Showing posts with label PORK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PORK. Show all posts

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Pulled Pork Ala The Robber

For the Fourth of July the Robber cooked up a little pulled pork in the crockpot (his first!) because he wanted to work that day and I, being post-call, was sleeping. Errrr, trying to sleep. So anyway, he got crockpot duty. After it was done cooking we took it over to our friends the C's and ate it out on their patio, a perfectly lazy way to celebrate the Fourth. Here is what the Robber has sent me to memorialize his pulled pork process. I don't know where he found his inspiration, but maybe this will inspire him again in the future.

Ala the Robber, and in his own words.

Ingredients:

5 lb Pork Shoulder, bone in or bone out (5lb was how much I used and you saw how much it made)
A couple bottles/cans of root beer
1-2 bottles of bbq sauce (I used Sweet Baby Ray's because why would you use anything else?)
Optional Spices (Thyme, Sage, Pepper)--I added a dash of these, but I'm not sure it really makes a difference
1 chopped onion
Some minced garlic (about a tablespoon?)

Directions:

1) Trim fat off of pork shoulder.  I didn't do this beforehand b/c I thought it would taste better, but I think it made it much more greasy.

2) Place pork shoulder in slow cooker.  Top with onion, garlic, spices (if desired), and a good squirt or two of bbq sauce.  Pour root beer on until it covers the pork.

3) Cover and cook on low for 8 hours or so.  Can also try high and go for less time if you're in a rush.  I think I did high for the first 2 hours and then low for another 4 or 5.

4) Remove pork to separate bowl (should be falling apart by this point).  Discard root beer (you can save the onions and put them back in with the pork after shredding or you can chop up a fresh onion and put it in with the pork).  

5) Shred pork with forks.  Mix in the bbq sauce to taste (I used 1 and 1/2 bottles maybe).

6) Place pork back in slow cooker and heat until it starts bubbling.  Be careful cause the bottom can burn, so maybe stir it occasionally?

7) Serve!

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Old-Fashioned Meatloaf

So the Robber Man had been hankering after a meatloaf for quite some time, and the hankering only grew all the more intense after two weeks of chicken and rice in Thailand. So for our "American" celebration of our two-year anniversary, I made him a real down-home traditional American meal-- the kind any real husband back in the 50s would have had all the time. Meatloaf. Homemade rolls. Mashed potatoes. Green beans. Watermelon. Pie. And it took me ALL DAY to make, and by make I mean the meatloaf, rolls, and pie (the Robber had to make his own beans and potatoes.) Seriously. How did the women back then do it? 

I used this recipe from Epicurious because it a) said old-fashioned and b) used lots of veggies which the Robber loved. And it was good, and the Robber has gamely been trucking through two whole meatloafs (we doubled the recipe, which made three meatloafs oddly enough-- we froze the third unbaked). He enjoys eating it with mashed potatoes and on hoagie rolls as a meatloaf sandwich.

Instead of the topping it suggests, I made a modified topping which I record down below so the recipe is not entirely as original. Oddly enough, I think meatloaf for me has always been pure beef so having the pork made it different. Not bad. Just not "hit the spot" since it wasn't the meatloaf of my childhood. Oh how we are shaped and fashioned by the things that we love. 

From Gourmet April 1994 by way of Epicurious:
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Old-Fashioned-Meat-Loaf-11676

Ingredients:

2 C. finely chopped onion (about one large onion)
1 T. minced garlic
1 celery rib, finely chopped
1 carrot, finely chopped
1/2 C. finely chopped scallion
2 T. unsalted butter
2 tsp. salt
1 1/2 tsp. freshly ground pepper
2 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
1/3 C. ketchup plus 1/4 C. 
1 1/2 lbs. ground chuck (beef)
3/4 lbs. ground pork 
1 C. fresh bread crumbs (I used panko)
2 large eggs, beaten lightly
1/3 C. minced fresh parsley
2 T. brown sugar
1 T. apple cider vinegar

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 350F. If using bread pan, line with parchment paper.
2. In a large heavy skillet cook onion, garlic, celery, carrot and scallion in butter over moderate heat, stirring, 5 minutes. Cook vegetables, covered, stirring occasionally, until carrot is tender, about 5 minutes more. 
3. Stir in salt, pepper, Worcestershire sauce, and 1/3 C. of ketchup. Cook, stirring 1 minute more.
4. In a large bowl, combine vegetables, meats, bread crumbs, eggs, and parsley.
5. In smaller bowl, combine additional 1/4 C. ketchup, brown sugar and vinegar to create sauce for topping.
6. In a shallow baking pan (or bread pan), form mixture into a 10x5 inch loaf and spread sauce over loaf.
7. Bake meat loaf in over 1 hour, or until a meat thermometer inserted in center registers 155F. 

Note: You can freeze a meatloaf before or after baking. If you freeze before baking, wrap formed meatloaf tightly in plastic wrap. When you go to bake it, don't thaw it first, just cook it for 1.5 - 2 times the normal cooking time.