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Food blog on scandinavian style food done right.

Pork

Wienerschnitzel - Danish style Schnitzel

Dinner, Meats, PorkTove Balle-Pedersen3 Comments

Wienerschnitzel - Danish style Schnitzel.

Schnitzel is a classic Austrian or German dish. The German version is made with pork, and the Austrian is made with veal. But the Danish version can be made with both, but mostly I make it with veal.

The Danish wienerschnitzel is served with something called a boy, or dreng in Danish. The boy is the topping, the lemon, capers, horseradish and brined anchovies. I have no idea why it is called a boy, but I love the salty and tangy addition to a rather fatty schnitzel. Normally I serve a wienerschnitzel with boiled potatoes, some steamed peas and a mushroom sauce, or sautéed mushrooms.

If you for some reason don’t like the topping, I would serve the schnitzel with a warm tangy potato salad with lots of fresh herbs.

Serves 2.

Ingredients:

  • 2 veal scaloppines

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour

  • salt and pepper

  • 2 eggs, lightly beaten

  • 2 cups unseasoned bakery bread crumbs or panko

  • Olive oil or clarified butter for frying, do not skimp

Topping:

  • 1 lemon, cut in slices

  • 2-3 tablespoons capers

  • horseradish, grated, to taste

  • 2-4 brined anchovies

Directions:

Prepare 3 shallow bowls. Place the flour, eggs, and bread crumbs in 3 separate large, shallow bowls. Season the veal scaloppine with salt and pepper. Start dipping each scaloppine/schnitzel in flour, shaking off the excess. Then dip each completely in the eggs. Drain the scaloppine from the eggs and dredge them in the third bowl with bread crumbs, pressing the veal lightly into the crumbs to adhere. Place the breaded scaloppine/schnitzel on a plate or some parchment paper.

Heat the oil/clarified butter in a large skillet over medium-high. Cook the scaloppine/schnitzels for 4 minutes on each side, only turning them once. Add more oil or butter when turning, so the pan won’t run dry. You want the schnitzels to be golden brown and crisp. Transfer the schnitzel to some paper towels to drain excess fat. Place a schnitzel on each plate and top them with lemon, capers, horseradish and anchovies.

Serve the wienerschnitzel with boiled potatoes, peas and mushrooms and with a cream of mushroom sauce.

Enjoy!

Medisterpølse - Danish Pork Sausage

Christmas, Dinner, Meats, Pork, techniqueTove Balle-Pedersen4 Comments
Fried Medisterpølse - Danish Pork Sausage

Fried Medisterpølse - Danish Pork Sausage

Happy First Friday in December. I better start upping my game. Normally I get stuff ready for the blog for December. But this year have been different. Somehow the holidays sneaked up on me - again. But this time we have guest staying here for the past few weeks. So yet again I’m late to the Christmas preparations. But I will be posting christmasy stuff as I get to it.This medisterpølse have been on my blog - to-do list for the longest time. So with this happy December from me to you. 🎄

Medisterpølse/julemedister/christmas medister or Danish pork sausage is something I had very often for weeknight dinners. I was easy to make, and its was on the cheaper end of meats. During November and December the sausage get another seasoning, adding cloves making it more christmasy. This is what I was aiming for here, and I think I’ve succeeded.

Christmas medister is served warm on an open-faced sandwich with pickled red cabbage on Danish rye bread at Danish Christmas luncheons.

Making sausages is a labor entensive process, but the final product is well worth it. Another pro is that you know what's in the sausage.

Makes 3-4 medisterpølser.

Ingredients:

  • 1 kg (2¼ pound) pork (could be a cheaper cut like shoulder)

  • 200 g (½ pound) fatty pork belly

  • 1 onion

  • 1¼ teaspoon salt

  • 1 teaspoon ground cloves

  • 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

  • 2 teaspoons ground allspice

  • ½-1 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper

  • 3 tablespoons potato starch

  • 2 egg whites

  • about 300 ml chicken stock, ice cold

  • 2-3 meter (yards) sausage casing.

Directions:

Make sure that all your ingredients are cold.

Cut meat, pork belly and onion in pieces that can go into the meat grinder. Grind it all 2 time on the corse setting. Add all the spices, potato starch and egg whites and mix it well. Start adding the cold chicken stock a little at a time. You want the mixture to be soft but by no means runny.  Put the mixture into the refrigerator to rest for 30-40 minutes. 

Rinse the casings in plenty of cold running water. Let tap water run through the casing. This way you’ll fine any holes in the casing. 

