July 4, 2005
Cherries and Pork
I was asked for a Rainier cherry recipe. First, I will say that I prefer the more intense cherry flavor of bings, but Rainier have a pleasant sweetness that can be useful in pork cookery.
First, you will need to pit a bunch of cherries. It is tedious, and there are gadgets that make it go better, or you can use household indentured servants (children) to do the task, provided they are old enough to use a knife properly.
Rub a pork loin with salt and pepper.
Then, brown your pork loin in butter. Transfer to a plate.
Add a finely chopped onion, a couple of peeled cloves of garlic, and fry gently in the fat.
Add the cherries and a pinch of carraway seeds and fry for a minute.
Return the pork to the pan, add a splash of white dry vermouth, cover and cook over low heat until the pork is done to your liking.
Let the pork rest 10 minutes before slicing. Meanwhile, reduce the cooking liquid, remove the garlic, finish with port and softened butter.
Slice the pork, and cover with the sauce. If you want to be fancy, you can puree and strain the sauce before the butter enrichment, but I like the chunks of fruit and cooked onion in mine.
Serve with good bread, a good pinot noir, and a green salad.
Hey, I tried this last night and it was quite marvelous - according to my beloved - even though I only cooked a pork chop. (I am a vegetarian.) He ate twice as much as usual! He chose to have it with fresh mashed new potatoes, with chopped parsley, and recommends that combination. After all that, he couldn't squeeze in any salad.
Anyway, your recipes are enticing. I like the confident style, and as a religious historian my beloved was amused by your asides. Thanks!
our menu for the fourth:
Tri-tip a la Santa Maria (dry rub with garlic, salt, coarse ground pepper and a splash of sherry)
Macaroni and cheese (sharp cheddar, from vermont)
salad of organic baby greens from the csa, with avocado, artichokes, tomatoes, and olives. dressed with a lovely mango vinaigrette.
strawberry shortcake and/or s'mores