A working blogger’s meal

Post-graduation life is just not the same. No more midday naps nor staying up all night with friends. These days I’m glad if I make it to happy hour and back in time for a good night’s sleep. I used to make fun of a recently-graduated friend of mine by calling him abuelito (grandpa in Spanish) because he would go to bed at a reasonable hour. I’m sure this is karma’s way of poking fun at me.

One thing I don’t skimp on though, despite my lack of time, is the food I eat during the week. Instead of procrastinating on the blog some more, I thought I would write about a typical workweek meal and throw in some of my cooking mantras, too.

mise en place
mise en place

First of all, I really do mise en place for every meal. Even if I prep all my ingredients on the same cutting board to avoid a sink full of dirty dishes, I do mise en place. Why? Mostly out of habit, but also because it makes the actual cooking process more enjoyable and less stressful. Trust me, nothing is worse than being in the middle of cooking a wonderful meal and realizing you added salt to bananas foster instead of sugar. It’s even worse to try to fix the horrible mistake by adding tons of sugar to an already ruined bananas foster. It’s happened to me. So, yes, prep all your ingredients beforehand.

Last week I discovered a bunch of overly ripe figs in my fridge that I had purchased at the farmer’s market a couple weeks prior. As you can tell by their wrinkly appearance, they were beyond sweet and perfect to contrast against something salty, say, like blue cheese. I don’t believe food needs to be complicated in order to taste great. Food needs to be balanced and well seasoned. The flavors need to strike that perfect note in your mouth. Figs, rosemary, and blue cheese are three ingredients that form one of the classic culinary chords. I paired these ingredients into a homemade fig jam and used it as a stuffing for a delicious butterflied pork loin.

a perfect pairing: pork, figs, rosemary and blue cheese
pork filling

For this dish, I threw some figs, rosemary and red wine in a small sauce pan and let it cook down for almost an hour. You don’t have to stand over your pot while the sauce reduces for an hour. I let the sauce do its thing and in the mean time I do other things: snack in the kitchen, pour a glass of wine, and unwind.

grill marks = flavor
sear the tenderloin

Never skip a good sear. Not only will it give the meat a head start before going into the oven, but it forms a nice crust that protects the meat from drying out on you. Sear the meat on all sides over the highest heat possible. Then it goes into a 400 degree oven until the meat reaches 160-170 degrees F or is opaque throughout and juices have a faint blush.

rosemary, fig & blue cheese pork tenderloin
rosemary, fig & blue cheese pork tenderloin

This meal lasted me for a few lunches at work. I alternated it with sides of wild rice, garlic roasted potatoes, and mashed potatoes to keep my lunches interesting.

Fig & Blue Cheese Pork Tenderloin

approx. 6 servings

Components

  • 1 pork loin, butterflied
  • 1/2 glass of wine
  • 10-12 figs, quartered
  • 1/2 lb blue cheese, crumbled
  • 2 tbsp fresh rosemary, chopped
  • 1 shallot, diced
  • 2 cloves of garlic, diced
  • olive oil, extra virgin
  • salt & pepper

Putting them all together

  1. In a small saucepan coated with olive oil, sweat the shallot and the garlic until translucent.
  2. Add the figs, wine, chopped rosemary and seasoning and cook for 45 minutes to an hour, until it has reached a thick paste consistency and allow the paste to cool.*
  3. Season the butterflied pork loin and line with fig paste and crumbled blue cheese. Tie the loin around the filling and sear on all sides.
  4. Finish cooking the loin in a 400 degree oven until it has reached 160-170 degrees F or the meat is opaque throughout and the juices are have a slight blush.
  5. Allow the meat to rest for 7-10 minutes covered by a sheet of aluminum foil before slicing.

notes: You can use dried figs and cook the fig paste for less time (this is what I most often do, in fact). Depending on the thickness of your meat, the cooking time will vary. Mine finished in the oven after 15 minutes, but a thermometer or the color of the meat is the best way to gauge proper doneness.

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24 thoughts on “A working blogger’s meal

  1. Divine!! I recently had a midnight meal with my honey that consisted of port wine, blue cheese, a fresh baguette and dark chocolate. I think we would love this! And yes it gets better. Then you have children, and it all goes to hell again. πŸ˜‰

  2. It took me quite a while to get used to post-grad working life but it gets better. As long as you are smart enough to make yourself delicious, homemade lunches like this, you’ll do just fine.

    I find now that I look forward to, and enjoy, weekends much more than I ever did before.

  3. Hang in there…you’re just experiencing the transition to a more balanced lifestyle with many satisfying components, including occasional nights in. But, whatever your time and energy constraints, don’t give up blogging. Your blog is so beautifully designed, it’s a pleasure for me to stop by with each new post.

  4. Wow, that looks awesome! Great use for overripe figs, and you get extra meals from it to boot.

    I applaud your mise en place prep. I am not as careful and suffer for it sometimes (but mainly with a very dirty kitchen rather than coughing up salt water. Quite the image, that.)

