Tag Archives: homecooking

Saffron Crab Cakes

saffron crab cakesTENDER, CRISPY, CREAMY CRAB CAKES BODIED WITH SAFFRON AIOLI AND ALMOND MEAL. WITH BAKED PARMESAN CRISPS, FRESH PARSLEY, AND OLIVE OIL.


The blue crab is Maryland’s official state crustacean, a tidbit I took for granted during the 10 years I grew up there. Not until I moved away did I realize what I was missing. Finally, I decided my craving was due, and I picked up a can of quality lump crab meat for a nostalgic taste of a Maryland classic.

Usually, crab cakes use mayonnaise, breadcrumbs, and other seasonings that are quickly mixed together before being pan-fried until golden-brown and crispy on the outside. And while these simple ingredients already make crab cakes absolutely delicious, I wanted to add just a touch of luxury by whisking up a saffron aioli in place of mayonnaise and using almond meal instead of breadcrumbs. A touch of smoked paprika and cayenne also gives the cakes a spiciness that isn’t “hot”, but brings an extra layer of excitement. To keep the shape a little better, I folded some aluminum foil into a ring mold and tied it in some twine before frying them. You can serve it with a lemon wedge and tartar sauce like many restaurants do, a quick drizzle of nice olive oil and some cheese, or just eat it plain. Whatever you do, these are a guaranteed hit as an appetizer, lunch, dinner, or snack! – Boo


Yield: 6 (3-inch diameter) crab cakes
Difficulty: 2 star

Ingredients:

  • Saffron aioli (or 1 c mayonnaise)
    0.25 ts saffron, ground
    1 tb hot water
    1 egg yolk
    1 lemon, zested and juiced
    0.5 c olive oil
    1 clove garlic, grated
  • Slurry
    0.75 c almond meal (or breadcrumbs)
    1 tb Dijon mustard
    1 tb Worcestershire sauce
    1 tb lemon juice
    1 egg
  • 1 lb crab meat
  • Seasoning
    4 green onions, minced
    3 tb cilantro, minced
    0.5 tb thyme
    1 ts salt
    0.5 ts black pepper
    0.5 ts smoked paprika
    0.5 ts cayenne pepper
  • Garnish
    olive oil
    parsley
    parmesan cheese
    lemon wedge
  1. For aioli, soak saffron in hot water, 5 minutes.
  2. In a mixing bowl, beat egg yolk with saffron water and lemon zest/juice until slightly thickened.
  3. Gradually add olive oil to egg mixture in a thin stream while whisking until thickened. Stir garlic into mixture.
  4. Stir slurry ingredients, crab, and seasoning into aioli. Refrigerate mixture, ~30 minutes.
  5. Fold 6 3-inch diameter rings from aluminum foil, and set on a baking sheet.
  6. Fill each aluminum ring to the top, and optionally tie twine around the middle of the ring.
  7. In a pan, fry cakes in olive oil over medium heat until browned, ~4 minutes per side.
  8. Remove onto serving plate, and remove string and foil.
  9. Garnish as desired, and serve.

Curried Lamb Shanks

curried lamb shanksLAMB SHANK BRAISED WITH CURRY SPICES AND HERBS. SERVED OVER WILTED SPINACH AND SAFFRON BASMATI RICE.


Braising has to be one of the greatest cooking methods ever invented, letting you turn the cheapest cut of meat into something juicy and fall-off-the-bone succulent. And not only does the broth flavor the meat as it simmers, the meat gives the broth a velvety, intensely savory texture as the gelatin melts into it. For this dish, I decided to take caramelized onions past the standard golden-brown stage and into deeply sweet and smoky dark brown territory. Together with the natural sweetness of the onions and the caramelization of the lamb shanks in the oven, this gave the dish a complex sweetness (maybe even sophisticated!) without a grain of added sugar. And it was also the perfect complement to the earthy spices we threw in with the lamb. You could just as easily use beef chuck or pork shoulder and belly. Hope you give this braised dish a try! – Boo


Oven: 475 F, 30-40 minutes
Difficulty: 2 star

Ingredients:

