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Default Pork in nut sauce

This is a recipe which I created using elements from various recipes. I
served it today for a dinner party, and it was a success!

(The nut sauce is from Elisabeth Lambert Ortiz.)

(Sorry that I don't have exact measurements for everything, but I tend
to just throw things together.)

3 or 4 lbs of pork tenderloin trimmed of fat and cut into bite-size
chunks.

In a large deep fry pan, brown the pork in olive oil. Add 2 cups of
chicken broth, a chopped onion, 1 clove of garlic mashed into a paste
with a little salt, some thyme and oregano. Let this mixture simmer for
about 2 hours.

In another saucepan, take 3 tart apples, peeled, cored and cut into
chunks, a good handful of raisins, some sliced black olives, a handful
of chopped onion, a handful of chopped yellow bell pepper, some thyme
and oregano. Add a little chicken broth and let that simmer until the
apples are soft.

When the pork is very tender, remove the meat and add it to the apple
mixture. Keep it on very low heat, just enough to keep it warm. Strain
the broth from fry pan and reserve.

Sautee one chopped onion in butter. When the onions start to become
transparent, add 1 cup of roughly chopped pecans and cook for a couple
minutes. Put the onion/pecan mixture in the blender with a little of
the reserved broth (maybe about a half cup) and blend until smooth (that
will take a little while). Pour this puree into a saucepan, add the
rest of the reserved broth and cook for a few minutes on low heat. Add
salt to taste. Add 1 cup of sour cream and blend in with a whisk.

To serve, pour the sauce over the pork/fruit mixture and garnish with
raisins.

(I made all of this a day ahead of time. About an hour before dinner, I
put the pork/fruit and the sauce on low heat. I added a splash of
chicken broth to the pork so that it wouldn't dry out. Perhaps it was
best to let it sit in the fridge overnight so that the flavors melded
together! Anyway, it came out delicious and was definitely worth the
effort!)

Bill

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Default Pork in nut sauce

Thanks this sounds great. You must be quite a cook.

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Default Pork in nut sauce


William wrote:
> This is a recipe which I created using elements from various recipes. I
> served it today for a dinner party, and it was a success!

Anyway, it came out delicious and was definitely worth the
> effort!)
>
> Bill


The elements in your recipe are very close to the ones in Chiles en
Nogada. As you like the one you crafted, I thought that you might
enjoy this version of it. There are many recipes for Chiles en Nogada
(Stuffed Peppers in Walnut Sauce), but I like this one, as it is richer
than the simpler ones. This is more of a contemporary (upscale)
version of a Puebla standard:


Chiles en Nogada
(serves 8)

12 ounces boneless pork shoulder, cut into 1-inch cubes
4 cups pork stock or water
3 tablespoons corn oil
2 roasted tomatoes, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons chopped white onion
1 garlic clove, chopped
1 pound fresh peaches, large dice, skin on
1 pound fresh Washington red apples, large dice, skin on
1 pound fresh Bosc pears, large dice, skin on
1 large ripe plantain, large dice, skinned
1/3 cup raisins, whole
1/3 cup sliced almonds, toasted
3 tablespoons sugar
8 large poblano peppers, carefully roasted, peeled and seeded, keeping
stems attached
2 cups white flour for dredging peppers
1 tablespoon salt for the dredging flour
Seeds of 2 ripe, fresh pomegranates for final garnish (about 8-10 seeds
on top of each pepper)

For the pork mixtu

Simmer the meat in the stock or water over low heat until it is soft
(approximately 2 hours). Cool and shred it. Set aside. In a large
saucepan, heat the corn oil and fry the tomatoes with the onion and
garlic. Cook until the liquid evaporates. Then add all the fruit,
almonds, sugar and meat and cook together for about 10 minutes. Cool
mixture.

The peppers:

Stuff the prepared peppers with the pork mixture, being extra careful
not to tear them. When the sauce has been made and the peppers stuffed
and ready to serve, dredge the peppers in flour seasoned with salt.

Walnut Sauce:

3 cups milk
4 cups of walnuts (shells and bitter skins removed)
½ cup Cinzano sweet vermouth
4 ounces queso añejo
4 ounces queso fresco
1 cup sugar

Blend (puree) all six ingredients together into a smooth sauce, then
chill to serve cold over finished chiles.

To serve:

Sauté the floured, stuffed peppers in corn oil until nicely browned
(about 5-7minutes) and finish them in a 325-degree oven for 20 minutes,
carefully turning them from time to time. Arrange the 8 peppers on
your serving platter. Pour the cold walnut sauce over the peppers and
garnish with the pomegranate seeds. Serve with white rice if desired.

The above recipe is from a friend of mine, Hugo Ortega, a Houston
Chef/Restaurateur who is from Puebla and now has a restaurant in
Houston called Hugo's, serving regional Mexican cuisine.

Jack

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