originally posted by maureen:
finish carmelizing veggies.
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
Red-cooked pork shoulder or belly.
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
Red-cooked pork shoulder or belly.
We have a winner. Not one of my favorite preps by itself but a great red wine match.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Pied de cochon?
Now that you mention it, you don't seem to see a lot of pork in Burgundy other than in lardon form.
originally posted by MLipton:
Sauté a selection of mushrooms with shallots in butter. Roll a pork tenderloin around the mushroom/shallot sauté, tie it up, immerse in chicken stock and braise until tender.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Gonna do a classic po'k chops in a wine, mustard, and cream (well, yogurt as a healthy substitute for crème fraîche) sauce tonight. Not grand -- just staying at home on a rainy night; will pair with a de Villaine Mercurey and a Werner Hochheimer Spätburgunder, and whatever strikes the fancy that is available if the previous two don't satisfy. (Previewing the Mercurey, I don't think there will be anything else.)
That's his only Mercurey.originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Gonna do a classic po'k chops in a wine, mustard, and cream (well, yogurt as a healthy substitute for crème fraîche) sauce tonight. Not grand -- just staying at home on a rainy night; will pair with a de Villaine Mercurey and a Werner Hochheimer Spätburgunder, and whatever strikes the fancy that is available if the previous two don't satisfy. (Previewing the Mercurey, I don't think there will be anything else.)
2009 Montots? I have a bottle on deck to try in the next few weeks.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by MLipton:
Sauté a selection of mushrooms with shallots in butter. Roll a pork tenderloin around the mushroom/shallot sauté, tie it up, immerse in chicken stock and braise until tender.
Mark Lipton
Do you mean loin or tenderloin? If TL, what, do you double it over so that tying is necessary? Did you butterfly it? Also, doesn't all the mushroom-shallot goo just wash off in the broth? I'm curious because this recipe in principle seems simple enough for even a kitchen klutz like me to benefit from.