  • 4 lamb shanks
  • 2 onions, thinly sliced
  • Spices
    1.5 ts smoked paprika
    0.75 ts curry powder
    0.5 ts turmeric
    0.5 ts cumin seeds
    0.5 ts fennel seeds
    0.25 ts ginger powder
    0.25 ts cardamom
    0.25 ts dried mint
    pinch cinnamon
  • 2 tb butter
  • 2 tb flour
  • Herbs
    1 bay leaf
    1 sprig rosemary
    1 sprig thyme
  • Braising liquid
    1.5 c chicken broth
    0.33 c red wine
    2 tb balsamic vinegar
    1.25 ts salt
    0.5 ts black pepper
  • (optional) Garnish
    cilantro, chopped
    sumac

Directions:

  1. In a roasting pan, drizzle olive oil over shanks. Roast on top rack until browned, 15-20 minutes per side. Meanwhile, prepare onions. Set aside lamb shanks after browning on both sides.
  2. In a large pot, stir onions in vegetable oil over medium-low heat until dark golden-brown, 40-45 minutes.
  3. Add spices into pot. Toast, 2 minutes.
  4. Stir butter into pot until melted. Stir in flour to coat evenly.
  5. Stir herbs and braising liquid into pot.
  6. Add lamb shanks, and simmer over medium-low heat until tender, 2.5-3 hours, basting occasionally.
  7. Serve, and garnish as desired.

Turkey Apple Meatballs and Pico de Gallo Salad

turkey apple meatballs pico de gallo saladHOT, TENDER TURKEY AND FUJI APPLE MEATBALLS TOSSED WITH A ZESTY APPLE PICO DE GALLO AND SHREDDED PURPLE CABBAGE.


More than a month ago, I found Pea a couple huge Fuji apples (her favorite!) from the farmer’s market. But after bringing them home and putting them in the back of the crisper, we forgot about them. Fortunately, fresh apples can last up to months if properly kept, and we decided to finally dig into the juicy, sugary-sweet goodness – by incorporating them into some turkey meatballs. Not only did the turkey and apple work deliciously well together, but the apple and breadcrumbs helped keep the meatballs super tender while developing a crispy exterior in the oven! For some temperature and texture contrast, we tossed the hot meatballs with a chilled apple pico de gallo and some shredded cabbage so we could call it a salad. And while we ate this happily as a meal, it would make a perfectly good appetizer, too! – Boo


Servings: 4-5 (main portions) or 8-10 (appetizer portions)
Difficulty: 1 star

Oven: 400 F, 20-25 minutes

Meatballs:

  • 1 lb turkey
  • 1 c grated apple
  • 1 c breadcrumbs
  • 1 egg
  • 0.5 tb grated ginger
  • 1.5 ts salt
  • 2 sprigs thyme, de-stemmed
  1. Mix all ingredients until homogenized.
  2. Form into small meatballs (diameter 2 cm), and place onto greased baking sheet.
  3. Bake on upper-middle rack until browned, 20-25 minutes. Meanwhile, prepare salad.

Pico de gallo salad:

  • 1 apple, diced 0.25 inch
  • Diced vegetables, 0.25 inch
    4 c tomatoes
    1.5 c onions
    1.5 c cucumbers
    0.75 c serrano (or poblano) peppers
  • Seasoning
    0.33 c cilantro, minced
    1 lime, zested and juiced
    0.5 ts garlic powder
    0.5 ts salt
    0.5 ts black pepper
  • 1.5-2 c shredded purple cabbage
  1. Place diced apple into ice water to prevent browning while preparing other ingredients.
  2. Toss all ingredients together.
  3. Toss with baked meatballs, and serve.

Black Forest Cake

black forest cakeRICH COCOA ESPRESSO SPONGE CAKE BRUSHED WITH CHERRY SYRUP. KIRSCHWASSER WHIPPED CREAM FROSTING AND SWEET DARK CHERRIES. GARNISHED WITH DARK CHOCOLATE SHAVINGS AND MARASCHINO CHERRIES.


When Pea and Boo first moved in together, Pea not-so-subtly hinted at making a Black Forest Cake. As cherry season came that year, Pea and Boo found piles upon piles of fresh, dark red cherries on display at the local farmer’s market, and they decided the time had come. It was one of the first cake projects they took on together, and it was time to revisit the old recipe to give it a few delectable tweaks in time for our friends’ birthday surprises!

