Friday, December 30, 2011

Bacon Wrapped Pork Loin with Apples and Sage

 Got this recipe from the Autumn LCBO magazine, the Ontario Liqour store periodical.  A great winter dish!
 The smoked thick cut bacon came from the Meat Lady at the Hamilton Market.  It cost as much as the tenderloin!
 Prepare the bacon slices to wrap around the tenderloin.


 Season the tenderloin with the chopped garlic, the sage and salt and pepper!

 Wrap and tie the pork ready to brown in the Dutch Oven!


 Brown on all sides and pull out and set on a wire rack in the roasting pan.

 Pop it into the hot oven for 30 minutes.
 Meanwhile prepare the apple sage sauce in the oil left over in the Dutch Oven!
 Pull the pork at 145 F, tent with foil and let it rest for twenty minutes, the meats internal temp will rise to the correct finished temp!
 Cook some Salmon for the non pork eaters as a courtesy...... lol


 The Tenderloin comes out of the tinfoil and onto the cutting board!


 Looks good with the steam rising off the roast!!!




 Roasted beets on the side and some garlic mashed potatoes!

 Plate and serve!


This dish was very very tender, the pork was melt in your mouth and the bacon was crisp and flavourful.








BACON-WRAPPED PORK LOIN WITH APPLES & SAGE
AUTUMN 2010
BY MARILYN BENTZ-CROWLEY

Choose bacon well-streaked with lean meat as well as fat and purchase it from the butcher’s case, as it tends not to be as watery as the bacon in the 500 g packages. For incredible flavour, seek out a dedicated butcher shop, such as Kingston’s Brothers Quality Meats, which smokes bacon on the premises.
2 large pork tenderloins,
total about 2 lbs (about 1 kg)
10 fresh sage leaves, very finely chopped,
or 1 tsp (5 mL) dried rubbed sage
2 to 3 large garlic cloves, minced
¼ tsp (1 mL) salt
¼ tsp (1 mL) freshly ground
black pepper
9 to 10 slices thick-cut bacon
Kitchen twine
3 to 4 large apples such as
Cortland or Spy
1 large cooking onion
2 tbsp (25 mL) all-purpose flour
1½ cups (375 mL) chicken broth or stock
1. If any silver skin on loins is present, cut away and discard. Sprinkle sage, garlic, salt and pepper all over loins. Place loins closely together lengthwise, with thick ends meeting thin ends, to even out roast thickness.

2. Lay out slices of bacon snugly together on a cutting board, forming a rectangle. Place loins across bacon so bacon ends emerge from each side. Beginning at one end, lift a bacon end up over loins at a 45° angle. Then, alternating sides, continue lifting bacon ends down the length of roast forming a chevron pattern of bacon on top.

3. Cut five 12-inch (30-cm) lengths of twine and one 30-inch (75-cm) length. Place 5 shorter lengths of twine under loins widthwise. Working out from roast centre, firmly (but not causing deep indents to form) tie up each piece of twine, spacing evenly apart. Then tie up roast lengthwise with longer piece of twine. Trim twine ends; discard. (Roast can be prepared, covered and refrigerated for up to half a day. Add 10 to 15 minutes to roasting time.)

4. When ready to roast, preheat oven to 425°F (220°C). Heat a large frying pan over medium heat. Lightly brown roast on all sides, about 15 minutes in total. Transfer to a baking pan lined with a rack. Place in oven; set time for 30 minutes. Check and continue roasting until a meat thermometer reads 145°F (63°C). Remove from oven: transfer to cutting board. Cover roast with foil; let rest 15 to 20 minutes.

5. Meanwhile, peel core and slice apples. Thinly slice onion.

6. Drain most of fat from frying pan; place back over medium heat. Add onion; cook 10 minutes or until lightly browned. Stir in flour; cook 1 minute. Stir in chicken broth; add apple slices. Bring to a boil; simmer, covered, 5 to 10 minutes or until apples are tender and sauce is lightly thickened. Add more broth if too thick; keep covered and hot.

