Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Braised pork roast with fennel and apples

Pork roast was on sale, buy one get one today, so I picked up two smaller ones (2.5 lbs, roughly). I knew I wanted to do something with the shiny new dutch oven that Carissa got for me. So I synthesized a couple different recipes based on what caught my eye and what was in the house. Namely, fennel and apples.

I cut slits in the roasts and put slivers of garlic in them. Roughly 15-20 slits, maybe two cloves per roast. I rubbed salt, pepper, fresh rosemary and fennel fronds into the meat, and then seared each on all sides in the dutch oven with a bit of peppery olive oil. I set them aside, and tossed some onion cut into thick slices and whole cloves of garlic. One large onion, the rest of the bulb of garlic. I tossed that around to loosen the sticky goodness leftover from the searing, then properly deglazed with about half a cup of cider. I put the biggest, outside pieces of the fennel bulbs (after trimming the top and bottom and slicing into half inch discs), on the bottom of the pan to keep the roasts up a bit. I put the roasts back in, and wedged the rest of the fennel in along with two apples sliced about like the fennel. I added another half a cup to a cup of apple cider (whatever was left in the bottle), a couple of sprigs of rosemary, covered it and put it in a 325 degree oven. I have convection, but I don't really think it matters too much, since it's cooking for so long. I left it in there about 3 hours 15 min, it probably was find after about 2 and a half, and I probably could have left it in there for another hour or so without too much going wrong. The meat was falling apart, had all of the sweetness from the cider and apples and the herbiness of the rosemary. The apples had all but disintegrated, and the fennel was on its way, but still delicious. I think if I was using a smaller roast, I'd put more fennel in, because it felt like there wasn't enough, but there really wasn't room for much more than the two bulbs I used. Less liquid and some root vegetables would be interesting as well.

I served it over whipped (sort of, the mixer went with my sister when she moved out) potatoes with a bit of parsley, and a simple salad on the side.

Hmmm, looking back at that, I wonder if I should write these up as proper recipes. I do lot of recipes out of magazines and don't want to really muck about with copyright, though. But I guess in cases like this it wouldn't be bad to make it an actual recipe.

Monday, September 15, 2008

To be resumed

I've been lax in updating the last couple months. I was finishing my dissertation and thus didn't have a lot of time to update. As a result the Tuesday night dinners either haven't been happening, or were something quick and/or not terribly interesting.

I'm moving to California in early October, which will unfortunately cut down on the Tuesday night dinners to almost non-existent, since I was unable to negotiate a benefits package that included weekly flights the east coast. I will have a fabulous kitchen and be living in the area that produces a huge amount of the produce consumed in the US, so I will be cooking a lot. Expect it to feature smaller meals and experiments. My isolation may contribute to more frequent updates, we shall see.