp. A scoop of rice (basmati optional) and sautéed green beans round out this light meal. An old favorite, tangy romesco sauce delivers a wallop of chile peppers, toasted nuts, and robust garlic. Two or three bites and I'm hankering for one sangria after another.

Romesco Sauce is a Shane and Emilie Favorite. Normally I toss whole wheat linguini with the sauce and serve with a dozen and a half of quickly sautéed shrimp. But Friday evenings call for something different and something casual – with pizzazz. And with a quart-size freezer bag not even a quarter full of romesco sauce and a smattering of shrimp neither are enough to feed 2 adults without a little stretching. My endeavor has to be creative in order to stretch the remains of both the shrimp and the sauce and make it so that Shane doesn’t need an after supper ice cream fix. Shane will want an ice cream fix, but, by golly, he won’t need an ice cream fix.

Thanks to my vivacious sourdough starter that gives more than I can take, earlier this week I prepared pizza dough, and it’s been sitting in my refrigerator begging for attention. After lugging home a week’s worth of groceries, I heated the oven to a cozy 450 degrees. Knowing the oven would continue to cook the shrimp to a succulent texture, 30 seconds was all it took to just sauté the shrimp. Over 10 inches of stretched pizza dough, I spread roughly a ½ cup of romesco sauce, scattered the sautéed shrimp, and to give the pizza one more depth of flavor (not to mention sustenance) a good dose of goat cheese completed my last minute nosh.

Twenty minutes crisped the bottom of the crust nicely while leaving the edges chewy, but not too soft. The goat cheese was a touch brown. I was afraid to leave it in longer for fear of overcooking the shrimp, but for those who prefer a browner crust and cheese, five more minutes should suffice.
To down play the richness of the pizza, a crisp romaine salad dressed with a crumbles of goat cheese, sliced Kalamata olives, olive oil and red wine vinegar garnished the empty spots on our plates and perfectly complemented the flavors of the pizza.

The verdict?

Emilie: absolute bliss.

Shane: we’ve made it far into the evening, and no ice cream has been consumed.