Garlic and Herb Pork Roast With Potatoes, Wilted Spinach, and Cooling Cucumber Cream

Servings: 10

Preparation duration: -1 minutes

Cooking duration: -1 minutes

 

Ingredients:

2 1/2 pounds boneless butterflies pork butt or shoulder

fresh oregano

fresh rosemary

fresh garlic

1 pound baby spinach

1 pound small red potatoes

3 medium white onions

EVOO

white balsamic vinegar

Greek yoghurt

1 medium cucumber

1 lemon

sea salt, cracked black pepper

Equipment:

bowl

roasting pan

tongs

frying pan

aluminum foil

oven

Cooking instruction summary:

I pull the leaves off two sprigs of rosemary and two sprigs of oregano (about a loose 1/2 cup of herbage). I peel and mince 4 cloves of garlic. Along with a few glugs of EVOO, some sea salt, and some cracked black pepper, I mix all this savory yumyum into a paste in a bowl. Then I spread it liberally along what will be the inside of my meat-wad. See the strings laid out below? Im going to fold this slab in half, encasing my herbaliciousness in the inside. See? I slide this baby into a ziplock bag and set it in the fridge to marinate for a few hours (overnight will work, too). Its going to take at least 2 hours to roast, so I take it out around 4:00 pm And get my roasting pan set to high heat with a few glugs of EVOO shimmering on the surface. Im going to sear every surface of my luscious wrapped pink pig, which will help it cook through to tender later. I leave the fat-cap for last. Bottoms down! Then cut side, using tongs to flip when the surface has caramelized to a lovely golden brown. I even brown each tip, like so. Finally, I press the sweet sweet slice of quivering pork skin onto the searing hot oiled surface of my pan. After a few moments, I flip it the final time. The house has already started to spell amazing, and the beautiful bacony aromas released once fat hits heat is almost more than I can handle. Almost. The promise of porcine perfection to come keeps me in check. Oh, Ive nestled a few thick slices of white onion under my pork roast, because I dont want the bottom to oversear before the meat can release some juices, and then I dont want the bottom to stew in those juices too much. The onion elevates the roast while adding flavor. I wrap this in foil paper, and set into a Oven. It will bake for at least 2 hours; larger roasts will take longer, but for 2 people this is just the right size, and just the right amount of time to inhale the noxious tantalizing aromas before some sort of crazy sets in. I make my cucumber yoghurt right away, because I want the flavors to blend. I start my peeling, then slicing Then chopping my cucumber. I throw it into a bowl, along with my yoghurt, 2 cloves of minced garlic, some lemon zest, the juice of 1/2 that lemon, some sea salt, cracked black pepper And I mix it all well. I set this in the fridge, so all the flavors can come together. Which they do oh, baby they do. When my roast is almost done (pretty much right at the 1:45 mark), I prep my spuds by splitting them into quarters, and tossing them with lots of EVOO, sea salt, cracked black pepper, and another 1/2 cup of chopped fresh rosemary and oregano. Were bringing the scent and savory of the pork and potatoes together by lacing them both with the same herb blend. I spread these out on a sheet pan, and give them another healthy dose of EVOO, just to be sure theyre very heartily coated. I set this into the bottom shelf of my oven, right above the heating element, so that my edges will crust up nicely. Youll see. We purchased this lovely bottle of oregano scented white balsamic vinegar at O&Co. on Newbury Street. Tonight was the perfect time to break it out. Have you ever had french fries with vinegar? If not, I highly recommend it. This is the same concept. I had set aside the large bowl in which Id tossed my spuds; it was still coated with residual herbed EVOO, salt, and pepper. Ive sliced my white onions into strips, and I toss them into this reservoir with another few healthy glugs of oil, and another handful of oregano leaves. Heres where my vinegar comes in; I douse a healthy serving over this beautiful blend, stirring it all up very very well, soaking each each crisp slice of white root with dressing. Every few minutes or so, I toss it afresh; this reactive base quick-pickles my onion slices transforming the flavor from pungent to perky sweet. For the last 10 minutes of cooking my roast, I remove the foil from the top to expose the skin to the heat. I can easily twist a wee bit of meat off with my fork, letting me know it is tender and perfectly ready to serve. I set the heat to 425, then stick my roast back in the oven so the skin can crisp. Meanwhile, my onions have pickled And Ive layered my baby spinach over them Before I pour my spuds, sizzling oil and seared spices and all, over the whole pan. I toss this very well, letting the hot potatoes and oil wilt my spinach, and blending the pickled onions over the whole batch. My pork is ready to go: the fat cap is crisped and blistered, and the meat is fork-tender. This hunk of lovemeat almost slices itself, and the herbage cleavage is like a vein of precious green flavor gold. Topped with a cool cucumber cream, my thick, tender slabs of herbed rolled pork roast with crispy, savory skin are perfectly partnered with my snappy spuds and buttery greens. This is an elegant, delicious dinner that welcomes the first breezes of early spring through freshly re-opened windows. Light, fresh, and fantastic: I wish I could have you all over for dinner, because this was a company meal!