7. To slice pork roast, snip off lengthwise string. Then slice about ¾ inch (2 cm) thick, removing crosswise strings as they are encountered. Place a few saucy apples on each warm serving plate, top with a couple of slices of roast and drizzle with more sauce. Serve with mashed potatoes and a steamed julienne of carrot and kohlrabi.
Serves 6 to 8

Sunday, December 4, 2011

The Bain-Marie








Found a great vintage copper Bain-Marie at the local Thrift Store.  This beauty was just sitting there waiting for me I guess..... !!  Looks like a two quart enamel container with nice brass handles and great barely used copper pan and lid.  Today it was pressed into service to make a cheese sauce for some eggs on potatoe  patties.  Worked perfectly, a nice gentle boil warming the sauce instead of overheating it directly on the gas burner.


The bain-marie comes in a wide variety of shapes, sizes, and types, but traditionally is a wide, cylindrical, usually metal container made of three or four basic parts: a handle, an outer (or lower) container that holds the working liquid, an inner (or upper), smaller container that fits inside the outer one and which holds the material to be heated or cooked, and sometimes a base underneath. Under the outer container of the bain-marie (or built into its base) is a heat source.
Typically the inner container is immersed about halfway into the working liquid.
The smaller container, filled with the substance to be heated, fits inside the outer container, filled with the working liquid (usually water), and the whole is heated at, or below, the base, causing the temperature of the materials in both containers to rise as needed. The insulating action of the water helps to keep contents of the inner pot from boiling or scorching.
When the working liquid is water and the bain-marie is used at sea level, the maximum temperature of the material in the lower container will not exceed 100 degrees Celsius (the boiling point of water at sea level). Using different working liquids (oils, salt solutions, etc.) in the lower container will result in different maximum temperatures.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Short Bread Bible

Here are a few recipes for shortbread, I use flour butter and sugar when i make this Scottish traditional favorite.  Below are some variations on the classic and the science behind it all!


Classic Shortbread

for a shortbread mold
by Lucy Natkiel
1/2 cup butter at room temperature
1/3 cup powdered sugar (unsifted)
1/4 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup flour (unsifted)
Using the back of a large spoon, cream the butter until it is light. Cream in the powered sugar, then the vanilla. Now work in the flour. Knead the dough on an unfloured board until nice and smooth. Spray the shortbread pan very lightly with a non-stick vegetable oil spray. Put the ball of dough in the middle of the pan, and working out from the center, firmly press the dough into the pan. Prick the entire surface with a fork, and bake the shortbread right in the pan at 325 degrees for about 30-35 minutes, or until it is lightly browned. Be sure that the middle is thoroughly cooked and doesn't look slightly opaque or the shortbread might stick in the pan.
Let the shortbread cool in the pan for about 10 minutes before you loosen the edges with a knife and flip the pan over onto a wood cutting board. If the shortbread does not come right out, hold the pan upside down over the cutting board and firmly tap one edge of the pan against the board. This should loosen the shortbread and it should drop out. Cut the shortbread into serving pieces while it is still warm.
Let the pan cool before washing it in the sink or dishwasher.


Adapted from COOK with Jamie
Makes 12 chunky ‘fingers’
Ingredients
  • 1 cup butter plus 2 tablespoons, at room temperature, plus extra for greasing
  • ½ cup plus 1 tablespoon superfine sugar, plus extra for sprinkling
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour, sifted
  • ½ cup semolina, plus extra for dusting 
  • ¼ cup cornstarch
  • pinch kosher salt
Method
  1. Preheat oven to 300° Fahrenheit. Butter a 9-inch square pan; dust with semolina.
  2. Cream butter and sugar together in a stand mixer until pale, light and fluffy.
  3. Add the flour, semolina, cornstarch, and salt. Mix very lightly with a wooden spoon and then with your hands until you have a smooth dough.
  4. Between two floured sheets of parchment paper, roll out dough until it’s an even 1-inch thick all over.
  5. Press the rolled out dough into your prepared pan, pressing it into the corners. Prick the dough all over with a fork, then bake in the preheated oven for 50 minutes or until lightly golden.