Take a little dollop of the mixture and fry it on a small skillet, and tast it, when its cooked completely. This way you can taste the mixture, without tasting the raw meat. Season the mixture with salt, pepper and other spices.

Use a sausage filler to fill up the casing. There are many different model on the marked, but follow the instructions for the one you have. 

But here is some general TIPS:

  • Use nozzle that fits your casings. 

  • Wet the tip of the nozzle with a tiny amount of meat mixture, this will help you getting the casing onto the nozzle. 

  • Put all the casing onto the nozzle

  • let the casing sit close to the tip, this will ease your sausage making.

  • Do NOT tie a knot on the casing, this will just trap a lot of air.

  • Gently pull and squeeze the casing while filling it with the meat mixture.

  • Do NOT fill the casing too much, you are aiming for a soft sausage, the mixture will expand when heated.

Traditionally medisterpølse is made as one big sausage, but of course you can make smaller sausage links. Let the sausage rest for about 30 minutes in the refrigerator before cooking.

Raw Merdisterpølse - Danish Pork Sausage

Raw Merdisterpølse - Danish Pork Sausage

How to cook a medisterpølse? This is a matter og taste or believes. Some would boil or lite simmer the sausage for about 10 minutes before pan-frying it. My mom never did that. She pan-fried it directly, and it worked just fine. The casing rarely split open.

I pan-fried it directly in butter on medium heat for 15-18 minutes until fully cooked, turnip the sausage a few times.

Another option is to put some water and butter in the pan, and place the raw sausage in the pan and then heat the whole thing up. Turning the sausage ones before the water evaporate, and the frying starts. This way you are pre-boiling and frying the sausage in 1 step, and no need for additional pots and pans.

Serve medisterpølse/pork sausage with boiled potatoes, pickled red cabbage and maybe even some pan-gravy. (Pan-gravy is made in the pan where you cooked the sausage, by adding some stock (water used to boil potatoes) and some milk/cream, then thickend, seasoned and colored with gravy browning).

Enjoy!

Danish Breaded Pork Patties - Karbonader

Dinner, Meats, PorkTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Danish Breaded Pork Patties - Karbonader

Danish Breaded Pork Patties - Karbonader

This dish is a walk down memory lane, an old school danish dish. In Denmark you would call this type of food Mormor mad (grandmother food). And for sure this is the type of food from yesteryear, but sometimes this kind of comfort food is soothing. A lot of traditional Danish dishes are only seasoned with salt and pepper, making the ingredients take center stage. Some might call it bland, and for sure it can be bland. This I would call filled with subtle flavors. A juicy pork patty with a nice crispy crust, here served with fingerling potatoes, cauliflower and another classic: peas and carrots in a white sauce.

Serves 4.

Ingredients:

Patties:

  • 1 pound (450 g) ground pork
  • ¼ pound (120 g) ground veal
  • 1 egg
  • bread crumbs
  • salt & pepper

White sauce with peas and carrots:

  • 25 g butter
  • 2½ tablespoons of all-purpose flour
  • 300 ml milk
  • 100-200 ml water from the peas and carrots
  • ⅛ teaspoon sugar
  • salt
  • 600 g peas and diced carrots (I used frozen peas and carrots)

Directions:

Patties:

Start by dividing the meat into 4, shaping them into circular thick patties.
Beat an egg in a shallow bowl. In another shallow bowl pour in the breadcrumbs, seasoning it with salt and pepper.
Dip the pork patties in the egg mixture, making sure to cover the entire patty in egg. Then roll the patty in the breadcrumbs, again making sure to cover the whole patty. Repeat with the last 3.


Heat a mixture of oil and butter on a frying pan. Fry the patties for about 5-8 minutes over medium heat until they are well done, flipping them carefully from time to time.. 

White sauce with peas and carrots:

Cook the peas and carrots for about 10 minutes, in light salted water. Reserve some of the water for the sauce. 

Melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the flour, mix with a whisk and warm through, making sure not to get any color on the mixture.

Add some vegetable water while whisking vigorously making a thick paste without any lumps. Add more water and milk until you have the desired consistency, you want it to be a bit on the thick side. Let the sauce boil a few minutes to get rid of the flour taste. Season the sauce with sugar and salt. Stir in the cooked peas and carrots.

Serve the Karbonader with boiled potato, boiled cauliflower and a whiter sauve with peas and carrots.

Enjoy!