One of the greatest things about sponge cakes is their ability to soak up delicious syrups and juices, intensifying the flavor of the cake. The Black Forest Cake, layered with a rich cocoa sponge soaked in cherry and liqueur syrup, is a brilliant example. Kirschwasser (cherry liqueur) is signature, and (fun fact) required by law in Germany, but you can put as much or as little as you want. This recipe uses about one shot for the entire cake, but no one’s stopping you! – Boo


Servings: 8-12 (dessert portions)

Difficulty: 3 star

Oven: 350 F, 25-35 minutes

NOTES:

  • May use fresh and/or canned cherries. If using canned cherries, reserve syrup as a soak for the sponge cake.

Preparation:

  • Line a 8.5-inch springform pan with parchment paper. Butter the interior.

Cocoa genoise:

  • 4 eggs, separated
  • 0.66 c sugar
  • 1 ts vanilla
  • Dry ingredients, sifted
    0.5 c flour
    0.33 c cocoa powder
    2 tb instant espresso powder
    0.5 ts salt
  • 3 tb butter, melted
  1. Over a bain-marie, beat egg whites to soft peaks. Gradually add sugar while beating to a firm, glossy meringue, ~4-6 minutes.
  2. Beat egg yolks and vanilla into meringue until just combined.
  3. Fold dry ingredients into egg mixture by thirds.
  4. Stir a large spoonful of batter into melted butter to lighten. Fold butter gently into remaining batter.
  5. Bake in prepared springform pan until cooked through, 25-35 minutes.
  6. Remove from oven, and invert springform pan over a cooling rack until cooled to room temperature.
  7. Remove cake from pan. Set aside until assembly.

Macerated cherries:

  • 1.5 lb cherries, pitted (including 1 can of cherries with syrup)
  • 2 tb kirschwasser
  1. In a bowl, toss cherries with kirschwasser. Cover and refrigerate until assembly.
  2. Stir remaining ingredients together until sugar dissolves. Refrigerate to cool.

Whipped cream frosting:

  • 3 c heavy cream
  • 1.5 ts vanilla
  • 1.5 ts kirschwasser
  • 0.25 c sugar
  1. Beat cream to soft peaks. Add remaining ingredients, and beat to stiff peaks.

Assembly:

  • Garnish
    dark chocolate curls, shavings, or bark
    cherries
    whipped cream
  1. Reserve several cherries for garnish.
  2. Divide the cake into three disks.
    Small pea tip: Use the disk with the flattest surface as the top layer.
  3. Place the bottom cake layer on assembly surface. Soak with one-third of the cherry syrup, and top with one-quarter of the whipped cream and half of the cherries.
  4. Place the middle cake layer on the cherries, and repeat with cherry syrup soak, whipped cream frosting, and cherries.
  5. Place the top cake layer. Spread frosting evenly over entire cake, and reserve ~0.5 c frosting for garnish.
  6. Decorate cake with chocolate, whipped cream, and cherries.
  7. Refrigerate until chilled, and serve.

black forest cake 2

 

Chocolate Soufflé with Passionfruit-White Chocolate Filling

chocolate souffle passionfruit fillingRICH, SWEET, AND FLUFFY CHOCOLATE DESSERT WITH A WARM WHITE CHOCOLATE AND A PASSIONFRUIT CENTER.


And now to finish off the Valentine’s tangy series, the dessert course. I thought we could combine chocolate and passionfruit, and we decided to make a soufflé with a passionfruit filling. We ended up posting this a little later because Boo wanted to make some changes to the recipe to make it a little more chocolaty with a dash of coffee and cocoa powder. Hope you enjoy! – Pea


Servings: 2 (9-oz ramekins) or 4 (5-oz ramekins)
Difficulty: 2 star

Oven: 375 F, 22 minutes

Preparation:

  • Coat inside of ramekins with melted butter, then with sugar. Place prepared ramekins in freezer until use.

Passionfruit white chocolate filling:

  • 3 tb white chocolate chips
  • 0.75 tb passionfruit concentrate
  • 0.5 tb heavy cream
  • pinch salt
  1. In a small bowl, microwave and stir together ingredients in 5-10 second increments until homogenized.
  2. Refrigerate to set while preparing souffle.

