Craig Cooks Pork Chops 2: Electric (Stove) Boogaloo

If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Unless you’ve failed to appear in court. Then flee the country.

Failure is a powerful force. My personal hero, Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi once said, “The Force is what gives a Jedi his power. It’s an energy field created by all living things. It surrounds us and penetrates us; it holds the galaxy together.” I think the force he was talking about is failure.

Another personal hero, Soulja Boy, once declared, “Superman dat ho.” I don’t know what the shit he was talking about.

Failure is everywhere, and looks and feels different to all of us. Some use it as motivation. Some let it destroy them. Others embrace it as a cornerstone of their identity. We call these people Juggalos.

For me, failure looks like pork chops. My first attempt to make Pan-Seared Pork Chops with Maple-Bourbon Glaze was abruptly halted by the shrill laugh of the evil Dr. Smoke Detector, Destroyer of Meat Products and Awakener of Neighborhood Hounds. This week I vowed revenge; served hot and full of pork. Don’t Google that at work.

The Food Lab’s Pan-Seared Pork Chops with Apple Cider Pan Sauce were my chance at redemption. The last time I attempted pork chops several unfortunate incidents occurred:

  • I set off every smoke detector in my apartment.
  • I overcooked the chops until they could have bounced off the floor.
  • I ate a frozen pea. I don’t know why. I was in hysterics.
  • I cried—but only a little.

In order to prevent a second Death Star-type repeat failure, I did what the Imperials never seemed to—developed a decent strategy. Seriously, building an entire space station as a plan to lure one person into a trap? What a massive waste of resources. Tax dollars went towards that space station and they left a giant undefended hole in the side of it? That’s gross incompetence. It’s indicative of party leadership that doesn’t understand fiscal responsibility on behalf of the taxpayers. No wonder they were facing a rebellion.

My foolproof plan:

  1. Never leave the stovetop when the cast iron is on it. It will smoke. It will catch fire. You will cry. You will die.
  2. The stovetop burner never gets set on “High”—which on my stove should read “Scorch with the fires of Satan.”
  3. As Guns N’ Roses once put, “All we need is just a little patience.” As Axl has a habit of going on stage several hours late for concerts, I assume this lyric is directed at his fans.
  4. All attention is on the pork chop. There is only the pork chop.

The first two are simple hard-and-fast rules, easy enough for me to follow. The third and fourth require that I completely change my core identity.

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One of the main ingredients in the sauce is apple cider. It’s July. Cider, pumpkins and corn mazes are a little tough to dig up right now. So, I just got the thickest-looking organic apple juice I could find and discovered that in the juice industry, “organic” is actually shorthand for “somewhat unappealing.”

I chopped up a granny smith apple (the Katherine Heigl of apples), and combined the “somewhat unappealing” apple juice with the apple cider vinegar, brown sugar, cinnamon and cloves. I don’t know what cloves are, but they sound contagious.

Now it’s time for the star of our show.

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The pan was prepped and the stove turned on. I opened the window hoping it wouldn’t be necessary, but preparing for a Batman vs. Superman-level disaster in my kitchen. I turned away to check The Food Lab one last time. I smelled smoke.

Son-of-a-bitch. I turned on the wrong burner. Strong start. I then turned on the correct burner, front-right.

The pork chop goes into the pan. This baby is much bigger than last time, hopefully giving me more leeway to make mistakes. All my focus was on the cast iron pan. There was no apartment. There was no kitchen. There was only me, the pan and my pork chop, that I named Wilbur because Charlotte’s Web is full of lies. There are no happy endings and spiders are not friendly, they are scary.

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Looking good through flip one, but this is one thick slab o’ pig. I could not lose focus. Every flip is an attempt to prove my smoke detector wrong. I discovered something zen, almost meditative, through cooking focus. Flip. Wait. Flip. Wait. Flip. Wait. Temperature check. Repeat as necessary. Remain patient. Don’t turn up the heat to get done quicker. Flip. Wait. Flip Wait. Remove when it hits 125o for medium-rare and looks kinda like this. You have achieved enlightenment.

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My confidence was soaring. It looked incredible, but this was no time to make mistakes. Apples and butter go in the pan for a few minutes while Wilbur takes a well deserved rest. The cider mixture went into the pan shortly after and was cooked down to a syrup. Then Wilbur goes on the plate and into my mouth—how Charlotte’s Web should have ended.

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This might be the most beautiful thing I’ve ever made–and I drew a colored-pencil portrait of Oakland Raiders Quarterback Rich Gannon when I was 11, so the bar is pretty high.

Flavor-wise the crispness of the apple plays very well with the heartiness of the pork, creating a sweet and salty meat-splosion on the plate. The pork is a deep brown on the outside, but not dried out. I’m way into it.

By sticking to the strategy I was able to defeat dastardly Dr. Smoke Detector. There’s a lot that went right here, and I’ll try to take these learnings forward. The four rules are here to stay. But most importantly, I learned something about failure.

It tastes goddamn great.

Recipe: 56/63
Did I do the Dishes? Yes. Like I said, enlightenment achieved.

Enjoy? Follow on Twitter or Facebook to stay up to date on what Craig’s cooking.

 

New Kitchen. Same Bitchin’.

You might be wondering what happened to me. Did he cut off his fingers rendering him unable to type? Did he get overwhelmed by success and go on a soul-seeking journey to find the meaning of the universe? Did he simply give up, like he has on everything else in his life?

