Pancetta-Wrapped Pork Tenderloin with Date Jam

Pancetta-Wrapped Pork Tenderloin with Date JamIf you’ve ever found yourself at a party, standing over the buffet, shoveling bacon-wrapped dates into your mouth as quickly as you can instead of, you know, being social and whatnot, this recipe is for you.  Well, you and me.  Seriously, who cares about meeting and greeting when there’s something as good as porky dates to be had?

This recipe takes the flavors of one of our most beloved cocktail snacks and turns it into an entree.  I made a sweet and savory jam with dates, onion, and mustard seed, smeared it on a butterflied pork tenderloin and wrapped it all up with strips of pancetta.  After roasting, the meat is moist and just a touch rosy in the center, with crisp pancetta serving as the perfect counterpoint to the sweet date filling.  It’s just like my favorite party snack but in a meal-sized portion I can enjoy without looking over my shoulder, wondering if I’m going to have to fight someone over the last date.

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Ham & Gruyère Buckwheat Crêpe (Galette Complète)

Galette Compléte-A Ham & Gruyere Buckwheat Crepe with an Egg

Envision this: you’re sitting on the coach one night, surfing cheaptickets.com with your boyfriend, and find an unbelievable deal on flights to Paris.  On a whim, you book a trip, with only 2 weeks to work out rest of the details.  You spend most of those 2 weeks just daydreaming about being whisked around Paris, looking impossibly chic with the Eiffel tour looming in the background.  You picture yourself drinking champagne and eating oysters twice daily because, well, the world is your oyster isn’t it?

And then you arrive.  You realize your ticket was impossibly cheap because Paris in November is blustery and gray.  And your bags were lost.  Instead of feeling tres chic, you’re feeling tres hobo in your grimy, rumpled clothes.  But you’re determined not to let any of this get you down.  You’re in Paris after all!

Yes, this was me and Matt a couple of months back.  Our first 24 hours in the city of lights were, uh,  less than sparkly.  We arrived tired, dirty, crabby, and without most of our luggage.  And to make matters worse, my (brilliant) fiancé had decided to shove his coat in our checked bag (who would do that???).  We found our way to our apartment and spent our first few hours of vacation napping and trying de-crabify.  When we woke, I convinced Matt to take a jacket-less walk around our neighborhood to scope things out.  It’ll be fine, I assured him, the wind has probably died down and once we get moving, it’ll be great.

Well, not exactly.  But we made the most of it and walked around, ducking into shops to warm up, peeking in gallery windows, and checking out restaurant menus.  We went out for dinner and practically sleepwalked back to our place, determined to start fresh the next day.

By the next afternoon, our luggage had arrived, we’d had a decent night’s sleep, and our not-so-great first day of the trip was a distant memory, except for this one image that kept popping into my head: I kept picturing a cozy creperie we had passed by on our walk.  I remembered peering through steamed up windows into a tiny dining room with wood paneling.  Everyone inside was eating these gorgeous savory crepes with sunny-side-up eggs.  They were smiling and looked so warm, so happy.  I had wanted to be in there so badly with all of them instead of outside, freezing my derrière off.

Over the next few days, every time a blast of wind cut through me, I’d imagine that restaurant.  I knew it must be very close to where we were staying, but somehow we had not passed it again.  I began to think it had been a hallucination, something my jet-lagged brain had cooked up to try to warm me that first day.

Finally, towards the end of our stay, we found our way back to this creperie and I realized it did indeed exist outside my head.  We walked in, late afternoon, out of the chilly Paris drizzle and each had our very own galette complète.  Thankfully, they were as delicious in reality as they had been in my imagination.  

A galette (at least in this context) is a buckwheat crepe with a savory filling.  Most of the galettes on this cafe’s menu were filled with ham, cheese, and maybe a few veggies, completed with a sunny-side-up egg.  The fillings are loaded into the center of the crepe, then the edges are folded to create a square envelope, framing a brilliantly orange yolk.  We had ours with hard cider served out of tiny ceramic bowls and I knew this would be a treat I’d be trying to recreate as soon as we got home.

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Broccoli Rabe, Italian Sausage & Ricotta Pizza

Italian sausage, broccoli rabe & ricotta pizzaAbout a year ago, my life changed in a big way.  I discovered this recipe for no-knead pizza dough that yields my favorite kind of restaurant-pizza crust, right out of my home oven.  It’s thin in the middle, chewy and bubbly around the edges, and a total cinch to make.  I’ve been talking it up to friends and family (come on, Dad–try it!  I know you’ll love it!), but somehow we haven’t talked about it here since my initial discovery.

Well, let’s change that!  Let’s talk pizza today.  We’ll definitely use my go-to dough and I’m thinking some garlicky sautéed broccoli rabe, spicy Italian sausage, and ricotta cheese sound like awfully good toppings for this chilly evening.  A bottle of red?  Maybe a movie?  Good, I’m glad you’re on board.

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Traditional Bolognese Sauce

Bolognese SauceBolognese sauce ranks pretty high on my list of favorite things to cook in the dead of winter.  It’s the ultimate comfort food–hearty, homey, and warming.  Plus, it requires you to spend a slow-paced afternoon in a toasty kitchen with an open bottle of wine.  What more could you ask for?

This recipe makes a big batch of Bolognese sauce that will keep you warm for several winter nights.  It’s a combination of beef, pork, and veal that is slowly simmered with wine and tomatoes until it becomes unbelievably rich and luxurious.   I used half of the batch in the lasagna I served on Christmas Eve and there are 2 small containers of it squirreled away in the freezer that will dress pasta or top polenta some time later this month when I’m snowed in and need nourishment.

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Cider Braised Country Style Pork Ribs & Cannellini Beans

Cider Braised Pork Ribs and BeansThere’s been an awful lot of apples and cider, sage and rosemary, molasses and brown sugar thrown around in my kitchen this fall.  And plenty of pork.  I feel like I’m heading into a flavor rut, yet I can’t help myself; these ingredients just sing fall and it’s exactly what I’m craving this time of year.

So even though I’d been planning to shake things up a bit last weekend, I was dying to try a recipe for slow-cooked cider beans I’d seen a few days before.  They looked like an autumnal take on baked beans, one of my favorite guilty pleasures of summer.  In the recipe, beans are simmered in apple cider with molasses and mustard.  I decided to make it my own and braise country style pork ribs along with the beans.  

And I’m glad did!  I’m glad I didn’t try too hard to reroute my food rut because it ended up being totally delicious and exactly right for a fall weekend.  

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