Cured pork tenderloin
Cured pork tenderloin is found in various cuisines in Mediterranean Europe and South America.
It is typically salted or brined then dried or smoked.
Spanien
In Spanish cuisine, lomo embuchado is a dry-cured meat made from a pork tenderloin, sometimes called caña de lomo lomo or just lomo for short. It is similar to cecina, but with pork instead of beef.
Italien
In Italian cuisine, there are many variants of lonza stagionata. Capocolla is very similar, but made from the neck muscle rather than the tenderloin, and often stuffed into a casing.
Corsica
In Corsican cuisine, lonzu is cured loin.
Zypern
In Cypriot cuisine, lountza (Greek: λούντζα) is made of pork tenderloin, which is first brined and marinated in red wine, then dried and smoked.[1]
It may be sold immediately after smoking, or aged. As it ages, it becomes harder and more strongly flavored. It may be spiced with coriander.[1]
Lountza may be served cooked or uncooked with alcoholic drinks such as zivania or wine. Grilled lountza served with other Cypriot foods such as halloumi and kefalotyri cheese often appears in meze platters. Sandwiches made out of grilled lountza and halloumi are favorite fast food snacks in Cyprus.
Griechenland
In Mykonos and Syros, Greece louza is preserved pork loin.[2]
Etymology
All of the names above come directly or indirectly from Latin lumbus 'loin'.
See also
References
- ^ a b Yangkou, Varvara. "Λούντζα". foodmuseum.cs.ucy.ac.cy (in Greek). Cyprus Food Virtual Museum. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- ^ "Local Products". mykonos.gr. Mykonos. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
External links
- The dictionary definition of cured pork tenderloin at Wiktionary