Pork Chops with Shallot and Pepper Agrodolce
When multiple people live and eat together, over time there are dishes or ingredients that disappear from use because one or more people don’t like them. We have a rule here that you have to try new things but if you don’t like them, no worries, and each of us has something we avoid either for taste or texture. The list of avoided items isn’t terribly long in our house but the thing on it I miss the most is the humble pork chop.
Pork chops get a bad rap. They’re like that person at work that no one wants to sit with at the team outing because they are considered dry and boring. A little flat, uninteresting on their own. Which isn’t exactly true but, like people who take a little bit of understanding to shine, they do require some attention and careful handling. An interesting sidekick never hurts.
Agrodolce had long been one of those words on a menu that my eye skimmed over with a vague idea it must be a sauce without having any idea what it would taste like. See also: romesco and gremolata. Sometimes when I see words on a menu I don’t understand I’m too intimidated to ask for fear of looking unsophisticated. If I had asked what agrodolce was, I would have found out it is the Italian version of sweet and sour sauce. Hm. Well, that sounds good. Our interesting sidekick has arrived.
I had my chance to try something new when the pork chop avoider was away on a business trip. I’m so glad I did because agrodolce “is the bomb” as people used to say in the early nineties. Often sweet and sour sauce is more sweet than sour but this has balance and bite. It is the interesting sidekick that brings out the best in the more unassuming pork chop.