The late Mr. O-P and I spent a lot of time on the road, largely heading east.
There was a gas station (yes, you read that right), now defunct, in Gnaw Bone,
Indiana by the name of Gnaw Bone Food & Fuel that was alleged to have
served the definitive pork tenderloin sandwiches. Unfortunately, we’d find
ourselves passing through way too early in the morning to want to consume heavy
gas station food, so when I found a recipe on the Food Network website I wanted
to give it a try.
This sandwich is not without a bit of advance work and preparation. Both,
however, are minimal, and the rewards are great. You can slice your tomatoes,
onions, and shred your lettuce well ahead of time. Then it’s just a question of
setting up your breading station, and spending six minutes time frying the pork
tenderloin. It really is worth it. Definitely diner-quality food, and I mean
that in a good way.
Hoosier Pork Tenderloin Sandwich
Adapted from foodnetwork.com
1 lb. pork tenderloin
1 large egg
1 c. buttermilk
½ t. salt
½ t. pepper
¼ t. cayenne pepper
¾ c. flour
Peanut oil, for frying
Mayonnaise
Yellow mustard
Shredded lettuce
Tomato slices
Slices of onion
Cut the pork crosswise into 4 equal pieces. Put each piece flat on a cutting board and slice horizontally almost in half (stop about ½-inch from the other side). Open like a book. Sprinkle each piece with water, place between 2 pieces of heavy-duty plastic wrap and pound to ¼-inch thick with a mallet or heavy skillet.
Whisk the egg, buttermilk, garlic, salt, black pepper, and cayenne in a shallow bowl. Add the pork, cover and refrigerate at least 4 hours or overnight.
Pulse the crackers into coarse crumbs in a food processor; transfer to a shallow dish. Put the flour in another dish. Remove each piece of pork from the marinade, letting the excess drip off. Dredge both sides in the flour, dip in the buttermilk marinade again, and then coat with the cracker crumbs.
Heat ¼” to ½” peanut oil in a large heavy-bottomed skillet over medium-high heat until a deep-fry thermometer registers 360°F. Fry the pork in batches until golden and cooked through, about 3 minutes per side. Drain on a wire rack positioned over a baking sheet to catch drips.
Toast buns on cut sides, and spread both halves with mayonnaise (top) and mustard (bottom). Layer the lettuce, tomatoes, and onion on the bottom halves. Add a piece of pork and a few pickle slices. Cover with the bun tops.
Makes 4 sandwiches.
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This looks similar to schnitzel and I love all things pork, so I'm going to bookmark it for future enjoyment!
ReplyDeleteOh my Goodness! Looks delicious!!
ReplyDeleteI've never tried crackers as a breading...thanks for the tip!
I'm So sorry for the loss of your husband! I didn't know...
Huge hug,
Donna
Instead of regular saltines, next time try Ritz or Club crackers. Same MO. Trust me on this!
ReplyDeleteI had planned on that, Raquel! I also have a recipe for using Ritz crackers to bread scallops, and that sounds particularly good. Stay tuned!
ReplyDeleteMy Mom breaded fish in milk, flour, egg and then the saltine crumbs. It was fantastic. Then a few years ago we ate a seafood restaurant and there was her breading. The place was mobbed for that delicious breading on their fish. It's time for me to revisit that recipe. When I was a kid I always got the job to do the breading and I hated it!
ReplyDeleteSaltines! Wow if it makes a crispy coating like that I will definitely try it. I love pork tenderloin, Hubs is so-so about it, so I know he would love it like this.
ReplyDelete