Chocolate souffle:

  • Chocolate mixture
    3.5 oz dark chocolate
    4 tb butter
  • Yolk mixture
    2 egg yolks
    0.5 tb instant espresso powder
    0.5 tb  cocoa powder
    1 ts vanilla
    0.25 ts salt
  • Meringue
    3 egg whites
    0.25 ts cream of tartar
    3 tb sugar
  • powdered sugar
  1. Over a bain-marie, melt chocolate with butter. Set aside to cool slightly.
  2. Beat yolk mixture ingredients until homogenized, and whisk into chocolate mixture.
  3. Beat egg whites with cream of tartar to soft peaks. Gradually add sugar while beating to stiff peaks (tips of peaks should gently curl when whisk is lifted), 4-6 minutes.
  4. Fold meringue into chocolate mixture by thirds.
  5. Fill prepared ramekins halfway with batter. Spoon the passionfruit white chocolate filling into the center of each ramekin. Top off with remaining batter.
  6. Level off with a knife, and use a fingertip to trace around the inside of the top edge, which helps the souffle to rise.
  7. Bake until maximally risen and cooked through, 21-23 minutes.
  8. Dust with powdered sugar, and serve.

Duck Breast with Orange-Blueberry Sauce

duck breast orange and blueberry sauceSEARED DUCK BREAST WITH A SWEET, TANGY BLUEBERRY AND ORANGE SAUCE. OVER CARAMELIZED MUSHROOMS AND FENNEL.


For the second course of our Valentine’s Day dinner, we stuck with the sweet, tangy theme and decided to include some blueberries we had sitting in our fridge. We rendered down the fat on the duck breast before turning up the heat to crisp it up in an infused butter, then served it with some slowly caramelized mushrooms and fennel for some earthy contrast to the otherwise sharp and sweet dish. – Boo


Servings: 2 (main portions)
Difficulty: 2 star

Oven: 350 F, 4-6 minutes

Orange-blueberry sauce:

  • 2 navel oranges, juiced
  • 4 oz blueberries
  • 2 tb honey
  • Seasoning
    0.25 ts salt
    2 pinches ginger powder
  • 1 sprig rosemary
  • 1 sprig thyme
  1. In a small saucepan, bring all ingredients to a simmer. Discard rosemary and thyme sprigs after simmering for 2 minutes.
  2. Stir and reduce by 25-33% to a thin syrupy or desired consistency.
  3. Keep warm while preparing duck breast.

Duck breast:

  • 2 duck breasts
  • sea salt and black pepper, coarse
  • Herb-garlic oil
    1 tb butter
    0.5 tb olive oil
    1 sprig rosemary
    1 sprig tarragon
    1 clove garlic
  1. Score each duck with 6-8 shallow diagonal cuts on skin side. Season duck on all sides with salt and pepper.
  2. In an oven-safe skillet, simmer herb-garlic oil ingredients until fragrant, 2-3 minutes. Discard rosemary, tarragon, and garlic.
  3. Over medium heat, saute duck on skin side in infused oil until rendered, 2 minutes.
  4. Increase heat to medium-high, and sear until crisp, 4-5 minutes.
  5. Flip duck breasts skin-side up, and transfer to middle rack of oven to finish cooking, ~5 minutes for medium-rare.
  6. Remove to a plate to rest, 5 minutes.
  7. Serve with orange-blueberry sauce.

Sea Scallops with Tarragon Pea Purée

sea scallops pea pureeSEA SCALLOPS SEARED IN HERB-INFUSED BUTTER. PEAS PURÉED WITH BUTTER AND TARRAGON. PARMESAN CRISPS AND SALMON ROE.


Sometimes – in this case, when you’re swamped with exams and try to make a reservation for Valentine’s day a little too late – it’s nice to stay in and cook with your special someone. I wanted to make a dessert with some of my Boo’s favorites: chocolate and passionfruit. Boo complemented the rest of the “menu” with tangy flavors – seared scallops with pea puree, and duck breast with a orange-blueberry sauce. Over the next few days we are going to post the recipes of our home cooked three-course Valentine’s day meal, starting off with the appetizer. – Pea


sea scallops pea puree 2

Servings: 2 (appetizer portions)
Difficulty: 1 star

Oven: 350 F, 4-6 minutes

Parmesan crisps:

  • 3 tb grated parmesan (or parmigiano-reggiano)
  1. Onto a parchment-lined baking sheet, divide cheese into six oblong mounds.
  2. Bake until browned, 4-6 minutes, while preparing scallops and pea puree.

