In Greece, skewers of garlicky meat called souvlaki are sold on street corners, in restaurants and at the beach, served hot off the grill to be enjoyed while out and about.
Though a yogurt marinade isn’t traditional for pork souvlaki, in this recipe from our cookbook “ Milk Street 365: The All-Purpose Cookbook for Every Day of the Year,” we take advantage of the tenderizing effects the cultured dairy has on meat. The combination of lactic acid and calcium loosens the structure of the proteins, tenderizing the meat. Flavored with red wine vinegar, oregano, garlic and salt and pepper, the yogurt pulls double duty as a creamy, tangy sauce.
Easy-to-source pork tenderloin is trimmed of its silver skin, halved lengthwise and cut into chuncks before being tossed with the yogurt mixture. After marinating, the pork is threaded onto skewers with sweet-tart Campari or cocktail tomatoes. Zucchini cut into chunks works nicely, too — or even a combination. Rather than grilling, we move the cooking indoors and broil the skewers until the vegetables blister and the meat chars.
Enjoy right off the skewer, over a bed of rice or orzo pilaf, or stuffed into warmed pita. Serve with the yogurt sauce and lemon wedges.