Comment on I can't believe it's necessary to ask the question...
grue@lemmy.world 2 days agoI’m gonna have to try that sometime. At my house, pork shoulder tends to get used for carnitas or pulled-pork barbecue.
Comment on I can't believe it's necessary to ask the question...
grue@lemmy.world 2 days agoI’m gonna have to try that sometime. At my house, pork shoulder tends to get used for carnitas or pulled-pork barbecue.
SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world 1 day ago
We usually get a tenderloin at Costco and cut it into chops and roasts. Some of the roasts get made into carnitas and pulled pork as well, but we will just season one up and bbq it for an hour too.
grue@lemmy.world 1 day ago
“Tenderloin” or just regular “loin?”
Tenderloin is the pig equivalent of filet mignon; IMO it’s too tender to justify the sorts of cooking methods you use to compensate for cheaper, tougher meat.
Seems reasonable for regular loin, though. I’d still usually pick shoulder for low and slow cooking because it works just as well and tends to be cheaper, but sometimes it isn’t.
SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world 1 day ago
The tenderloin it’s cheap enough and will even go on sale even more at times and we will get a couple.
grue@lemmy.world 1 day ago
I almost did a spit take when I saw that huge $9.99 number. Then I realized that it was in CAD and per kg, which works out to be cheaper than it is here in the Southeast US (about $4 USD / lb), LOL!
Still kinda think a pressure cooker is overkill for a tenderloin that would cook up just fine with a dry cooking method (roasting or pan-grilling, like a steak) though. You could save $2 CAD / kg (plus an extra $5 off) getting regular loin and it would turn out just as good in a pressure cooker.