 

Spicy Thai Inspired Barley Salad

Dinner, Lunch, Meats, Pork, SaladTove Balle-PedersenComment
Spicy Thai Inspired Barley Salad

Spicy Thai Inspired Barley Salad

What's for dinner tonight? The daily pressure to come up with a tasty, healthy option. Even though I have a Food Blog, I DO get surprised, that we need to have dinner every night. And I do tend to grab to the 5-8 easiest and well-known dishes or even take-out. I know choking, right?

One of my Facebook friends posted a Thai Pork salad from NY Times, and this inspired me to create this dish. And WOW - we loved it. The different texture and flavors worked perfectly. This one is a keeper in my house.
If you're not big on spicy food, just add a small amount of chili, so you only tickle your tastebuds.

Ingredients:

  • 1 pork tenderloin

Marinade/dressing:

  • 2 serrano chilies

  • handfull cilantro + stems

  • 5 scallions

  • 3 limes, zest & juice

  • 6 garlic cloves

  • 2-inch fresh ginger

  • 4-5 tablespoons brown sugar

  • 2 tablespoons fish sauce

  • 5 tablespoons soy sauce

  • 5 tablespoons grape seed oil

  • ½ teaspoon salt

Salad:

  • ½ green cabbage, thinly sliced

  • 5 scallions, chopped

  • 1 serrano chili, julienned

  • 3 carrots, in thin peels

  • 1-2 cups pearl barley grain, cooked and cooled

  • 1 handful cilantro, chopped

  • 10 mint leaves, chopped

  • a small handful roasted peanuts

Directions

Trim off the silver skin from the tenderloin and pat the trimmed tenderloin dry with paper towel. In a blender combine soy sauce, fish sauce, lime juice and zest, shallots, cilantro, half the sugar, garlic, ginger, chiles and salt. Purée until smooth. Save half of the mixture for the dressing, add the rest of the sugar to the dressing, and set aside. Marinate the pork in the rest of the mixture in an airtight container over night.  

Preheat the oven to 320 ℉ (160℃).

Sear the pork in a ovenproof skillet, and roast it in the oven until meat reaches an internal temperature of 150℉ (65℃), about 20-25 minutes. Let meat rest while you prepare the salad. 

In a large bowl, combine the salad ingredients, reserving the herbs and nuts.

Whisk the dressing and use just enough to dress the salad.  Let the salad sit for a few minutes for the flavors to blend, then right before serving, add herbs, nuts and maybe some more dressing.

Serve the salad with the sliced pork on top, sprinkle with some more nuts.

 

Enjoy!

 

Crispy Pork with Parsley Sauce

Dinner, Meats, PorkTove Balle-Pedersen1 Comment
Crispy Pork with Parsley Sauce

Crispy Pork with Parsley Sauce

I am serving Crispy Pork with Parsley Sauce aka stegt flæsk med persillesovs for election night in America. In Denmark we have a term called 'valgflæsk' (election pork) meaning the hot air or elaborate promises politician give in order to be elected. So many Danes eat this crispy pork dish on election day in Denmark. 

For me crispy pork with parsley sauce was my favorite dish growing up. I always chose this as my birthday dinner, the most important for me was the potatoes and the sauce. 

In 2014 Denmark voted for their national dish, and crispy pork won in a landslide. 

I hope you will try out this old Danish classic dish, maybe even served with a cold beer.

Serves 4.

Ingredients

  • about 600 g (1½ pound) potatoes (I prefer fingerling potatoes)
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 16-20 slices pork belly 

For the parsley sauce:

  • 25 g butter
  • 2½ tablespoons of all-purpose flour
  • 300 ml milk
  • 100-200 ml water from the boiled potatoes
  • ⅛ teaspoon sugar
  • salt
  • 1 cup finely chopped parsley

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350℉ (175℃)

Lightly sprinkle the sliced pork belly with salt on both sides. Place the pork on a wire rack over a sheet pan, so the fat can drain away from the meat. Roast the pork in the oven for 30-40 minutes turning it once or twice until the pork looks crisp and delicious, remove from the oven and place plate.

Bring the potatoes to the boil in lightly salted water, then simmer until tender, about 15-20 minutes.

Parsley sauce:

Melt the butter in a pan. Add the flour, mix with a whisk and warm through, making sure not to get any color on the mixture.

Add some potato water while whisking vigorously making a thick paste without any lumps. Add more water and milk until you have the desired consistency, you want it to be a bit on the thick side. Let the sauce boil a few minutes to get rid of the flour taste. Season the sauce with sugar and salt. Remove from the heat, and whisk in the chopped parsley.

Serve the crispy pork with the boiled potatoes and a large spoonful parsley sauce.

Enjoy!