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Posted
Quick and easy work night dinner.
I bought three racks of pork (loins) recently and cut a couple of chops off one of them.
Got home from work about 5:15 tonight and we were eating at 5:55.
Put a pot of water on to boil for my rice. I cook rice the same way I cook pasta.
Big pot of boiling water. When al dente, the rice is drained and put back into the pot covered with paper towels and lid and left to steam from its own heat.
The chops were seasoned with fresh garlic, oregano, pepper, olive oil and fresh lemon juice, and left on the counter, while the rice cooked and the grill was heating.
While all that was going on , I made the Greek Salad.
GrilledRackofloinchopJanuary9th2025.thumb.jpg.9b51285542798a5dc0b28d017f099846.jpg
 
When the rice was cooked, the chops went on the grill and didn't take very long on high heat to reach 140°F.
GrilledRackofloinchopJanuary9th20251.thumb.jpg.85ec7cae3b3b290304fef2be13fcd0e4.jpg
Let rest for five minutes and dinner was ready to serve.
 
  • Like 7
  • Delicious 3
Posted

Bangers and Mash....and Ash. 

 

Grilled a banger and served with leftovers of mashed potatoes, green beans and bacon, and chile ash sauce (from a MXN take-away meal).  

 

 

banger.jpg

  • Like 4
  • Delicious 2
Posted
2 hours ago, gulfporter said:

Bangers and Mash....and Ash. 

 

Grilled a banger and served with leftovers of mashed potatoes, green beans and bacon, and chile ash sauce (from a MXN take-away meal).  

 

 

banger.jpg

 

Are you joking about a poorly executed sauce from the takeaway joint, or is chile ash sauce a thing? If the latter, please tell more!

Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
HosteG Forumsnsmith@egstaff.org

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"Every day should be filled with something delicious, because life is too short not to spoil yourself. " -- Ling (with permission)
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Posted
3 hours ago, Smithy said:

 

Are you joking about a poorly executed sauce from the takeaway joint, or is chile ash sauce a thing? If the latter, please tell more!

 

Chile ash cream sauce is divine!  They mix the charred remains of toasted chiles into the sauce.  I could (and do) drink down the last drops!

 

Here is menu we ordered from; it's a special the chef makes about once a month. 

 

 

cocinartweekly.jpg

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Posted

Great menu. I wish I could find something like that in Costa Rica. Mexico has amazing food. People don't think of anything but the typical Mexican food but there is a lot of International food. My favorite place to stay in Mexico City is the Zona Roja. There are restaurants there from all over the world and they do it well.

  • Like 1

Yvonne Shannon

San Joaquin, Costa Rica

A member since 2017 and still loving it!

Posted
1 hour ago, Tropicalsenior said:

Great menu. I wish I could find something like that in Costa Rica. Mexico has amazing food. People don't think of anything but the typical Mexican food but there is a lot of International food. My favorite place to stay in Mexico City is the Zona Roja. There are restaurants there from all over the world and they do it well.

 

We live in a little village on the shores of Lake Chapala, Mexico's largest lake.  We are less than an hour from the Guadalajara Metro area with a population of 6.5+ million.  

 

When we first visited here in 2007 Guadalajara did not have much of a restaurant scene; it now rivals CDMX for inventive eateries.  At the Lake in 2007, there were a few gringo-owned places serving American foods, one or two decent Italian restaurants, a couple of Argentine steak places. but mostly it was local fare.  

 

Mexico's middle class has exploded in the past 15 years.  And similar to the US in the 1970s and 1980s, they have disposable incomes that allow them to sample different foods in restaurants; this demand has caused an explosion of a variety of international eateries, both in Guadalajara and here at the Lake.  

 

Tapatíos (as residents of Guadalajara proudly call themselves) have always come to the Lake on weekends; some day trippers, some upper class families that have owned homes on its shores for generations.  Without their business, most of the better restaurants here would not survive.  

 

More and more properties in my village (Ajijic) are being sold to Mexicans, reversing the decades long trend of sales to expats from US and Canada.   

 

 

  • Thanks 2
Posted
16 minutes ago, gulfporter said:

We are less than an hour from the Guadalajara Metro area

I love Guadalajara. The last time we were there was about 2012. It was probably just starting to develop more. I got hooked on the pork tortas. I don't remember what they were called but I love them. I could spend days and days in Tonalà and Tlaquepaque.

Yvonne Shannon

San Joaquin, Costa Rica

A member since 2017 and still loving it!

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