Pork Steak


Look! A St. Louis Pork Steak is a thinly sliced Boston Butt. I got mine at Dierbergs a few weeks ago at the end of summer.

4 tablespoons of a pre-made House Seasoning:
(1 cup salt , 1/4 cup black pepper , 1/4 cup garlic powder)

No one in the comments section could stand to add this much salt. I think perhaps they were adding the whole House Seasoning recipe? Mathematically (as I understand math), you could add 2 tablespoons of salt, 1/2 T pepper, 1/2 T garlic powder.

2 tablespoons seasoned salt

4 tablespoons liquid smoke, found in grocery store (This kills me. Are people looking in chemistry books for Liquid Smoke? Or their pantries? I can bet I don’t have any from the last time I made a stew because I always throw out almost full bottles, while saying “When will I ever use this again?” I think that’s because Mom kept one bottle of Liquid Smoke during my entire adolescence.)

1 medium onion, sliced

1 cup water

3 bay leaves

Barbeque sauce of choice, for serving (I have that now that Gary has stopped feeding the Mac dog food covered with Barbeque sauce.)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Sprinkle 1 side of the roast with 2 tablespoons half the House Seasoning, making sure to rub well. Flip the roast over and rub the remaining half of House Seasoning. Repeat the process with the seasoned salt and liquid smoke.

Cover the meat. (Commenters were outraged Paula left this out.)

Place the roast in a large roasting pan. Add the onion, water and bay leaves to the roast.

Place in the oven and cook for 2 1/2 to 3 hours, or until thermometer reads 170 degrees F.

Let meat cool for a few minutes and then slice. Serve with your favorite barbeque sauce.

Their photo:

Butt

My photo (of everything – pork is bottom center).

Alldone

And a surprise mystery guest on the top right – new potatoes, some so withered they were the size of golf balls. (Step one: neglect your new potatoes for months.)


7 responses to “Pork Steak”

  1. Wow! What a meal. That pork roast looks so tasty.
    Unfortunately, I’m too lazy to make the risotto cakes, but the zucchini spinach gratin looks like something I would make for a special side dish.

  2. Wow, I had to scroll way down the page to make sure I hadn’t stumbled onto some cooking blog. It all looks wonderful, BTW.

  3. Arlene – Wellllll … it’s not that special
    Amy in StL – Yes, but it all tastes somewhat inadequate.

  4. Hattie – really, none of it is speaking to me. The leek soup has too much stilton and you cant taste the leeks. I think for my next cooking binge I need to cook only things in my wheelhouse.

  5. Take the Stilton down to 2 ounces. Roast the leeks whole for 15 minutes before chopping instead of sweating them. Just get ’em oiled up, salt ’em, and put ’em on a baking sheet in a hot, hot oven. 15 minutes or less, though, leeks burn. I think you’ll like the flavor of the roasted leeks, it’s much more noticeable.
    I want to make the risotto cakes and the gratin.

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