As Ron reminded me, pork tenderloin is the piece of meat cut along the top of the rib cage, so I didn’t really carve a “tenderloin” from the leg and shoulder I sliced up - I just carved the meat to look like one. What I actually had was a chunk of pork roast. This marinade works well with chops, roasts - and yes, tenderloins. Even though the cut wasn’t really a tenderloin and the marinade isn’t really Tahitian, the name and the recipe and the result pleased me enough to blog it for you. I told Ron that if he didn’t stop reminding me of technicalities, I would feed him my infamous recipe for Leg of Tongue. It begins: Place foot in mouth, chewing words well ...
This recipe requires extra time 
for marination
Tahitian Tenderloin:
2 tsp. oil
¾ c. non-alcoholic cooking sherry
¼ c. dark soy sauce
¼ c. canola oil
1 tbsp. maple syrup
1 tbsp. maple syrup
1 or 2 large cloves garlic, minced fine
¼ tsp. oregano
¾ tsp. ginger (fresh or powdered)
¾ tsp. ginger (fresh or powdered)
Preheat oven to 350 deg. F. Sear “tenderloin” (or chops, or small pork roast) in large cast iron or ovenproof skillet on medium-high heat in 2 tsp. oil until well-browned on all sides. Remove from heat. Whisk together remaining ingredients. Brush tenderloin or other cut of pork with marinade, pouring remainder over. Tent skillet with foil, creating a tight seal. Place skillet in oven, roasting tenderloin 30-to-40 min., or until meat thermometer registers 150 deg. F.  Transfer pork to carving board, cutting into thick slices. Discard marinade - do not re-use.
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| Prepare marinade: Cooking sherry ... | 
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| Soy sauce ... | 
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| Canola oil ... | 
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| Maple syrup ... | 
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| Garlic ... | 
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| Oregano ... | 
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| Ginger ... | 
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| Whisk ... roast ... | 
| Slice and serve! A little more, Marlon? | 

 
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