That was last night's treat. No particular recipe followed here, just my nose.
Some 6 hours earlier I marinated two pork tenderloins in the following mixture:
1 big onion chopped
2 red/yellow peppers in small strips
4 cloves of garlic - sliced
1/2 glass (around 125ml) of red wine
small amount (some 50ml) of cheap grappa
a splash of balsamic vinegar
salt, pepper, fresh and dried oregano
in a cast-iron lasagne dish.
Just before putting them in the oven (around 250-300C depending where I pointed the pyrometer at) I browned the tenderloins whole on a skillet with a little olive oil. Then they went on top of the mix in the same dish, with a digital meat thermometer ( such as this one ) set for meat temperature of 70C, stuck in the thickest part of the thicker tenderloin. It went off not a long time later - the veg were cooked beautifully too, and the marinade thickened a little.
If I repeat this for my visitors I'll set the meat to rest for a few minutes while I thicken the gravy in the oven.
The meat was served with baked potatoes (from the oven), additional roasted onions (just halved, sprinkled with salt, pepper, oregano and olive oil - also from the oven) and salad (not from the oven!). Went well with some Argentinian Malbec.
Notes:
1. I would never roast meat in a normal home oven at this temperature; I was watching it cook and moving it closer and further from the door.
2.There was a bed of glowing coals in the oven (swept to one side) and I put a piece of green cherry log on it, which gently added to the flavour, but did not give the meat a strong smoky taste.
3. I find that a good head-lamp is a necessary tool for a WFO cook, perhaps FB shop would consider this?
Some 6 hours earlier I marinated two pork tenderloins in the following mixture:
1 big onion chopped
2 red/yellow peppers in small strips
4 cloves of garlic - sliced
1/2 glass (around 125ml) of red wine
small amount (some 50ml) of cheap grappa
a splash of balsamic vinegar
salt, pepper, fresh and dried oregano
in a cast-iron lasagne dish.
Just before putting them in the oven (around 250-300C depending where I pointed the pyrometer at) I browned the tenderloins whole on a skillet with a little olive oil. Then they went on top of the mix in the same dish, with a digital meat thermometer ( such as this one ) set for meat temperature of 70C, stuck in the thickest part of the thicker tenderloin. It went off not a long time later - the veg were cooked beautifully too, and the marinade thickened a little.
If I repeat this for my visitors I'll set the meat to rest for a few minutes while I thicken the gravy in the oven.
The meat was served with baked potatoes (from the oven), additional roasted onions (just halved, sprinkled with salt, pepper, oregano and olive oil - also from the oven) and salad (not from the oven!). Went well with some Argentinian Malbec.
Notes:
1. I would never roast meat in a normal home oven at this temperature; I was watching it cook and moving it closer and further from the door.
2.There was a bed of glowing coals in the oven (swept to one side) and I put a piece of green cherry log on it, which gently added to the flavour, but did not give the meat a strong smoky taste.
3. I find that a good head-lamp is a necessary tool for a WFO cook, perhaps FB shop would consider this?
Comment