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Title: Bourbon and Honey Smoke-Roasted Pork Tenderlo
Categories: Herb Entree Marinade Pork
Yield: 6 Servings
MARINADE | ||
1 | c | Olive oil |
1/2 | c | Bourbon |
3 | tb | Honey |
1/2 | c | Lemon juice |
1 | tb | Minced garlic |
1 1/2 | tb | Fresh ginger root - peeled and grated |
1/4 | c | Soy sauce |
1/2 | c | Thinly sliced onion |
2 | tb | Fresh sage - coarsely chopped |
2 | ts | Pepper |
1 | ts | Salt |
MAIN DISH | ||
3 | Pork tenderloins | |
GRILLING MATERIALS | ||
Charcoal briquettes | ||
6 | Wood chips (up to 8) - preferably fruitwood |
Combine all marinade ingredients; blend well. The marinade for this dish can be prepared a day in advance; marinating should go on for 24 hours.
Lay the pork tenderloins in a ceramic or glass dish and pour marinade over them. Turn the tenderloins several times during the 24 hours that they are marinating in the refrigerator. When ready to cook, pat the pork dry.
Preheat charcoal in an outdoor grill and soak the wood chips in water for 30 minutes. Add the chips to the hot coals. Roast the pork evenly for about 40 minutes, until its internal temperature is 165 F. If pork is to be eaten hot, allow it to sit on the edge of the grill for 10 minutes or so after it is cooked so that the juices can be drawn back into the meat.
Good served either hot or cold, accompanied by a green tomato chutney.
From Someplace Special restaurant in McLean, VA. In _The New Carry-Out Cuisine_ by Phyllis Meras with Linda Glick Conway. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1986. Pg. 130. ISBN 0-395-42504-2. Typed for you by Cathy Harned.
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