Pork Tenderloin with Allspice Dry Rub

Simple but fabulous! Another winner from Julia Child. Although this doesn’t need a sauce, I often like to serve it with plum chutney or roasted grapes. This time around, I will try a roasted lemon-shallot chutney.

Ingredients:

3-to 4-pound boneless pork roast with a good marbling of fat, or two large tenderloins for the grill
4 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 teaspoon dried thyme or sage leaves
1 bay leaf, crushed
1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
2 cloves garlic, minced or put through a press.

Preparation:

Dry the meat well with paper towels. In a bowl or a mortar, mix the remaining ingredients together and rub into the surface of the pork. Place in a covered dish and marinate in the refrigerator for at least 6 hours or up to 2 days. Turn the meat 2 or 3 times if the marinade is a short one; several times a day if longer.

Heat oven to 325 degrees, or a grill to medium-high. Scrape off the marinade and dry the meat thoroughly with paper towels.

For roasting, place meat on a rack in a shallow pan and turn often until just cooked through, about 30 minutes per pound or until internal temperature reaches 140 degrees.

For grilling, place tenderloins on oiled grate, cover, and cook for 12 to 15 minutes, turning every 2 minutes, or until internal temperature reaches 140 degrees. Cover meat with foil and let rest 10 minutes before slicing.

Prosciutto-Wrapped Halibut

This dish will forever remind me of my mother-in-law, who scrunched her nose at it and pronounced it as “too prosciutto-ey.” How is that even possible? Please ignore her.

This is a dish I would order over and over again from a restaurant menu. If you enjoy prosciutto and you like fish (heck, even if you are on the ho-hum side of fish), do yourself a favor and make this dish. It’s almost as easy as ordering take-out but oh so much more satisfying. It’s simple, dinner-party worthy and just takes a few key ingredients: buttery delicate fish, salty pig, white wine and fresh herbs — it’s hard to go wrong here. Once again, I sent my husband to Frank’s Seafood Market for the fish and I continue to be amazed by the quality and value. How could it be any fresher? Only if I caught it myself, that’s how.

Flash in the pan time

Flash in the pan

Wednesday Night Fish Feast



I sent my dear husband off to Frank’s Seafood Market with instructions to purchase “whatever Mr. Fishmonger would choose to take home for dinner tonight.” He returned with a slab of sushi-grade tuna so gorgeous it begged to be licked and then devoured raw. I couldn’t wait to crack open my bottle of Sicilian olive oil I had been saving to drizzle over supremely fresh fish.

Perfect tuna

Perfect tuna

Although the tuna could have easily been enjoyed as is, I did decide to give it a nice crust with a quick sear in a hot cast iron skillet. I then thinly sliced the tuna, placed it on a bed of wilted spinach and topped it with one of my favorite seafood sauces from Steven Raichlen’s Planet Barbecue. A riff on his recipe for Livornese sauce and photo follows.

Livornese sauce

Livornese sauce

Livornese Sauce:
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil. (Use your good stuff for this recipe as it shines)
Handful of pitted kalamata olives — feel free to chop them if you wish
2 to 3 cloves of garlic, sliced paper-thin
Handful of drained capers
Several chopped fresh tomatoes or good quality canned tomatoes in the winter months
Several tablespoons of chopped fresh parsley or other herbs
Squeeze of fresh lemon juice
Salt & pepper to taste

Heat the olive oil in a medium skillet over high heat. Quickly saute the garlic, capers, olives and parsley until garlic turns golden brown and crisp. Add tomatoes and a few squeezes of lemon juice and boil until reduced just a bit — 2 to 3 minutes should be plenty. Season with salt and pepper and spoon over fish. Drizzle additional olive oil over fish if needed.

Viola, that is all! Light, healthy and satisfying. All you really need is fresh fish and high quality olive oil to turn this into a fabulous dinner. Enjoy!


Seared ahi with Livornese sauce and roasted butternut squash

Seared ahi with Livornese sauce and roasted butternut squash

Crispy Duck — Quack!

This recipe was my first foray into playing with duck and it’s one I go back to again and again. It’s truly easy enough for a weeknight meal and elegant enough for a dinner party. The sauce can be made days ahead so you aren’t stuck trying to monkey around with a pan sauce while guests are seated at your dinner table. In fact, I have made the sauce in double batches and often freeze half to pull out later when I spot a fresh duck at the market.

The only trick with this one is coaxing out all of that quack fat to render the skin crispy crunchy, which, let’s face it, is the best part of any feathered creature on our plates.  What I love about this dish, however, is that the fabulous sauce makes up for just about any mistake with the duck. Limp duck skin? No problem, ladle on that sauce. Just past the perfect rosy medium rare? Sauce to the rescue. Skin charred black? Peel it off and dump on the sauce. This is nearly a fool-proof recipe. Whether you’ve tackled duck 100 times in your kitchen or have shied away from our web-footed friend, give this dish a whirl.

Crispy Duck & "Celery Root" Remoulade

Crispy Duck with Pomegranate Chile Sauce & “Celery Root” Remoulade

I know some of you are wondering why the remoulade is fluorescent yellow. If you are not wondering, you should be. Alas, Whole Foods did not have celeriac available and thus, I substituted golden beets and rutabagas. I do not recommend trying this at home.

Roasted Greek Shrimp

This dish is so easy for a weeknight — no real recipe or measuring required here. Prep the shrimp the day before and you are all set for a fast and healthy dinner. If you like tomatoes, capers and shellfish, you can’t go wrong with this dish. I served the shrimp with a salad of red leaf lettuce, shaved fennel & dried blueberries dressed with just lemon juice and olive oil.

IMG_0961

Ingredients:

  • 2 to 3 cups diced tomatoes (can also just use canned tomatoes if you wish)
  • Handful of capers, rinsed
  • Several minced garlic cloves
  • 1 pound of shrimp or scallops (or a combination)
  • feta cheese
  • fresh herbs such as basil, dill or oregano
  • several shakes of red chile flakes if you like things spicy

Preparation:

  • Heat oven to 450 degrees
  • Dump tomatoes in a shallow baking dish, sprinkle with garlic, capers, chile flakes and salt & pepper
  • Add shrimp and a drizzle of olive oil — more chile flakes here if you wish and bake until bubbling — 10 minutes or so.
  • Remove from oven and sprinkle feta on top. Bake an additional 5 minutes or so until shrimp are nice and pink. Sprinkle chopped fresh herbs on top and serve with hunks of crusty bread.

Greek shrimp