 

Step by step:


1. I pull the leaves off two sprigs of rosemary and two sprigs of oregano (about a loose 1/2 cup of herbage). I peel and mince 4 cloves of garlic.

2. Along with a few glugs of EVOO, some sea salt, and some cracked black pepper, I mix all this savory yumyum into a paste in a bowl.

3. Then I spread it liberally along what will be the inside of my meat-wad. See the strings laid out below? Im going to fold this slab in half, encasing my herbaliciousness in the inside.

4. See? I slide this baby into a ziplock bag and set it in the fridge to marinate for a few hours (overnight will work, too). Its going to take at least 2 hours to roast, so I take it out around 4:00 pm

5. And get my roasting pan set to high heat with a few glugs of EVOO shimmering on the surface.

6. Im going to sear every surface of my luscious wrapped pink pig, which will help it cook through to tender later. I leave the fat-cap for last. Bottoms down!

7. Then cut side, using tongs to flip when the surface has caramelized to a lovely golden brown.

8. I even brown each tip, like so.

9. Finally, I press the sweet sweet slice of quivering pork skin onto the searing hot oiled surface of my pan. After a few moments, I flip it the final time.

10. The house has already started to spell amazing, and the beautiful bacony aromas released once fat hits heat is almost more than I can handle. Almost. The promise of porcine perfection to come keeps me in check.

11. Oh, Ive nestled a few thick slices of white onion under my pork roast, because I dont want the bottom to oversear before the meat can release some juices, and then I dont want the bottom to stew in those juices too much. The onion elevates the roast while adding flavor. I wrap this in foil paper, and set into a

12. Oven. It will bake for at least 2 hours; larger roasts will take longer, but for 2 people this is just the right size, and just the right amount of time to inhale the noxious tantalizing aromas before some sort of crazy sets in.

13. I make my cucumber yoghurt right away, because I want the flavors to blend. I start my peeling, then slicing

14. Then chopping my cucumber.

15. I throw it into a bowl, along with my yoghurt, 2 cloves of minced garlic, some lemon zest, the juice of 1/2 that lemon, some sea salt, cracked black pepper

16. And I mix it all well. I set this in the fridge, so all the flavors can come together. Which they do oh, baby they do.

17. When my roast is almost done (pretty much right at the 1:45 mark), I prep my spuds by splitting them into quarters, and tossing them with lots of EVOO, sea salt, cracked black pepper, and another 1/2 cup of chopped fresh rosemary and oregano. Were bringing the scent and savory of the pork and potatoes together by lacing them both with the same herb blend.

18. I spread these out on a sheet pan, and give them another healthy dose of EVOO, just to be sure theyre very heartily coated. I set this into the bottom shelf of my oven, right above the heating element, so that my edges will crust up nicely. Youll see.

19. We purchased this lovely bottle of oregano scented white balsamic vinegar at O&Co. on Newbury Street. Tonight was the perfect time to break it out. Have you ever had french fries with vinegar? If not, I highly recommend it. This is the same concept.

