Return to listing

Roast Loin of Pork with Herbs and Spiced Apricots - recipe cost £13.72 (£1.72 each)

This Christmas recipe for pork uses the loin, which yields lots of crunchy crackling, roasted with aromatic herbs. It is served with a sweet and sour sauce made with our Spiced Apricot and Orange Chutney simmered with some sweetish white wine such as Riesling. Crisp roast potatoes and Traditional Braised Red Cabbage with Apples make a wonderful accompaniment for this. If you do not have an apricot chutney, then I suggest serving this with a classic apple sauce and some prunes in Armagnac.

 
 

This recipe is taken from Delia Smith’s Christmas

Method

When you buy a piece of pork always look out for a dry skin – the drier the skin, the better the crackling will be. If it does look at all damp, dry it as much as possible with a cloth and leave it uncovered in the refrigerator till needed. When you are ready to cook the pork, place it on a board and tuck little sprigs of rosemary and thyme in between the scored fat. Make little slits all over the joint with the tip of a knife (particularly near the bone) and insert the slivers of garlic in them – and a few herbs here and there as well. Now rub the surface of the skin all over with coarse sea salt and a sprinkling of pepper: this will help to give crunch to the crackling. Place the joint in a roasting tin, slipping half an onion underneath to give a good colour and flavour to the sauce in due course. Don't add any fat at all, as there is more than enough in the pork. Roast on the highest shelf in the oven for 20 minutes, then reduce the heat to gas mark 5, 375°F (190°C), and continue to cook for a further 1¾-2 hours. When the pork is cooked, remove it to a warmed plate, leaving the pan juices and fat in the roasting tin, and keep warm. To make the sauce, discard the onion and spoon off all but 1 tablespoon fat from the roasting tin, retaining the pan juices. Then sprinkle in the flour and mix to a smooth paste. Place the tin over a gentle heat and, using a wire whisk, gradually whisk in the wine, little by little, until you have a smooth sauce. Let it bubble and reduce for a few minutes, taste to check the seasoning, then finally stir in the chutney and orange zest. Simmer for about 5 minutes, then pour the sauce into a jug to hand round separately with the meat.

RECIPE COST £13.72 (£1.72 PER PERSON)

 

Return to Homepage
Have you looked at the Delia Online Cookery School
 
 

Related recipes


Spiced Apricot and Orange Chutney Makes a 1¾ pint (1 litre) jar

Spiced Apricot and Orange Chutney

This is a superlative chutney: it makes an elegant accompaniment to the Terrine with Three Cheeses, is excellent with Pheasant Terrine and is the main ingredient for a wonderful sauce for Roast Loin of Pork. To sterilise the jar, wash it thoroughly i

 
 

 

 




 
Forums
Popular topic
Latest post
Ask Lindsey... Baking Cakes in Pyrex
23 May 2013 17:54
Fresh Week Introducing - Tracy!
23 May 2013 08:09
Coffee Break 5:2 Diet
25 May 2013 09:12
Food and travel Norwich Lunch
20 Apr 2013 08:44
Ingredients minced chicken
22 May 2013 17:16
Can Anyone Help? Turkish delight
24 May 2013 19:31
Books You cannot be serious
21 May 2013 07:12
Equipment Equipement
21 May 2013 11:48
Gardening Chelsea Flower Show
24 May 2013 07:42
 
NetObserver
CMS solutions by REDtechnology.com