Still have all my digits (look ‘em up ladies), I already know the “why” of the universe (salami…duh) and despite all evidence to the contrary I have not given up on learning to cook or writing about it. Craig Cooks Crap went on hiatus because I moved into a new apartment, with an exciting new kitchen to destroy each and every week.

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You might not think the new kitchen is very relevant to cooking Pan-Seared Pork Chops with Maple-Bourbon Glaze and Hot Buttered Snap Peas with Leeks and Basil, but I have a confession to make. I own almost none of the kitchen equipment, including the stove, I’ve been showing off with. With the exception of my cast-iron pan, which I’ve grown to love more than Donald Trump loves himself, almost everything belonged to my former roommate. He has a Food Science degree, manages a restaurant and owns pretty much every kitchen tool known to man except a damn garlic press. So we’re all going to be taking a step back here. For the first time since this experiment started I’m operating without proper equipment. Considering how poorly I did with proper equipment, this does not bode well.

One minute in to cooking the first dish in my new apartment things started to go downhill. I like to take nice pictures of the ingredients on my cutting board before getting started. It’s my pre-game ritual. Wade Boggs used to eat fried chicken before every baseball game. That’s 162 fried chicken meals a year not counting the playoffs. He also once drank 64 Miller Lites on a cross-country flight. That man deserves his place in the Hall of Fame.

My taking-pictures warm-up routine is significantly less badass, but probably healthier. The problem is my kitchen’s not the only thing less than half the size it used to be.

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Yeah. So no nice pictures for the moment.

The first step is to salt and refrigerate the chops for at least 45 minutes as part of a process called brining. Brining is supposed to keep the pork chop juicy, but with what I put these poor little pigs through they turned out drier than Cloris Leachman’s lady bits.

I decided to use the brining time to prep everything else, starting with the leek. I’ve never seen a leek before, much less bought one. They’re huge. When I was carrying it around the grocery store I was worried someone from the EPA was going to fine me for deforestation. Apparently, only the white part of the leek is edible, leaving roughly 95% of it absolutely worthless, similar to cable news. I wonder if leeks taste good, because as you’ll soon see why, I’ve never eaten one.

Making the maple-bourbon glaze involved three of my favorite things; women, whiskey and mustard. Usually you can only get that kind of action at Oktoberfest, but anything can happen in Craig’s new kitchen. I’d like you all to meet a very special woman.

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We’re dating. She’ll probably be embarrassed that I’m writing about it, but I think I’m in love. She’s super sweet, a little on the quiet side and sometimes smothering but come on, she parties with Jack Daniels and Bulleit Whiskey. What’s not to love?

The prep work was done and it was time to start cooking with my new lady love, on my brand-new super-old electric-top stove. I’ve heard electric heat is harder to manage, and you need to pay close attention or things burn quickly but I was feeling confident. Like Jordan Spieth on the 12th hole at The Masters, that confidence was about to be shaken to its very core.

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Small problems started to pile up. I don’t own tongs so I used a spoon to flip my pork chops. Not ideal, but not a big deal. The chops weren’t browning, so I pumped up the juice a little bit. Again, no big deal. The water wasn’t boiling quite fast enough for the peas and chops to be done at the same time, and the butter wasn’t melting to cook the leeks in, but there’s an easy solve. Just turn up the heat.

BEEEEEEP. BEEEEEEP. BEEEEEEP.

BEEEEEEP. BEEEEEEP. BEEEEEEP.

BEEEEEEP. BEEEEEEP. BEEEEEEP.

DO NOT TURN UP THE HEAT. I REPEAT–DO NOT TURN UP THE DAMN HEAT. IF YOU DO TURN UP THE DAMN HEAT THE FOLLOWING THINGS WILL HAPPEN:

  • You will set off every smoke detector in your apartment, which is a great way to say hello to your new neighbors you haven’t met yet
  • You will attempt to remove the batteries from the smoke detector, which is 10 feet off the ground without a chair or ladder because you do not own a chair or a ladder
  • You will run back and forth between the kitchen, living room and bedroom fanning the alarms with a sweatshirt, moving from detector to detector like a game of whack-a-mole from hell
  • You will forget that the leeks and chops are still on the stove, continuing to create smoke and turning exciting new colors
  • You will turn off everything on the stove, including the peas which were making steam, not smoke, and not doing anything wrong
  • You will fall over and injure your pride as you attempt to plug in a fan and open every window in the apartment
  • You will have the heightened senses of a dachshund on Independence Day.
  • You will cry a little.
  • You will attempt to eat a semi-frozen pea and burnt-rubber pork chop
  • You will go to the bar down the street and order chicken wings

So there it is—my first true failure. There will be no final photo. There will be no uplifting story of unexpected success. Life is not a Disney movie, everything doesn’t always end up the way you want it to. That’s why I thought Toy Story 3 should have ended with them all going down together in the incinerator.

The only thing I’ve ever failed at is pretty much everything, so it’s not an entirely unfamiliar sensation. I like to look at failures as lessons and I have learned a few very important things from this traumatic experience.

  1. Don’t trust Mrs. Butterworth’s. She’ll run when it gets too hot.
  2. Own a chair. They are useful for more than just sitting on.
  3. Don’t take time off from your blog. Karma’s a bitch.

Recipe: Chicken wings were pretty good.
Did I do the Dishes? Yes. I might be developing a sense of pride in my own place.