20. I had set aside the large bowl in which Id tossed my spuds; it was still coated with residual herbed EVOO, salt, and pepper. Ive sliced my white onions into strips, and I toss them into this reservoir with another few healthy glugs of oil, and another handful of oregano leaves. Heres where my vinegar comes in; I douse a healthy serving over this beautiful blend, stirring it all up very very well, soaking each each crisp slice of white root with dressing. Every few minutes or so, I toss it afresh; this reactive base quick-pickles my onion slices transforming the flavor from pungent to perky sweet.

21. For the last 10 minutes of cooking my roast, I remove the foil from the top to expose the skin to the heat. I can easily twist a wee bit of meat off with my fork, letting me know it is tender and perfectly ready to serve. I set the heat to 425, then stick my roast back in the oven so the skin can crisp.

22. Meanwhile, my onions have pickled

23. And Ive layered my baby spinach over them

24. Before I pour my spuds, sizzling oil and seared spices and all, over the whole pan.

25. I toss this very well, letting the hot potatoes and oil wilt my spinach, and blending the pickled onions over the whole batch.

26. My pork is ready to go: the fat cap is crisped and blistered, and the meat is fork-tender.

27. This hunk of lovemeat almost slices itself, and the herbage cleavage is like a vein of precious green flavor gold.

28. Topped with a cool cucumber cream, my thick, tender slabs of herbed rolled pork roast with crispy, savory skin are perfectly partnered with my snappy spuds and buttery greens. This is an elegant, delicious dinner that welcomes the first breezes of early spring through freshly re-opened windows. Light, fresh, and fantastic: I wish I could have you all over for dinner, because this was a company meal!


Nutrition Information:

Quickview
479 Calories
45g Protein
21g Total Fat
25g Carbs
67% Health Score
Limit These
Calories
479k
24%

Fat
21g
33%

  Saturated Fat
4g
28%

Carbohydrates
25g
8%

  Sugar
11g
13%

Cholesterol
78mg
26%

Sodium
196mg
9%

Get Enough Of These
Protein
45g
90%

Vitamin K
236µg
226%

Vitamin A
4329IU
87%

Selenium
53µg
76%

Vitamin B2
1mg
66%

Phosphorus
576mg
58%

Vitamin B1
0.78mg
52%

Vitamin B6
0.99mg
50%

Vitamin B12
2µg
41%

Zinc
5mg
36%

Potassium
1267mg
36%

Manganese
0.71mg
35%

Calcium
330mg
33%

Vitamin C
26mg
32%

Vitamin B3
6mg
32%

Folate
124µg
31%

Vitamin B5
2mg
27%

Magnesium
105mg
26%

Vitamin E
3mg
23%

Iron
3mg
22%

Copper
0.32mg
16%

Fiber
3g
14%

Vitamin D
0.68µg
5%

covered percent of daily need
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The fig is also a fertility symbol and the Arab association with male genitals is so strong that the original word 'fig' is considered improper.

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The Passover test [My thanks to Jeff G for the following] Sean is waiting for a bus when another man joins him at the bus stop. After 20 minutes of waiting, Sean takes out a sandwich from his lunch box and starts to eat. But noticing the other man watching, Sean asks, "Would you like one? My wife has made me plenty." "Thank you very much, but I must decline your kind offer," says the other man, "I’m Rabbi Levy." "Nice to meet you, Rabbi," says Sean, "but my sandwiches are alright for you to eat. They only contain cheese. There’s no meat in them." "It’s very kind of you," says Rabbi Levy, "but today we Jews are celebrating Passover. It would be a great sin to eat a sandwich because during the 8 days of Passover, we cannot eat bread. In fact it would be a sin comparable to the sin of adultery." "OK," says Sean, "but it’s difficult for me to understand the significance of what you’ve just said." Many weeks later, Sean and Rabbi Levy meet again. Sean says, "Do you remember, Rabbi, that when we last met, I offered you a sandwich which you refused because you said eating bread on Passover would be as great a sin as that of adultery?" Rabbi Levy replies, "Yes, I remember saying that." "Well, Rabbi," says Sean, "that day, I went over to my mistress’s apartment and told her what you said. We then tried out both the sins, but I must admit, we just couldn’t see the comparison."

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