Welcome to our year of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet, a new catering service out of East Thetford, Vermont. Over the years Ryon's dad, Barry (the Barefoot Gourmet himself; check him out at barefoot-gourmet.com), has given his children, along with several of their well deserving friends, many of his recipes that are now famous among their circle. After receiving the latest additions, the cookbook includes about 111 recipes! The exact number is still a little fuzzy. As a New Year adventure, we decided to make our way through the entire cookbook. Yes, we have decided to cook (well Ryon to cook, Caitlin to eat) ALL of the BFG's recipes. We will blog regularly about the successes and tragedies of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet and maybe add in a little about what is going on down here in C'Ville. Keep us posted on your attempts at the recipes...and don't forget, food tastes better when made with a wooden spoon and eaten with good company. Enjoy!

-Ryon and Caitlin

Sunday, June 6, 2010

#27, #28 and #29 - Pork Loin Braised in Milk, Petit Pois, & Scalloped Potatoes Au Gratin

By Ryon - Pork loin braised in milk, or just "milk pork", for as strange as it sounds is really an amazing dish. It reminds me of winter in VT, but for some reason I chose to do this on a warm spring day. I have not been choosing recipes to match the weather very well recently... I'll work on that from now on.

I had trouble finding a good piece of pork for this recipe. I know my dad likes to get a pork loin with a healthy portion of fat on it and this is so the meat does not dry out while you cook it. Unfortunately, I could not find such a piece, since supermarket butchers tend to cut most of the excess fat off, so the end product ended up a bit on the dry side. Besides that, I was pretty happy with how this turned out. Be aware that this is not a "set-it-and-forget-it" type of recipe, like a pot roast. You have to be sure to turn the pork loin often and scrape the bottom of the pot so that you do not burn the milk. But I was keeping myself busy in the kitchen during this time, so it was not a problem. The real trick to this is getting the milk to coagulate into the "small nut-brown clusters" that my dad refers to in the recipe. These little morsels of goodness are by far the best part and worth the effort you put in.

I was able to knock off two other recipes along with the milk pork: petit pois and scalloped potatoes au gratin. Now some of you may be asking: "Petit pois? Au Gratin? Ryon, stop speaking Spanish, I can't understand you." Well, it's French, you idiot, and "petit pois" means "small peas". I believe they are really just a baby version of your garden-type variety pea. They tend to be sweeter than their older brothers and, as an added benefit, you get to sound cultured and intelligent by speaking French while you're cooking. Abigail, my sister-in-law, loves these peas. Nothing fancy in this recipe. Just add mint, a pinch of sugar and butter. The mint really gives the peas an amazing flavor.

The scalloped potatoes au gratin may have been a poor choice ("Milk was a bad choice!") as the final side for this plate. In my mind, the milk pork was going to be awesome with the cheesy, heavy potatoes ("au gratin" is French for "with the grating" but in cooking translates into "with breadcrumbs and/or cheese"). And I was right... kind of. These two dishes were delicious together, but a bit too heavy. Caitlin and I could not move for a couple of hours after we ate.

In the end, this was a great meal but looking back I would have done a few thing differently. First, make sure you find yourself a fatty piece of pork so that it does not dry out. Second, be aware that the milk pork is a very rich dish and choose your sides accordingly. Thirdly, learn to speak French so you sound like a sweet dude (or dudette) while you're cooking.

Ratings:
Milk pork - RHC
Petit pois - SECCDI
Scalloped potatoes au gratin - SECCDI

1 comment:

  1. You stop making me hungry! I am going to cook the veggie soup tonight. Man I need to work on my culinary skills. Pretty exciting we get some true barefoot chef-ing this weekend.

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