Stuffed Pork Loin With Figs

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- 1½cup dried figs
- 1boneless pork loin, 2 to 3 pounds
- Salt
- freshly ground pepper
- 3 or 4fresh rosemary sprigs, minced
- ½cup red wine, more if necessary
Preparation
- Step 1
Put figs in hot water to soak. Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
- Step 2
Wriggle a thin, sharp knife into each end of meat, making a kind of pilot hole. Then use handle of a long wooden spoon to force a hole all the way through meat, making it as wide as your thumb.
- Step 3
Drain when figs are tender but not mushy, reserving liquid. Stuff figs into roast, all the way to center from each end.
- Step 4
Combine salt, pepper and rosemary and rub it all over meat. Put meat in a roasting pan and pour about half a cup of fruit-soaking liquid over it. Roast undisturbed for 20 minutes. Lower heat to 350 degrees and continue to cook, basting with pan juices (or added liquid, like wine or water, if necessary) every 15 minutes or so. When an instant-read thermometer registers 145 to 150 degrees — probably after 40 to 60 minutes — remove roast to a warm platter. (When checking meat, be sure thermometer is in meat, not fruit.)
- Step 5
Let sit for 15 minutes. Meanwhile, put roasting pan on stove over one or two burners set to medium-high. If there is a lot of liquid, reduce it to about half a cup, scraping bottom of pan with a wooden spoon to release any brown bits. If pan is dry, add half a cup of wine and follow same process. When sauce has reduced, slice roast and serve with sauce.
Private Notes
Comments
Bittman has a video online for this recipe & there are differences between the video and this recipe worth noting. I also have some notes to add. Soak 2 cups of figs in red wine for 2 hours. Once you have prepared the pork for stuffing & roasting, place it in your pan & put all the soaking red wine & remaining figs into the pan around it. Then follow written instructions. Baste periodically and, if necessary, add some additional wine if the original amount has evaporated.
We've updated the recipe. Thank you!
When I made this, the fig-soaking water evaporated during that first 20 minutes of roasting, and the sugar that the figs had left in the water burned. To avoid this, put a cup or so of water into the bottom of the pan at the start. Most will evaporate by the time the roast is done, and if too much is left you can simply reduce it on the stove (as the instructions tell you to do anyway).
Am I the only one who had way too many left over figs?! Maybe I did this wrong, but there was no way I could fit all of them into the meat. So, I ate a few (several) and cut up a few to add to the sauce. Stil had many left over. What did I do wrong? The roast, btw was divine.
Had to improvise a bit and used dates instead of figs and I wasn’t disappointed! This is so easy to make and it is delicious. It looks pretty fancy for a super easy recipe!
Phenomenal as written. Dispersing the figs is difficult to be uniform. The pan sauce with red wine and emulsification was sublime. This isn't putting lipstick on a pig. It's going to the prom with the partner of your dreams, while driving a Chevrolet.
Advertisement