A Butcher Sells Meat at the Food Market
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Nowitz, Richard
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La Belle Cuisine -
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cook is to create. And to create well...
is an act of integrity, and faith."
Pork in the Style of
the Butcher's Wife
“It was in France that I first learned about food.
And that even the
selection of a perfect pear, a ripe piece of Brie, the
freshest butter,
the highest quality cream were as important as how the dish
you
were going to be served was actually cooked.”
~ Robert Carrier
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Forney, Steve
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Chez Dugand Butcher Shop, Tournon, Rhone-Alps, France
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Engelbrecht, Lisa
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Pork in the Style of the Butcher’s Wife
Tournedos de Porc à la Charcutière
Parisian Home Cooking: Conversations, Recipes, and Tips from the Cooks and Food Merchants of Paris
by Michael Roberts, 1999, William Morrow and Co.
Makes 4
servings
“This classic pork is sauced with an herbed mustard cream sauce
and garnished with a salty, sour dice of capers and cornichons, the
little tart
tarragon-flavored pickles of France. The combination is
as comfortable to a
Parisian as tartar sauce on fried fish is to an
American. If you use butter
pickles, sweet dills, or even
kosher sour
dills, the flavor of this dish
will be completely different. Still
delicious, but different.”
Four 6- to 7-ounce boneless pork loin steaks
Freshly ground black pepper and coarse
or flake sea salt
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1/4 cup dry white wine,
such as Sauvignon Blanc
1/2 teaspoon minced fresh savory or
1/4 teaspoon dried
1/2 teaspoon minced fresh tarragon or
1/4 teaspoon dried
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
3 tablespoons heavy cream
1 teaspoon capers, finely chopped
6 cornichons, finely chopped
(about 2 tablespoons)
1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh chervil
1. Generously season the pork with pepper and sprinkle
with salt. Dissolve the mustard in the wine and, if using dried herbs, add
the savory and
tarragon now. Set aside.
2. Melt the butter in a large nonreactive skillet over
medium-low heat.
Cook the chops on both sides until lightly golden, about 2
minutes
per side. Add the wine mixture and cook for another 3 to 5 minutes,
or until the pork seems springy to the touch. Transfer the pork to
a platter
and keep warm.
3. Add the cream, capers, and cornichons to the skillet and
cook until the liquid is reduced to a saucelike consistency, about 2
minutes. Add any
juices that have collected around the pork to the skillet,
along with the
fresh savory and tarragon, if using, and the chervil.
4. Arrange the pork chops on a platter, pour over the sauce,
and serve immediately.
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Archive Recipes:
Côtelettes de Porc Poivrade à la Crème
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Pork Chops with Mustard and Bacon (Anne Willan)
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