How to make perfect shortbread

12:49pm GMT, Thursday, 30 September 2010
It has a strong claim to the title of greatest British biscuit. What’s the best commercial shortbread, and what’s your favourite recipe?
I’ve always wished I had a Scottish granny. Nothing against the two ladies to whom I owe my taste for slabs of Thornton’s toffee and cream sherry, but if they ever baked a round of shortbread, it never made it on to the tea table while I was visiting. I won’t deny thatTunnock’s tea cakes – another great Scottish snack – have their merits, but despite not having a tartan bone in my body, I nurse a particular passion for shortbread as wild and romantic as anything in the work of Sir Walter Scott.
Sandy as the Western Isles, and rich as an RBS board member, shortbread is without doubt the finest biscuit Britain has ever produced. (Although, strictly speaking, thanks to the efforts of the Scottish Association of Master Bakers, it’s not a common biscuit at all, but a “speciality item of flour confectionery” – for tax purposes, at least. Even baked goods are canny with their pennies north of the border, it seems.)
All you really need to know about shortbread is in the name: according to Laura Mason and Catherine Brown’s methodically researched encyclopedia The Taste of Britain, “short” has been used to describe a “friable, brittle, crumbling texture” since medieval times. The first recipes called for “barm” (the yeasty foam formed by fermentation) along with butter and a “Peck of Flour”, which sounds more like a modern shortcake, but by the 19th century the leavening agents had returned to their duties in brewing, and the shortbread had taken its current form – a sweet, crumbly biscuit.
According to one Mistress Meg Dods (aka Christian Isobel Johnstone) writing in 1826 as she prepared a box to send south for Christmas, the buttery biscuit is a treat reserved for special occasions. You don’t get shortbread in a box of Family Circle (the hopefully named “rich shortie” is no substitute), or nestling amongst the pink wafers at the blood donation centre – its natural habitat is Sunday china, and Christmas Eve. Even the tartan pouches of Walkers beloved of refreshment trolleys have a certain posh thrill about them, particularly when dunked in railway tea. But, assuming you don’t travel enough to get your fix, what’s the best way to make shortbread at home?

The basic

According to the Orcadian folklorist and food writer F Marian McNeill, who published The Scots Kitchen in 1929, classic shortbread contains just three ingredients, flour (”dried and sieved”), butter (”squeezed free of all water“) and sugar (”fine caster”). It all, she says, depends on the quality of this trio, ‘careful blending … and careful firing’.
Reading on, however, her shortbread turns out to contain rice flour (of which more later), forcing me to fall back on the patron saint of inept cooks, Delia Smith, for my first recipe. In her Complete Cookery Course, she beats 110g butter until creamy, stirs in 50g caster sugar, and then sifts in 175g plain flour. The dough is rolled out to a 3mm thickness, cut into biscuits, and baked at 150C for half an hour. The results remind me of the description of shortbread in the Oxford Companion to Food as essentially “a thick layer of rich, sweetened shortcrust pastry”: crumbly and sweet, this would make an excellent accompaniment to some fruit and cream, but isn’t rich or buttery enough to satisfy on its own.

Enter the rice

Improbably exotic as it may sound in this context, ground rice (available from the Asian or baking sections of large supermarkets, depending on the relative propensity of the local population to make phirni or shortbread – fine semolina also works if you can’t find it) has long been the secret of many a cook’s deliciously sandy shortbread. The recipe in the Leiths Baking Bible suggests a ratio of 55g ground rice to 115g plain flour, stirred into 115g softened butter and 55g caster sugar. The dough is then shaped and baked for 20 minutes at 170C – and it’s absolutely delicious. There’s a definite crunch when I bite into a piece, and the rice has made the crumb fabulously friable. This could be a contender – although I’d reduce the ratio of rice slightly, or it’s more grit than biscuit.

Cornflour

Scottish food expert Sue Lawrence knows her shortbread – and she uses cornflour, rather than ground rice, to give a “nice melt in the mouth texture” – 50g to 200g plain flour, along with 175g slightly-salted butter and 85g caster sugar. (Shortbread, she says, benefits from a wee bit of salt, and I have to agree – a generous pinch also works wonders.) It’s patted out and cooked in a gentle 150C oven for 35 to 40 minutes, to give a rich, feather soft shortbread that does indeed dissolve on the tongue. The flavour is good, but personally, I prefer a bit of Scottish sand in my petticoat tails.

Baking powder

I find only one recipe using any sort of leavening agent, as used at Ballymaloe Cookery School – the news of the change in recipe must have been lost somewhere over the Irish Sea. A good pinch of baking powder is sifted into 275g butter and 110g caster sugar, along with 350g plain flour and 75g ground rice, and baked in a 150C oven for an hour. There’s a satisfying ’snap’ as I break a biscuit in half, but I find the texture rather dry and crunchy – I can imagine these with ice cream, but they’re a bit too austere for a cup of tea.

