Sunday, December 28, 2008

Breaded Pork Chops

My mother, and my various aunts, all seemed to make outstanding breaded pork chops. I recall that they used thin cut chops and make piles of them. I can remember eating six or seven at a time as a teenager. They were especially succulent because nobody bothered to remove the fat. It simply hid under the bread crumbs.

Before getting to the recipe, I have to tell you that all pork chops are not created equal. There are three principal pork chop cuts. The boneless pork chop, the rib cut pork chop and the loin cut pork chop. Let’s review the boneless chop first. Evidently boneless chops are made for people in a hurry because a piece of meat without a bone will cook more quickly. But there are two problems with this. First, you don’t want to cook pork chops quickly. They lose whatever moisture they had and they get tough. Second, you shouldn’t be using rib cut pork shops in the first place. The pork chop of choice is the loin cut pork chop. Visually, the difference between the two is that the loin cut chop looks somewhat like a small version of a T-bone steak. That is, there is a T-shaped bone (see photo above) with meat on each side. The smaller part is the tenderloin, which, as the name implies, is tender.

The secrets to good breaded chops, I think, are 1.) breading them twice, as explained below, and 2.) browning the chops and then slow cooking over a low heat.

Serves 4

4 loin cut pork chops, all fat removed.
Bread crumbs, plain
Garlic powder
Onion powder
Thyme
Salt
Pepper
3 Tablespoons olive oil
Water

Mix three eggs in a bowl. Sprinkle one side of each pork chop with the five spices (think “moderate”). Use your judgment regarding relative quantities. Dredge each chop, seasoned face down, in bread crumbs. Sprinkle naked side of chop with the five spices, turn and dredge in bread crumbs, including edges.

With plenty of bread crumbs waiting, hold one chop by thick part of the T- bone and, dunk it in the eggs just long enough to coat it. Turn over, if necessary. Place in breadcrumbs, turn it over and on its’ edges to thoroughly and uniformly coat again.

Heat three tablespoons of oil in a large skillet over a moderately high heat. Arrange the chops in the skillet and brown. Flip to brown the other side. Reduce heat to low, add ¼” cup of water and cover. Cook for 1 hour. Add water to keep moist and to keep from burning.

Serve on warmed plate with potatoes, carrots and a green vegetable.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Bigos (A Polish Hunter's Stew)


W
hen I first moved to Evanston in 1985, I lived on the first floor of a two flat. A quiet Jewish family lived upstairs. One Saturday morning our neighbor knocked on the front door and asked if I had noticed the strange odor in the hallway. I told him I had not, sniffed, and reported that I didn’t notice anything unusual. He returned to the apartment upstairs, shaking his head. On Sunday afternoon he knocked on our door again. This time he insisted that I step out into the hall. “You don’t smell that?” he asked incredulously, “It smells like some animal died out here.” I sniffed, several times, but could not perceive anything unusual. On Monday evening, there was a knock on the back door. When I opened it, our neighbor marched in and went straight to the stove. He pointed at the large, bubbly pot and triumphantly declared (picture Ralph Kramdon of the Honeymooners), “Ah ha! That’s what I’ve been smelling!” I sheepishly offered him a bowl, but he declined.

Bigos, considered to be the national dish of Poland, is a stew that once upon a time aristocratic hunters prepared for their guests. Ordinary Poles couldn’t afford to put so much meat into a dish! Traditionally bigos included game such as wild boar, pheasant, and/or venison. Today, the ingredients, sourced at the grocery store, are less romantic, but make a quite tasty, if somewhat pungent, dish nonetheless. Any kind of leftover meats or sausage, and even fowl, can be added and it simply improves the flavor. The longer it is cooked, the deeper, more complex and satisfying is the flavor. Bogos is typically served with rye bread and is traditionally served the day after Christmas. Who knows why. Polish cooks sometimes refer to choucroute as "bigos alzacki", and Alsatian cooks sometimes refer to bigos as "choucroute à la polonaise.” I prepared and documented this version on January 2, 1999. --jrb

3 quarts of Polish or German style sauerkraut (i.e. fermented cabbage; not merely cabbage with vinegar)
4 large onions, diced
3 tablespoons olive oil
4 loin cut pork chops, meat trimmed from bone (see note 1)
1 lb. beef stew (beef chuck or sirloin), cut into ¾” pieces (see note 1)
1 lb. mushrooms, sliced
3 Knorr's vegetable bullion
1 can (14-1/2 oz.) of chicken broth
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2-3 dozen black peppercorns
2 carrots sliced into ¼” rounds
1/2 cup frozen blueberries (I also used two heaping tablespoons of Ligonberry preserves and/or apples)
8 oz. tomato sauce
12" of Polish sausage (Kielbasa Wiejska preferred, but any kind will do), sliced into ¼” thick medallions

Day 1: Saute onions in a 12” skillet in the olive oil on low-medium heat for one hour, turning often. Add a little water to keep it moist. Be careful not to burn. You want to caramelize the onions.

