I bought a whole pork loin on sale recently and couldn’t resist using part of it to make Country Fried Pork Loin With Bacon Gravy using the recipe from the “Recipe BY Me” blog. I changed the cooking method a lot a shown in the recipe below.
But before we get into the meal let’s discuss the liberties
being taken by restaurants with the words pork tenderloin. This is a pork tenderloin along side a piece
of pork loin and as you can see, the 1½ -2 inch diameter tenderloin is much
smaller than the 4-5 inch diameter pork loin.
And now back to the meal. Bev brought some mushrooms home om the market and I decided to add some to the bacon gravy so I adjusted the recipe to reflect this.
Country Fried Pork Loin With Bacon Gravy - Adapted from Recipe By Me
Ingredients:
Pork Chops
4 pork chops – Larry used 1” boneless loin Jaccarded to
about ¾“ thickness
8 oz buttermilk
4½ oz all-purpose flour
1 tsp salt
½ tsp black pepper
½ tsp paprika
½ tsp garlic powder
½ tsp onion powder
2 oz vegetable oil
Bacon Gravy
4 slices bacon, chopped
6 large mushrooms, halved and sliced
2 tbsp. unsalted butter
½ oz all-purpose flour
12 oz. whole milk
½ tsp salt
½ tsp black pepper
Directions:
Place pork chops in a shallow dish and pour over the
buttermilk. Allow to marinate for 30 minutes at room temperature (I marinated
them in a plastic bag).
In a 12” skillet, cook chopped bacon over medium heat until
crisp. Transfer bacon to a bowl, reserving rendered fat in
the pan.
Add the mushrooms to the pan and cook until most moisture
is released. Remove to the bowl with the
bacon.
While mushrooms are cooking, in a shallow dish, combine the
flour, salt, black pepper, paprika, garlic powder, and onion powder.
Remove pork chops from the buttermilk, dredge each in the
seasoned flour, shaking off excess. Fry in the same skillet to an internal temp
of 138F.
Remove to a plate and keep warm in a 140F oven.
Add butter (as needed for 2 tbsp total fat) to the bacon
fat in the skillet and allow to melt. Stir in flour and cook for 1 minute,
stirring constantly.
Add a little milk to deglaze the pan, scrapping up the brown bits, then gradually whisk
in the remaining milk until smooth. Season with salt and pepper. Simmer for several
minutes until thickened.
Then stir in crispy bacon and mushrooms and cook a couple
of minutes to reheat them.
Ladle warm bacon gravy over fried pork chops before
serving.
We planned to serve the pork with boiled plate mashed
potatoes and broccoli salad but decided the meat would be enough.
Verdict:
Doing it as a one pan meal in the order I used did not work
out as the pork chops stuck to the stuff in the pan from cooking the bacon and
mushrooms. It was very good and as you
can imagine the gravy was delicious with all of the sucs in the pan – the
mushrooms were a good addition to the gravy.
I will make it again and still as a one pan meal but I would cook the
chops first in the clean pan and keep them warm in the oven. Then I would cook the bacon and mushrooms in the same pan,
remove them and make the sauce then add back the bacon and mushrooms – the
gravy should still have those delicious sucs from cooking the bacon and
mushrooms.
Photos can be slightly enlarged
by clicking on them and the blue words are links.
Have a
great day and thanks for stopping by Almost Heaven South.
Larry
9/12/25
event date
In my opinion pork loin has a different texture than pork tenderloin. But then again I've never fried pork loin for a sandwich. Does something magical happen to make it as tender as the tenderloin? Those pork chops with gravy sounds incredibly delicious. A must make soon.
ReplyDeleteHa! I always wondered how they got a tenderloin slice that big for a sandwich! Good to know. The pork loin with bacon gravy has me drooling!
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