Two perfect instant Father’s day gifts:

InsideGOLF
Food

Clubhouse Eats: The pork chop at Reynolds Lake Oconee’s National Tavern is so tender you can cut it with a fork

national tavern pork chop

The National Tavern's pork chop is fired to perfection in a wood-burning oven that cranks to 700 degrees.

Courtesy

This Monday, in Atlanta, it will all be settled. When the final putt drops at the Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club, we will have a winner of the 2020 FedEx Cup Playoffs. That’s $15 million to one very happy golfer, and a comforting sense of closure for the rest of us in what has been an otherwise uncertain year.

As long as we’re talking about clarity, here’s something else in Georgia that’s already been decided. About an hour east of Atlanta, at Reynolds Lake Oconee, surveys have been conducted asking guests to name their favorite meal at the luxury resort. With the ballots counted, the winner, in a landslide, is the pork chop at the National Tavern.

Food
Clubhouse Eats: Just outside Chicago, the Glen Club serves up a stunning seared salmon
By: Josh Sens

As its name suggests, the tavern is a lively, relaxed redoubt that serves farm-fresh iterations of traditional favorites, from Southern fried chicken with honey-mustard dipping sauce to a Low Country boil, starring shrimp, andouille sausage and corn on the cob.

But nothing keeps the kitchen busier than the pork chop orders, which come in fast and furious, night after night. What makes it so special? For starters, this is richly marbled meat, like the pork equivalent of Kobe beef. And it’s fired to perfection in a wood-burning oven that cranks to 700 degrees, so the chop sears quickly and stays juicy, its flavors sealed, its texture is so tender you can cut it with a fork. No need for a knife. As a compliment to this delicious cut, the pork chop comes with a baked potato and a side of creamed corn, a double-dose of starchy satisfaction. 

Who will win at East Lake? That’s to be determined.

But as for what you’ll want to eat at Lake Oconee, there’s no doubt.

Related Articles

Lifestyle
Your guide to Bordeaux-style blends from Napa Valley
By: Shaun Tolson
Lifestyle
Why canned cocktails are the perfect on-course companions
By: Michael Corcoran
Food
How to make the perfect martini, according to a master mixologist
By: Shaun Lewis
Food
5 grilling mistakes you absolutely must avoid this Labor Day weekend
By: Josh Sens
Food
The secret to making perfect hash browns, according to a golf-club chef
By: Josh Sens
Food
How to make the perfect post-round lobster roll, according to a golf club chef
By: Shaun Lewis
Lifestyle
How to make 3 fruity and refreshing rum-based 'tiki' cocktails
By: Shaun Lewis
Food
How to make delicious mint ice cream, according to a golf-club chef
By: Josh Sens
Lifestyle
Here's how to build a whisky bar to suit every palate
By: Jessica Marksbury
was:
Exit mobile version