Drain and reserve liquid from 1 quart of kraut. Place all three quarts of kraut (including liquid from 2 quarts) into a large pot or Dutch oven. Cook for one hour, stirring every 15 minutes.

Add the onions and the next seven ingredients (see note 1 below). Mix well and cook, covered, over low heat for 2 hours. Stir occasionally and add water when needed to keep the bigos fairly wet. Remove from stove and allow to cool.

Day 2: Heat up the bigos and cook, covered, for another 2 hours. Remove from stove and allow to cool.

Day 3: Heat up the bigos and add the carrots, tomato sauce and blueberries. Cook for 90 minutes (or more). Serve with rye bread and butter.

Note 1: Although you can put raw meat into the bigos, I brown the meat and I think it adds considerable flavor: I season the pork chops with some salt, pepper and garlic powder and brown the chops in a cast iron skillet in about 2T of olive oil (both sides). At the end, I add more olive oil and brown the beef stew over a fairly high heat. This will nicely brown the meat. Then I add about cup or more of chicken broth and deglaze the pan. Add the chops (I include the bones and fish them out later), the beef and the pan juices.

Note 2: You can compress the instructions for Day 2 and Day 3 into one day.

The ingredients above are a general guide. The recipe varies from family to family. You can add ham, prunes, apples, whole or cut up tomatoes, caraway seeds, chicken leftoevers, bacon, etc., etc. Traditionally, Poles include diced “boczek” (Polish pork belly, like salt pork or slab bacon), but I think this simply adds unnecessary fat. A final note: Bigos can be frozen.

"Bigos is no ordinary dish,
For it is aptly framed to meet your wish.
Founded upon good cabbage, sliced and sour,
Which, as men say, by its own zest and power
Melts in one's mouth, it settles in a pot
And its dewy bosom folds a lot
Of the best portions of selected meats;
Scullions parboil it then, until heat
Draws from its substance all the living juices,
And from the pot's edge, boiling fluid sluices
And all the air is fragrant with its scent."

from
Pan Tadeusz, by
Adam Mickiewicz (1834)

Greek Lentil Soup




I obtained this recipe from Lenna Athanasopoulos, an acquaintance, just before she moved back to Krioneri, Greece, in 1997. I arrived at her house on a cold winter afternoon. The wonderful aroma of soup cooking filled the house, fogging all the windows. She insisted that I try it. After one spoonful, I agreed to a bowl. Afterwords, I begged for the recipe. This soup is unexpectedly rich in flavor; thick, and hearty. Serve with a crusty Italian or French bread smeared with butter. Perfect for lunch or as a light dinner. – jb


1 cup (8 oz.) – lentils
6 cups - water
1 large onion, finely diced
3 cloves garlic, finely diced
4-5 bay leaves
2 tablespoons oregano
1 cube vegetable bullion (I use Knorr; Lenna didn’t use any)
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground black pepper
2 or 3 tablespoons olive oil (Lenna used more)
4 oz. tomato sauce
pinch of sugar
1 tablespoon Balsamic vinegar

Begin boiling the lentils while preparing the other ingredients. Add all the ingredients, except for the vinegar. Simmer, partially covered for 1 hour, stirring often. After one hour, turn off the heat, add the Balsamic and stir. Allow to sit a while before serving.

This soup, like most, tastes better the next day, but be careful when reheating to avoid burning it.

Mushroom Soup (Zupa Grzybowa)



I have made Polish-style mushroom soup many times over the years, modifying the recipe each time to try to re-create it the way Mom made it. This time I succeeded! The secret to this recipe is to use good dried mushrooms. Borowik (aka Borowki) are traditionally used in Poland. Similar to the Italian Porcini, they are highly prized in Poland. (Latin name: Boletus edulis.) However, that being said, for this Christmas dinner, I used Gourmet Mushroom Blend (Manitou Trading Co.), purchased at Costco and they made a delicious soup. -jb 12-26-08

Serves 8

8 oz. dried mushrooms

64 oz. chicken broth
2 Knorr’s vegetable bullions
Rounded 1/8 teaspoon of white pepper
1/8 teaspoon - ground Thyme
2 bay leaves
3 tablespoons butter
Salt, to taste
6 tablespoons flour + 1/4 cup water
2 teaspoons finely chopped parsley

Combine mushrooms, bay leaf, and broth in a large pot and bring to a boil. Simmer, covered, for 1 hour. Allow to cool. Pour liquid through a cheese cloth into a pot. Place a handful of mushrooms in to your hand and squeeze remaining juice into the soup base. Repeat until all the mushrooms have been squeezed. Discard the mushrooms and bay leaves.

Add the vegetable bullions, white pepper, Thyme and 3 tablespoons of butter. Cook for 10 minutes.

Mix flour and water until smooth. Pour into the soup while stirring. Continue to stir until thickened. Serve in heated bowls with a sprinkle of parsley.

(optional: place a dollop of sour cream into the center of each serving. Personally, I don’t like the flavor sour cream imparts to the soup.)