Rich shortbread

This leads me to seek out a richer recipe for so-called Ayrshire shortbread, which, not content with the butter and sugar content of the traditional biscuit, demands cream and egg as well. I try one taken from a 1936 manual of Household Management, which uses 2 tbsp cream and 1 egg yolk stirred into 225g plain flour, 100g rice flour, 100g caster sugar, and 100g butter. The dough is moister than an all-butter version, and the shortbread has a rather scone-like texture – in fact, fluffy wouldn’t be too strong a word for these deviants. Too soft by half – proper Sassenach biscuits in fact.

Chilled out …

Sue Lawrence, and Leiths, both call for softened butter. Delia and Good Housekeeping ask for it at room temperature. Chef Marcus Wareing, however, in his book How to Make the Perfect … specifies the butter for his mother-in-law Doreen’s shortbread must be chilled, and then grated into the dry ingredients. This is a technique I’ve come across before in pastry making – keeping the mixture cool means it’s easier to work with.
However, according to Bon Appetit magazine, using cold butter also helps to give a flaky, rather than a crumbly finished product, as “the relatively large particles … leave air pockets when they melt during baking“. Flaky is not a word writ large in my shortbread dreams, but I give the recipe a try anyway, chilling the dough for an hour in the fridge before baking as well in obedience to Doreen. The texture of her shortbread does seem different – looser, somehow, and when I break one in half, I spot a few tiny cavities in the crumb.
As Leiths also recommend chilling the dough before baking, although only for 15 minutes, I make another batch of their recipe with soft butter, stick it straight in the oven without passing the fridge, and end up with thinner, crunchier biscuits – presumably because the mixture spreads as the fat melts. I conclude that refrigerating the dough is a good idea, but chilling your butter probably isn’t.

Roll on, roll off

In the course of my baking, I’ve noticed that many recipes instruct the baker to pat her biscuits into shape, rather than rolling them. This puzzles me, until I read F Marian McNeill’s explanation: too much pressure on the dough has a “tendency to toughen it”. Sue Lawrence agrees that if you have cool hands, you should use them – if not, she says, a light rolling pin will be fine.
To put this to the test, when making the Ballymaloe biscuits, I roll out half the dough firmly, and pat the other half into shape by hand. Oddly enough, the rolled biscuits, which start off flatter, seem to have risen slightly more than their patted counterparts, but they’re also a little less crumbly. It’s a fine point, but for the perfect shortbread, you should probably go as easy on the dough as possible.
Shortbread has so few ingredients that you can’t get away with cutting corners; good quality butter and sugar are essential, and plenty of them. Rice flour gives it that special sandy texture that sets it apart from the common biscuit, and a pinch of salt helps to balance that rich, delicious sweetness. Treat the dough gently, chill it, and cook it gently, sprinkle liberally with brown sugar – and wash down with a pint of Irn Bru.

Perfect shortbread

Makes about 12 portions
115g butter, at room temperature
55g caster sugar (I like to use golden for flavour)
Good pinch of salt
130g plain flour
40g ground rice
Demerara sugar, to finish

1. Pre-heat the oven to 150C. Put the butter into a large mixing bowl, and beat with a wooden spoon until soft. Beat in the sugar and salt.
2. Sift over the flour and ground rice and mix to a smooth dough; if it doesn’t come together, add a little more butter.
3. Line a 15cm cake or tart tin with baking parchment, and pat, or lightly roll, the dough into a shape slightly smaller than the tin. Alternatively pat out to 1cm thickness and cut into biscuits and put on a lined baking tray. Put in the fridge to chill for 15 minutes until firm.
4. Bake for around an hour (about half that for biscuits) until cooked through, but not browned. Take out of the oven and cut into fingers, slices or squares.
5. Allow to cool for a couple of minutes, then sprinkle with demerara sugar and transfer to a wire rack. Once cold, this should last for a good few days in an airtight container (or the coolest oven in an Aga, according to Darina Allen of Ballymaloe).
Could shortbread be the greatest British biscuit of all time – and if so, what’s your favourite recipe? Is Walkers shortbread the best on the market, or does anyone share my sneaking fondness for Prince Charles’ elegant shortbread thins, despite his Welsh loyalties? And are added flavourings ever acceptable north of the border?

Some pictures of the actual process!!!!!!