Seared scallops:

  • 6 sea scallops
  • Seasoning
    sea salt, coarse
    black pepper
    garlic powder
  • Seasoned butter
    2 tb butter
    0.5 tb olive oil
    1 sprig thyme
    1 sprig tarragon
  • 0.5 lemon
  1. Pat scallops dry.
  2. Sprinkle and press seasoning into both sides of scallops.
  3. In a pan, heat butter and olive oil with thyme and tarragon over medium heat until fragrant, 3-4 minutes. Discard thyme and tarragon.
  4. Sear scallops in hot butter until browned on both sides, ~1-2 minutes per side.
  5. Remove to a warm plate, and sprinkle lemon juice over scallops. Rest, 2 minutes, while preparing pea puree.

Pea puree:

  • 0.5 tb butter
  • 0.5 tb olive oil
  • 0.25 c peas
  • Seasoning
    4 leaves tarragon
    0.25 ts salt
    pinch black pepper
  1. Saute peas in butter and olive oil until just cooked through, 1 minute.
  2. Blend peas with seasoning and any accumulated juices from resting scallops.
  3. Serve scallops over pea puree.

sea scallops pea puree 3

Eight-Spice Leg of Lamb

eight spice leg of lamb

LEG OF LAMB ROASTED MEDIUM-RARE WITH A FRAGRANT LEMON AND SPICE RUB. PAIRED WITH LUXURIOUS, BODIED RED WINE REDUCTION. SIDES OF SAFFRON BROWN RICE PILAF, SAUTÉED BABY BELLAS, AND ROASTED GRAPE TOMATOES.


Easily a centerpiece holiday roast, leg of lamb can also be a pretty low maintenance treat of a dinner that looks and tastes like a whole day’s work. It has such a great natural flavor that even just salt and pepper turns out a delicious roast. We decided to mix together an earthy spice rub for a little extra kick and made a red wine sauce from the spicy onions that soaked in the pan drippings that rendered as the lamb roasted. While you could cut up a leg into two or three pieces to make it more manageable, we decided to roast it whole and enlist the help of some friends and their tummies! – Boo


eight spice leg of lamb 3

Servings: 8-10 (main portions)
Difficulty: 2 star

Oven: 400 F, 35 minutes; 350 F, 40 minutes

Lamb roast:

  • 5 lb boneless leg of lamb, room temperature and rolled
  • 4 tb olive oil
  • 1 tb lemon juice
  • Spices
    1 tb rosemary, minced
    2 ts paprika
    1.5 ts salt
    1.5 ts turmeric
    1.5 ts cumin
    1 ts cayenne pepper
    1 ts cinnamon
    1 ts black pepper
  • Aromatics
    1 onion, sliced
    3 cloves garlic, minced
  1. Pat meat dry. In a baking pan, drizzle olive oil and lemon juice over lamb.
  2. Combine and rub spices over lamb. Spread aromatics around baking pan.
  3. Roast on middle rack at 400 F for 35 minutes. Lower to 350 F, and roast to desired doneness, ~40 minutes for medium-rare (internal temperature 130 F).
  4. Set aside lamb to rest for 10-15 minutes before serving. Optionally, remove onions and 1-2 tb rendered fat to a pan to prepare red wine reduction.

Red wine reduction:

  • reserved onions and rendered fat
  • Herbs and vegetables
    2 cloves garlic, sliced
    2 sprigs rosemary
    2 sprigs thyme
  • Liquids
    1 c chicken or beef stock
    1.5 c red wine
  • Seasoning
    0.5 tb sugar
    0.5 ts salt
    0.25 ts black pepper
  • 3 tb butter
  1. In a wide pan, saute reserved onions in rendered fat with herbs and vegetables over medium heat until fragrant, ~1 minute.
  2. Add stock and red wine. Stir and simmer over medium-high heat until reduced by half.
  3. Sieve sauce into a bowl, and return liquid to the saucepan. Discard sieved solids.
  4. Stir and simmer until reduced by 33-50%.
  5. Remove from heat, and stir in seasoning and butter.
  6. Serve over lamb.

eight spice leg of lamb 2

Meat Internal Temperatures – A Guide to Juicy, Flavorful Meat, Every Time

If you’ve watched some TV cooking shows, you’re bound to have heard how cooking a steak to a pitch-perfect pink medium-rare, or keeping a roast chicken or turkey juicy, takes professional skill. Or at the very least, a laundry list of preparation steps like brining in a tub of 20 ingredients or salting no more or less than five-and-a-half seconds before the meat hits the pan.

