~ Strada Provinciale - Val d'Orcia ~ |
As my summer garden winds down it's bounty, the one thing I'm left with in abundance are long hot peppers. I've been looking for ways to use them and when I saw some really nice thick pork chops at the market, I knew my chance presented itself.
I had these simple, Tuscan grilled pork chops at a little Osteria outside Radda in Chianti. Seasoned perfectly, char grilled, with a wonderful reduction of sweet onions and spicy peppers lathered on top. I was bent on replicating them.
Grilled Pork Chops with Sweet Onions & Hot Peppers
4 pork chops, about 1 1/4" thick
4 sweet onions, sliced lengthwise
2 garlic cloves, smashed
4 hot chile peppers (mine are medium, you can adjust to taste)
3 pats butter
Handful Fresh Parsley
Slice the onions and smash the garlic. Start about 2 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil and the butter in a large skillet and saute the onions over medium heat until they begin to sweat. Add the smashed garlic, season with salt and pepper and turn the heat down to low. Allow to saute, stirring occasionally for 30-40 minutes until the onions break down.
~ This is 2 & 1/2 onions. It was not enough. They shrink considerably so I'd use 3 or 4 onions next time ~ |
To develop the rich, soft texture of the onions, you need to saute them slowly. While they cooked down, I prepped the meat, finished the side vegetable and opened the wine! When the onions are about half way done, dice the chile peppers and add them to the mix. Right before serving, chop the parsley and toss that into the onions as well.
~ This is the onion mixture just before plating. Note the color, and the amount of the reduction. This pan was essentially full when I started the process. This took about 40 minutes ~ |
This is quintessential Tuscan cooking. Perfect ingredients, simply treated and served together. This is a three ingredient main course and features essentially nothing but the onions as a topping for the tender pork chops. The sweetness of the onions contrasts great with the fat in the meat and the peppers give a little zing.
~ The finished plate ~ |
As I mentioned, we drank the Il Palazzone Rosso del Palazzone with this dish. You could easily pair Chianti Classico, Brunello, Merlot, or Zinfandel with this.
Tutti a Cucina!
Looks mouthwateringly good. Did you cook the chops with the onions?
ReplyDeleteTW - Nope. I just rubbed the chops with a little olive oil and then seasoned them with sale e pepe and grilled them straight away to a nice medium. Then just used the onions as a condiment.
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