Iowa-Style Pork Tenderloin Sandwich

Prep:

Cook:

Level: Easy

Serves: 4

4

Description

Iowa-style pork tenderloin sandwiches are amazing! These sinfully delicious, crunchy bits of piggy goodness were hard to resist when we went to Southeast Iowa and Northeast Missouri last week. And we ate more than we should have. Frankly, it was the perfect comfort food.

Ingredients

  • Oil For Deep Frying (quantity Varies By Frying Vessel)
  • 1  Pork Tenderloin (1 To 1-1/2 Pound) Trimmed Of Fat And Silver Skin
  • 1 cup Flour
  • 2 teaspoons Lawry’s Seasoned Salt
  • 1 cup Buttermilk
  • 2  Sleeves (about 4 Oz. Size) Saltine Crackers, Processed To Crumbs
  • 4  Large Hamburger Buns
  • Butter, For Toasting Buns (optional)
  • 4 Tablespoons Slivered Sweet Onions
  • 16 slices (Oval-shaped) Dill Pickle
  • Mustard To Taste

Preparation

Preheat enough oil for deep-frying to 350°F in either a deep fryer or a heavy pan.

Cut trimmed pork tenderloin into 4 equal-weight portions. Butterfly a portion by cutting it ¾ of the way through. Cover with plastic wrap and pound with a steel mallet until ⅛-inch thick or thinner. Meat may start to look transparent. Repeat with remaining tenderloin portions.

Season flour with the seasoned salt. Dredge both sides of a piece of pork in the seasoned flour. Shake off the excess, then coat both sides with the buttermilk. Allow excess buttermilk to drip off, then dredge the pork in the saltine crumbs. Press gently to coat all sides thoroughly. No meat should be exposed. Repeat with remaining cutlets.

Fry until lightly browned, about 4–5 minutes, flipping once about ⅔ of the way through. Lift the cutlet out of the oil and allow to drain, then transfer to a paper-lined dish to continue draining. Repeat with remaining cutlets.

Heat a large frying pan to very hot. Toast the insides of the buns in the pan, adding a little bit of butter, if desired.

Assemble pork tenderloin sandwiches, garnishing with slivered onions, pickles, and mustard. Serve.

Note: The cutlets for these sandwiches are traditionally pounded so thin as to make one portion very large. They are often served that way, with the pork significantly overlapping the bun on all sides. For portion control, you may choose to make 8 cutlets instead of 4 by cutting the pounded pork in half before breading it for frying. If so, adjust for other ingredients as needed.

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