fish-r-man
★★ Legendary Member
Hey everyone, looking to expand my recipient collection. What's your favorite way to cook tenderloin?
Tenderloin usually gets just a simple salt and pepper dusting grilled medium rare at most. Usually is paired with fried heart and onions in butter done in a cast iron pan. However, I'll take the backstrap over the tenderloin.
Real men eat the liver raw while field dressing and salt it with deer piss:::My favorite meal off a deer is FRESH sliced venison liver fried with bacon and thin-sliced yellow onions. Add sliced heart and tenderloin medallions for the weak people that don't appreciate yummy liver.
grind some coarse pepper onto a cutting board. follow up with coarse sea salt and a little cayenne pepper - your goal is to create a nice even mix of whatever amount suits your taste - then roll a whole or half slightly tacky tenderloin across the board like a tube so it picks up a nice even coating
after letting it sit for a few minutes fry it whole in a medium oiled pan - like a big bratwurst - keep rolling it and brown it on all sides - a loin is not perfectly round but slightly oblong so you might even have to tend it (hold it and keep it from rolling over) - start on the two "narrow sides" that don't want to let the roll stand up on their own - that way as it cooks/firms it gets almost perfectly round - your goal is perfect round and you can almost get there
using a quick-read thermometer check the internal temp of center - but not a lot - don't pincushion it. stop cooking immediately when on low end of medium rare (130)
the skinnier ends will be slightly more done (for the ladies usually)
slice it on a bias and serve with a port wine reduction or some sort of currant/raisin old schooly sauce
roast spuds and/or root veggies of some sort are perfect alongside - think primeval
here's bison pic off the web - but this is what you're after - you can't get this by frying slices - you gotta broil/grill/fry it whole
slice after resting for that perfect clear pink juicy finished product
![]()
this is backstrappable too of course
- - - Updated - - -
(that pic is too perfect now that I look at it - they used a sous vide for sure to achieve that perfection of doneness)