Thursday, March 13, 2008

Non-conformist Pork Loin


Thanks to Mr. AB (who cannot be named for fear of lawsuits, but if you watch any cooking shows on a certain cooking channel and don't know who AB is, you should probably pay closer attention next time) I decided to use a dry rub I learned from him.

8 parts Brown Sugar
1 Part Salt (Kosher of Course)
1 Part Chili Powder (I used a nice deep red roasted one)
1 Part Misc Spices (I used garlic Granules, Mustard Powder, Basil, Cumin, Black Pepper)

We did this mixture using a cup of Brown Sugar so it was a Cup of that and an 8th of a cup of everything else. You can make as much as you like but that was a perfect amount for this piece of meat. So this all happened the night before.

We rubbed the back and front massaging the rub into the savory flesh of the loin. And then we wrapped it up in two layers of Wide (this helps immensely) tinfoil.

It looked like a happy tinfoil sausage at this point.

Our seasoned happy roll was then placed in the fridge to chill out over night. We put in on a standard sheet pan diagonally and it mostly fit. The next day we made the glaze sauce base.

1 cup Chicken broth
1/2 Cup Red Wine Vinegar
2 TBLS Worcester Sauce
3-4 Smashed up garlic cloves
1-2 TBLS of Honey

Mix this all together and bring to a boil then let steep for a while. Then open up one end of your pork roll and pour it in. Cook (this is called braising) for 3-4 hours on 225 F. It wont burn unless all the liquid dries up. Which at 225 would take days. I used a probe thermometer to check doneness and pulled it at 190 which is actually hotter than it should be but it didn't hurt it. Anything after 180 should be more than hot enough to kill the bugs. After it has cooked open one end of the foil and dump out all the liquid into a big sauce pan. At this junction I actually moved the loin onto a new sheet pan lined with foil since it was being served later and to the public. At home I would have left it in the old, now discolored, tinfoil. Put the loin into the now extinguished oven to rest. Now boil the liquid for a long time. This stuff needs to go from water consistency to BBQ sauce consistency. Do be afraid to let it boil and boil good. It took about 30 minutes for ours because we had so much sauce. Once the sauce is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon, spoon it over the loin. Don't be shy, this is the divine ambrosia that makes this dish. Then hit the loin with the broiler until the sauce starts to caramelize (it will turn brown and bubble, it might even get black in one or two spots). Cut and serve.

Taken from http://mormoncook.blogspot.com/2007/12/non-conformist-pork-loin.html

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