    I’m lucky to work swing shift, so I do have personal time at the beginning of my day when I’m fresh and can enjoy it. If I worked days, I would try to be an earlier riser so I could still do that. At night it is hard to feel ambitious about anything, even cooking, after a long day.

    Welcome to the working world.

  5. I definitely remember those initial transition days. In fact, I still miss the flexible schedule sometimes. Where I went to school we took one class at a time for a month and then got a week off in between classes. Talk about a schedule to adjust from! No more week vacations every month! All the same, I agree with Joan re: great nights in.
    I love reading your blog (and seeing it). I hope the balance strikes for you and you can keep it up!
    Cheers!

  6. It is just a transition, cuz after a while you get used to waking up so darn early 5 days of the week yet at the same time you are able to sleep late and wake up at early!

  7. Toni, tus guisos y recetas son fabulosos!!! It’s always worth waiting for the next one :D. A great dish! When did you start cooking? YOu look so young and yet your dishes are so profesional πŸ˜€

    I’m an abuelita already and nearly forgot all those crazy nights…nearly!

  8. Heavy T, as long as the word gym is up there, you receive the blogging excuse from me πŸ™‚ No worries, just keep doing what you’re doing bud.

    While I don’t have a real job yet, I’m in grad school too technically, and I figure we’re about the same age. Call me an old pants, but I like going to bed at 11pm and getting up at 7. I dunno, the long nights thing doesn’t do it for me anymore.

    What does do it though, is roasted stuffed pork. The meat is lean, mean, and flavorful. Awesome j-o-b.

  9. Looks great. I have some figs getting old in the fridge that I’ve been wondering what to do with.

    Do you think using feta cheese would work as well?

  10. I love HOUSE too – and also Grey’s Anatomy!! OK that out of the way allow me to drool – this is simply lovely. I am into pears and blue cheese so I can only imagine the fig and blue cheese dreamy combination. So when I’m over I’ll bring the wine you cook this up and we can get cozy with HOUSE! Sound good?

  11. Holy. Holy of holies, Tony! This looks just sublime. And welcome to abuelitoland! hehe just kidding…coming down off of a college high is hard, but you’ll get used to it. πŸ˜‰

  12. Katie, that is quite the midnight meal!! Port is fantastic and if you love those types of flavors, I think this would be right up your alley πŸ™‚ Hopefully I’ll have a couple years to adjust before the kids make an appearance.

    Robin, weekends are my new weekly treasures!!

    Thanks, Joan! Hearing back from bloggers is my motivation to keep going and I always appreciate all the comments. I’m glad this is just the transition… I’m looking forward to the balance.

    Kitt – Hehe, the mise en place does take some getting used to. I probably should have clarified that it was more than one culinary mishap that forced me to start developing my mise-habits. Now it’s hard to imagine cooking without it.

    Thanks, Peter!! I knew I can always count on you to make the party happen πŸ™‚

    Thanks, Micha! I think it’s going to really hit me hard when December comes around and I don’t have a month off to relax and have time for myself.

    Mrs. ErgΓΌl – That will be my goal πŸ™‚

    Querida NΓΊria, muchas gracias por tus comentarios πŸ™‚ hehe, I started cooking for real when I got to college, but I’ve been around food my entire life.
    haha, the crazy nights never leave you!!

    Thanks for the blogger-pardon, Adam πŸ™‚ The gym is what keeps me going most of the days. I feel lazy before I go, but I’m over the place and pumped by the time I get out.

    Thanks, Nate!! I think feta would work well, although I did enjoy some of the melting qualities of the blue cheese. Let me know how it turns out if do try it πŸ™‚

    haha, sounds FANTASTIC, Meeta!! I feel like this season is gonna be a good one, too!!

    That means a lot Karen!! You’re always welcome to DC πŸ™‚

    Thanks, Kevin!!

    Gracias, Nikki!! haha, I feel like I’m the mayor of abuelitoland. I can’t wait till everything gets back to normal πŸ™‚

  13. Tony, all I can say is, can I come over for dinner soon? πŸ™‚

    I hear what your saying about the “real” world often after students leave campus. It definitely takes some getting used to!

  14. love, love, love house… i get hooked and cannot tear myself away. as for setting up a mise, i always do it. it makes me better organized and it’s alot easier to cook because there is always a little sous chef that comes and interupts when i’m cooking dinner. as for being busy… wait until you decide to have kids, it brings up the busy level to crazy busy!

  15. This is one of the best pork dishes I’ve seen for some time – fantastic!

    I find blogging goes in phases – sometime life just gets in the way (at the moment I barely have time to check my email, never mind post 5 times a week!) But I know it’ll get back to normal soon – it’s all about the routine!

  16. I don’t know why I have been postponing using figs as cooking ingredient. Okay so, maybe I just have this fear of messing it up. But oh look at that cheese and figs combo!! I loveee blue cheese on everything! So I should just get over my fear on using figs as cooking ingredients!

    I have not blog as often either, between work and dance and oh..LIFE in general – I am dead tired by the time I hit home.

  17. Now that is the way to serve / make pork.. OMG off the charts amazing looking and I am sure the flavors are equally as amazing. Thanks for this kick as culinary creation. I will make this one for sure.

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