Step 1: Ingredients
For this recipe, you're going to need:
- Flour
- Salt
- Peppercorns
- A Hammer
- A Ziploc Bag
- Two bowls
- Two egg yolks
- Water
- Olive Oil
Step 2: Smash
Pour a measure of peppercorns in to your Ziploc bag. The peppercorns are
going to lose a lot of their burn when they fry in the breading, so use
more than you think you're going to need. You want a lot of cracked
pepper in this recipe. Then smash it with a hammer. Repeatedly.
Step 3: Flour Mix
Fill a medium bowl about half full of flour, then pour your cracked peppercorns on top of it and give it a good coating of salt (as shown above). Then mix it all together with a fork:
Step 4: The Dipping Mix
In a smaller bowl, crack two eggs and only add the yolks. Then fill the bowl 1/2 to 2/3 full of water and add two or three handfuls of flour:Mix it all together with a fork until you start to feel a little bit of resistance when you're mixing. You want the dip to be thick but not as thick as, say, pancake batter or even crepe batter:
Step 5: Trim the Porkchops
I usually buy a whole pork loin and then cut it up in to chops, which means there's a pretty thick ribbon of fat around the edges. Trim that off because the texture is... kind of awful if you leave it on when you fry it.
Step 6: Get Ready to Fry
After you set up your work area, put a moderate amount (maybe 1/4" thick) of olive oil in your frying pan and heat it til JUST before it smokes.
Step 7: Let's Get Fryin'
This is going to happen in 5 steps. First, dunk a porkchop in the Dip:Then roll it in flour:
Then do it again. Which is to say, you're going to do this: Dip, roll in flour, dip, roll in flour.
Then add it to your frying pan:
Flip them when they start to look a little "liquidy" around the edges, like so:
Now, at this point, your oil may start hissing and spitting like crazy. If it does, it just means you've got the heat on a little too high. Don't panic and just turn it down a notch or two until it starts to become a little more sedate.You're going to have some popping and splattering because, well, you're frying... but if it starts to get a little too aggressive, turn it down.
The short version? Listen to your oil. If it sounds too "angry", turn it down.
After the flip, use a meat thermometer to check the temperature:
Once it hits 145, set them to the side to rest on a draining rack:
aaand here we are! Peppercorn crusted pork chops. This recipe is good enough that I completely forgot to take a picture of the 'freshly plated' meal, we were a little too eager to get to eating:
If you don't have a hammer handy (because you're an un-American communist) or you're lacking a zip-top bag, you can easily crush peppercorns by laying them on the counter and rolling the edge of a heavy iron skillet over them (apply pressure).
ReplyDeleteOh come now, what self-respecting communist DOESN'T have a hammer? Power to the proletariat!
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