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I said I'd contact my Iowa SIL and pose this important question! I can't bear to edit his reply to me, so here it is in its entirety. Enjoy! "Needless to say, the "tenderloin question" has ignited an untold number of arguments, most of which spiral out of control into ugly observations about the typical Hoosier's ravaged DNA structure (or that matter of the missing chromosomes, the poor *******s). So I'll do my best to take the high road and leave it he Indiana tenderloins are, at best, pale, feeble imposters to the impossibly delicious, legendary Iowa tenderloin. True, most outsiders would say a tenderloin doesn't amount to much ("they call this meat?") ... but it's our meat and there's nothing like biting into a crisp, nutritionally-inert genuine Iowa tenderloin. Preparation? Grease. And lots of it. Preferably suitable aged (okay, rancid). Then boil the oversized but paper-thin tenderloin into oblivion. Serve. Enjoy. "There's probably more to it than that. But my one notable incident with a non-Iowa tenderloin was in Faribault, MN. I was on my way home with an Iowa family from the Twin Cities. To this day, I vividly recall how Volker Dube (his name) was enraged when the tenderloin he ordered -- gasp! -- actually revealed a troubling meat content and was uncharacteristically grease-filled due to that fact. When the unsuspecting server returned, Mr. Dube rose from his chair, grasped the sandwich and proceeded to wring the grease out in a theatrically-impressive display. Lousy Minnesota grease gushed from the pitiful "sandwich." Point made. Yes, we Iowans know the score when it comes to tenderloins." Dennis and the beat goes on. Dora |
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limey wrote:
Then boil the oversized but paper-thin tenderloin into oblivion. Serve. Enjoy. Dennis' correction: "fry", not "boil". Dora LOL Boiling in oil could be considered deep frying! Jill |
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"jmcquown" wrote: limey wrote: Then boil the oversized but paper-thin tenderloin into oblivion. Serve. Enjoy. Dennis' correction: "fry", not "boil". Dora LOL Boiling in oil could be considered deep frying! Jill Sounds rugged, doesn't it! I think I'll pass. My post is a follow-up to the "controversy" going on in the thread of yesterday on "Non-American Foodies", where I said I'd check with my Iowa SIL. G Dora |
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"jmcquown" wrote in message ... limey wrote: Then boil the oversized but paper-thin tenderloin into oblivion. Serve. Enjoy. Dennis' correction: "fry", not "boil". Dora LOL Boiling in oil could be considered deep frying! Jill I agree with Jill...ROTFLMAO Harriet & critters |
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On Sun 12 Mar 2006 10:26:28a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it jmcquown?
limey wrote: Then boil the oversized but paper-thin tenderloin into oblivion. Serve. Enjoy. Dennis' correction: "fry", not "boil". Dora LOL Boiling in oil could be considered deep frying! Jill I have to admit to never having a pork tenderloin prepared in either Iowa or Indiana. However, there is a small restaurant in Mesa called The Iowa Cafe, that is owned and operated by a transplanted Iowa family. The pork tenderloins I've eaten there, either in a sandwich or plated as part of a dinner, are absolutely delicious. The coating is crisp and golden and the meat is very tender, and there is barely a trace of grease. -- Wayne Boatwright ożo ____________________ BIOYA |
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limey wrote:
Yes, we Iowans know the score when it comes to tenderloins." Dennis The tenderloin sandwich is practically the state dish of Iowa. They do make it other places, to be sure, including a number of places here in Missouri. However, it's not to the level of reverence that it is in Iowa. Brian -- If televison's a babysitter, the Internet is a drunk librarian who won't shut up. -- Dorothy Gambrell (http://catandgirl.com) |
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pamjd wrote: Center Point Iowa. Jonesys is the king of frittered pork! Just bring your own mustard if you don't eat yellow. Pam Jonesy's in Solon, Iowa. Illinois cannot be compared with Iowa - Iowa tenderloins are the best. And the really really good ones DO have a nice thickness of pork, as well as NOT being greasy. I know the writer was trying to be humorous, but he/she needs to get their facts straight. It needs to be an accurate description..... (Henry's Cafe over by Honey Creek is excellent, also.) N. |
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"Blair P. Houghton" wrote in message
oups.com... I have, in fact, had tenderloins in both Illinois and Iowa (Indiana isn't in the picture here). Geez. I grew up in Indiana and can attest to the quality of pork tenderloins there. The Illinois version was better. --Blair |
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"Needless to say, the "tenderloin question" has ignited an untold number of
arguments, most of which spiral out of control into ugly observations about the typical Hoosier's ravaged DNA structure (or that matter of the missing chromosomes, the poor *******s) The problem with the food (and everything else) here in Indiana is that the state is not really a state at all, except in a legal sense. When settlers in the 19th century were headed for interesting places like Chicago, California and Texas sometimes they didn't make it. Indiana is where they usually ended up when the money ran out or the horse mired down. Nobody loaded a wagon up in the 1840s with a big sign saying "Indiana or bust!" on it. Today, Indiana is flyover country. Then it was rollover country. People who were out of money, out of supplies, out of options and out of hope sold whatever they had left for ten really cheap acres of mediocre farmland and a plow here and settled down because they couldn't even go back home. This is where hope came to die. Indiana is the graveyard of a million dreams and we are the descendents of failed dreamers. |
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Tom Royer wrote: "Blair P. Houghton" wrote: I have, in fact, had tenderloins in both Illinois and Iowa (Indiana isn't in the picture here). Geez. I grew up in Indiana and can attest to the quality of pork tenderloins there. This argument goes way back, and I believe we'll have to reincarnate Will Rogers to get the real answer: http://groups.google.com/group/rec.f...4eae0d2f939eba --Blair "We can fry pork cutlets in Arizona, too." |
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Christopher Helms wrote: "Needless to say, the "tenderloin question" has ignited an untold number of arguments, most of which spiral out of control into ugly observations about the typical Hoosier's ravaged DNA structure (or that matter of the missing chromosomes, the poor *******s) The problem with the food (and everything else) here in Indiana is that the state is not really a state at all, except in a legal sense. When settlers in the 19th century were headed for interesting places like Chicago, California and Texas sometimes they didn't make it. Indiana is where they usually ended up when the money ran out or the horse mired down. Nobody loaded a wagon up in the 1840s with a big sign saying "Indiana or bust!" on it. Today, Indiana is flyover country. Then it was rollover country. People who were out of money, out of supplies, out of options and out of hope sold whatever they had left for ten really cheap acres of mediocre farmland and a plow here and settled down because they couldn't even go back home. This is where hope came to die. Indiana is the graveyard of a million dreams and we are the descendents of failed dreamers. And therefore as deeply Republican as any localized real-estate in America. --Blair |
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And therefore as deeply Republican as any localized real-estate in
America. --Blair Yep. The last Democratic presidential candidate who won Indiana was Lyndon Johnson in 1964. There are a few hyperconservative Democrats in various positions around the state, but for the most part the best way to get yourself unelected in Indiana is to express a post-neolithic view of anything at all. |
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