Roasted Carrots and Beets with the Juiciest Pork Chops

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Picture of Roasted Carrots and Beets with the Juiciest Pork Chops Recipe Photo: Roasted Carrots and Beets with the Juiciest Pork Chops Recipe
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Total Time:
1 hr 30 min
Prep
30 min
Cook
1 hr 0 min
Yield:
4 servings
Level:
Intermediate
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Directions

Carrots and beets are particularly good when roasted as it brings out their natural sugars. The best advice I can give you is about flavoring them. A few smashed garlic cloves, a woody herb like rosemary, thyme, sage or bay, and a splash of vinegar, or squeezed lemon or orange juice, can accentuate their natural flavor.

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 pounds carrots, mixed colors if available, peeled
  • 1 1/2 pounds beets, different sizes and colors if available
  • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 bulb garlic, broken apart, 1/2 the cloves smashed, 1/2 left whole
  • Extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 orange, juiced
  • A few sprigs fresh thyme, leaves picked
  • A few sprigs fresh rosemary, leaves picked
  • 5 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
  • 4 thick organic pork loin chops, skin on
  • 8 fresh sage leaves
  • 1 lemon

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Put the carrots into a large pot and the beets into another, and add enough water to cover them. Season with salt and bring to a boil. Cook for 15 to 20 minutes until just tender, then drain and place in separate bowls. Peel the beets, and cut any larger carrots and beets in half or into quarters. Smaller ones can stay whole.

Now add the flavorings while the vegetables are still hot. Toss the carrots with half the smashed garlic and a glug of olive oil, then lightly season. Add the orange juice and the thyme leaves and toss again. Mix the beets with the rest of the garlic, the rosemary, balsamic vinegar and salt and pepper. You can now put the vegetables either into separate ovenproof dishes, or together on a large roasting pan with the carrots in 1 half of the pan and the beets in the other. Place in the middle of the preheated oven and roast for around 1/2 hour or until golden.

While the carrots and beets are cooking, lay the chops on a board and score through the skin and the streaky-looking part of the meat. This will give you lovely crackling.

Firmly press a sage leaf onto the eye meat on both sides of each chop. Season with salt and pepper.

When the vegetables start to color, heat a large ovenproof frying pan or small roasting pan on the burner, add a good glug of olive oil and put in the chops. As soon as you've got nice color on 1 side, turn the chops over and place the pan in the oven for 10 minutes, or until the chops are crisp on the outside and just cooked through and juicy in the middle. Remove the chops to a warmed plate. Pour most of the fat out of the pan and add a squeeze of lemon juice to it. Stir and scrape the lovely sticky bits off the bottom and drizzle all over the chops. Remove the carrots and beets from the oven - they should be nice and sticky by now. Serve them with the chops and a glass of wine.

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Newest Ratings and Reviews

Read all 12 reviews

  • on September 17, 2011

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    While the meal turned out well for us, this recipe is written very generally, and now we have the charred dishes to prove it. How exactly are the vegetables going to caramelize with not burning the dish in the oven? what are the amounts that work best in the oven to prevent the dishes from scorching? should there be more water, or olive oil? The way this recipe is written, while delicious, is more of a suggestion than a blueprint.

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  • on September 08, 2011

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    Made this for my family tonight.

    My beets were undercooked, which is totally my fault. They were extra large and cutting them in half wasn't good enough for them to cook as quickly as the carrots.

    I couldn't taste the rosemary in the beets -- the balsamic and beet flavors were too strong.

    Everybody liked the carrots, which came out golden brown and delicious.

    I didn't transfer the pork chops to the oven because I ALWAYS burn myself after I take it back out. I'm forgetful... I forget it's hot. But they browned up nicely just on the stovetop. The sauce, just drippings and lemon juice, was great.

    people found this review Helpful.
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  • on February 06, 2011

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    Lots of work having to precook the veggies. I haven't been able to get a great carmelization on the carrots. Will keep it on hand.

    people found this review Helpful.
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