Farmers "Uncle Bob" & Kate Boyce share their secret recipe for mock tenders
In Central Pennsylvania near the town of Carlisle, there's a family farm called Lil' Ponderosa where "Uncle Bob" and "Aunt Kate," as they're known to all their friends, raise Black Angus cows on grass pasture (with no chemicals, no pesticides, hormones, or nothin').
Uncle Bob works outside all day, moving his cattle, mending fences, ascertaining the health of the grasses, and generally being an expert at what he does. (He's also been known to visit young farmers who live in the area on his way back from town, just to check in and see how their operations are going.)
Kate is the expert cook of the house; she holds their family secrets for turning long-forgotten cuts of meat into culinary masterpieces. Her most prized recipe is for mock tenders, and she served it to this writer when I came by for a visit recently. I ate three helpings, begged for the recipe -- at which point she blushed and told me it was the simplest thing in the world -- and she agreed to share her secret.
Aunt Kate's World's Tastiest Mock Tenders
A cheap cut that's absolutely delicious if you cook it right. (Don't sear it like a tenderloin!)
Ingredients
- 3 pounds mock tenders
- 2 medium-sized onions
- 2-3 gloves garlic, to taste
- salt and pepper, to taste
Instructions
- In a skillet, brown meat on both sides.
- Then add water to come up to half on the side of the meat.
- Add salt and pepper to taste. Add a couple of bay leaves.
- Chop two medium sized onions and shred over top of meat and into the water.
- Add two or three cloves of garlic – finely chopped.
- Cover with a tight fitting lid and simmer for 2 - 2.5 hours. Do not boil. You are trying to capture the flavor of the meat.
- Serve!
Thank you for sharing your recipe, Aunt Kate! Shop mock tenders over here, and keep an eye out for Uncle Bob and Aunt Kate's Lil' Ponderosa Beef.