Creole Pork Chop Piquante
When piquante is less than piquant...
The classic sauce-piquant is based on the making of a fine, well balanced and seasoned Creole sauce, normally as in Shrimp Piquant or the cousin to Shrimp Creole. Piquant in these parts means 'hot and hurts your tongue'.
The classic sauce-piquant is based on the making of a fine, well balanced and seasoned Creole sauce, normally as in Shrimp Piquant or the cousin to Shrimp Creole. Piquant in these parts means 'hot and hurts your tongue'.
Many times the flavored sauce is used with seafood; Crab and Shrimp Sauce Piquant for example, and I know of many recipes formed on the same tomato base made with seafood stock. Only a few uses beef, veal or fowl as enriching the liquid base. What all do have in common is the use of vegetables, always starting with the trinity of onions, celery, bell pepper and layering in aromatic herbs and spices.
In my version, I wanted a rich Creole base with the elements of sauce piquant, but I wanted to make it with pork. Not unheard of I'm sure, but rarely have I seen any variation that I might like or anything that comes to mind as to the outcome in desired taste. The closest was in a Creole cookbook that is the basis for my desire. By using less tomato than say a Shrimp Creole dish, adding beef stock (in this hurried case, consommé) and by adjusting herbs and seasoning to adequate the use of pork, I managed to make one heck of a dish flavorful to my liking and with just enough kick to be called Piquante, which in my mind is not as hot as Piquant.
So what did it taste like? Well, imagine a deep, robust gumbo stock simmered with well seasoned pork cutlets. Delightful, surprising and delicious. Enjoy!
Creole Pork Chop Piquante
4 to 6 servings
3 to 3.5 pounds pork chops, or pork loin cut 1/2" thick
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon sweet paprika
1/2 teaspoon crushed basil
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons butter
6 scallions (green onions), chopped
1/2 cup minced onion
1/2 cup minced green bell pepper
1/2 cup finely chopped celery
4 tablespoons flour
1 -16 oz can Creole tomatoes or a good Italian variety
1/2 teaspoon crushed thyme
1 tablespoon minced parsley
2 bay leaves
3 garlic cloves, minced
1 jalapeño pepper, minced - optional
1 jalapeño pepper, minced - optional
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 -10.5 oz cans beef consommé
If using pork chops, pound the meat a little to tenderize as close to the bone as possible. Pound pork loin to about quarter-inch thickness and cut into serving sizes.
Mix the cayenne, pepper, salt, paprika and basil together and sprinkle both sides of the pork lightly.
Heat the oil in a wide heavy skillet or Dutch oven over medium heat until hot. Add the pork and brown on both sides. Remove meat and all but 1 tablespoon of the oil; add the butter. When sizzling settles down, add the scallions, onion, bell pepper and celery. Sauté for 5 minutes. Stir in the flour, any remaining seasoning from the pork and cook another 5 minutes stirring occasionally.
Add the tomatoes with juice, thyme, parsley, bay leaves, garlic and jalapeño. Stir in the wine and consommé. Simmer for 15 to 25 minutes until thickened. Adjust seasoning by adding salt as needed. Add the pork nestling into the sauce; reduce heat to low and simmer partially covered for about an hour.
Remove bay leaves; turn off heat and let set covered for 10 minutes before serving. Serve over white rice.
Note: Chicken cutlets would also be very good cooked this way.
Creole hmm Italian Variety...amazing this sounds like it has a wonderful kick to it along with making that pork fall apart...a great way to make these chops~ has to be awesome adding the wine~too
ReplyDeleteYum! We're always looking for good pork chop recipes.. definitely going to have to give this a go!
ReplyDeleteIt sounds very appetizing! I love a good sauce piquante but I've never had it with pork.
ReplyDeleteLooks sinfully delicious! I love a good sauce piquante and although I make a crab and shrimp sauce piquante, and a chicken sauce piquante, this is really different from any of the ones that I've ever made. I am drooling! Kudos, cher!
ReplyDeleteYes, I love this...spicy thick sauce. Looks very delicious with all the beautiful ingredients there. I think I will eat a pot of rice with this...haha
ReplyDeleteDrooling..
ReplyDeleteon my...
.....keyboard....
what a flavorful plate of pork chops! That sauce piquante looks so very very good! What an incredible sauce, I have never had it with Pork, it sounds wonderful!
ReplyDeleteI love the rich, sauce. You have a great combination of ingredients that really had to make for a flavorful sauce. The color is fantastic.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to eat at your house. You have yet to post anything that doesn't sound wonderful.
ReplyDeleteWay to go! It looks and sounds delicious and it's hard to beat Creole cooking! I must try the sauce with pork!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds yummy. I made the Pot Roast like no other, took it to a family reunion and it was a hit.
ReplyDeletewhat a party of flavors....robust gumbo stock with pork, heavenly...yum
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