Yes, some of these tricks have their merits, but I would say 95% of the moistness and natural flavor of your favorite steak of roast comes down to temperature. So once you go out and buy a sturdy, reliable meat thermometer, here’s a table of temperatures to look for if you want that juicy goodness:

meat temperatures guide

These are RESTED temperatures!

One important note is that these are rested temperatures taken after the meat is removed from your oven or stove and allowed to sit for about 5-15 minutes, depending on the size of the steak or roast! Because the temperature of the outer parts of the meat is much higher than on the inside as you just finish cooking, the heat redistributes and transfers towards the inside as the meat rests. You should aim to rest the meat after the thickest part of the meat reaches about 5-10 F under the target temperature. The larger the meat and the higher the cooking temperature, the earlier you should rest it, towards the side of 10 F under.

Using a New York Strip steak as an example…

Remove it from the pan or oven onto a resting plate when it hits about 126-130 F for medium-rare, since it will cook through to the middle and rise a few degrees as it rests.

On cooking chicken:

Don’t eat raw or undercooked pink, fleshy chicken. As if you needed a reminder. Though some of the USDA’s 165 F guideline is rightly simplified for mass public safety, some of the juiciest, most tender chicken can be served safely around 145-150 F using proper techniques and times. At BooPeaKitchen, we like our white meat (the breast) around 155-160 F and dark meat (the rest) around 165 F, so we take our roast chickens out around 150 F when the juices that run off the chicken just start turning clear. Just so that no one accidentally gets sick thanks to us, our official recommendation will be a little higher!

On cooking pork:

While rare pork is still questionable because of the risk of the Trichinella spiralis parasite, the USDA fairly recently lowered the safe temperature to 145 F. It turns out that a few minutes around 136 F is sufficient stave off this parasite, so we give temperatures down to medium-rare. We would still recommend pork be cooked medium for the best taste and texture!

On ground meats:

These temperature do not apply for ground meats, simply because there is a lot more surface area for possible bacteria to survive. Cook any ground meat to at least 157-160 F!

*The images used the chart are credited to Google emojis.

Pork Tenderloin à la Diable

pork tenderloin a la diableSIMPLY-SEASONED AND ROASTED PORK TENDERLOIN OVER A BED OF SHREDDED PURPLE CABBAGE. WITH A BUTTERY, SPICY DIJON SAUCE. GARLIC-SAUTÉED VEGETABLES.


There are probably a hundred (if not many, many more) ways to prepare a pork tenderloin, one of the most versatile cuts of pork or red meat anywhere. As its name implies, it’s so tender that you can cut it with a fork – try it for yourself! Of the ways Pea and I have tried, this has to be one of the easiest and most flavorful. Literally just seared with salt and pepper, and roasted just long enough to prepare a side of veggies,  this can be a quick and easy weekday dinner. It goes so well with the sauce, which is smooth and creamy, yet tangy and smokey from the Dijon mustard and paprika and adds a comforting warmth, even eaten a little cold like we did after taking our pictures. But as I said before, pork tenderloin tends to go well with a lot of different things, so hopefully this recipe helps make it one of your staple proteins, too! – Boo


Servings: 3-4 (main portions)
Difficulty: 1 star

Oven: 375 F, 23 minutes

Ingredients:

  • 1 pork tenderloin
  • salt and black pepper
  • Sauce
    0.5 c chicken stock
    0.33 c white wine
    1 tb heavy cream
    1 tb Dijon mustard
    1 ts smoked paprika
    0.25 ts cayenne pepper
    2 tb butter, cold

Directions:

  1. Salt and pepper the tenderloin on all sides.
  2. In an oven-safe pan, sear tenderloin in olive oil on one side, ~4 minutes.
  3. Flip seared-side up, and transfer to oven to roast, ~23 minutes for medium-well (internal temperature 150 F).
  4. Remove from oven, and set tenderloin aside to rest.
  5. In the same pan, bring chicken stock and wine to a simmer over medium-high heat.
  6. Add Dijon, paprika, and heavy cream. Stir and reduce by half or until slightly thickened.
  7. Remove from heat, and stir in butter until melted.
  8. Slice tenderloin, and serve with sauce.

pork tenderloin a la diable 2