Recipes to cut out and keep

Last post 16-02-2008, 15:15 by notthat. 1 replies.
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  •  12-12-2007, 15:08

    Recipes to cut out and keep

    Pasta casserole with small cockles

    Description

    Small cockles (coquinas in Spanish) are a kind of mollusk sold, like any other, at a good price. In the old days, one of the attractions of sea bathing was collecting cockles. One would poke about a bit in the sand and, with a little luck, come back not only with their body refreshed but also with a good handful of cockles. Cockles are tightly sealed. Therefore in Spanish ‘acoquinarse’ means to be a coward, to shrink away, to be disheartened. For a human being, it is not easy to come out of one’s ‘cockle shell’. As for the cockle, all it takes is to put it in a pot of boiling water. This pasta and cockle casserole belongs to the family of Malaga casseroles or clams. In Italy, there is a very famous dish: ‘spaghetti a la vongole,’ but the Malaga dish is usually more soup-like and picks up a special flavour from the cockles.

    Method

    Lightly fry the peeled and seedless tomatoes and garlic, parsley and onion in olive oil. When this gentle frying is complete, add paprika and pour everything into a stew pan together with the artichokes (from which the coarse leaves have been removed), shelled broad beans and cockles (well washed and without a trace of sand). Stir-fry at low heat until the cockles open, then add the proper amount of water and salt, as well as saffron to give it colour. Cook until the beans are tender and add the noodles and the peeled potato cubes. Next, boil over a low flame until the noodles are done. You may add hot water if the stew is too thick. Upon removing the flame, season with mint.

    Ingredients

    1/2 kg cockles

    1/2 kg artichokes

    1/2 kg broad beans

    1 tomato

    2 potatoes

    200g noodles

    1 onion

    2 cloves of garlic

    parsley

    saffron, paprika, mint

    olive oil, salt and water. Anchovies are optional

    Malaga stew

    Description

    Although the most famous of Spanish stews is that from Madrid, this one is prepared throughout the country, with some variations. In Andalucía, there are the famous varieties of Andújar (Jaén), which includes fresh bacon, ham, veal and cabbage; Fernán Núñez (Cordoba), made with chicken, fresh or aged bacon, potatoes, Spanish oyster plant,tender thistles and aubergines; and Granada, with chickpeas, marrow, green beans, beef and parsley, among others. The manner in which it is served is one of its defining features. It generally comes in three platters: the broth, the chickpeas and the ‘pringá’. In contrast, in the case of the maragato-style stew, the broth is served last.

    Method

    First soak the chickpeas overnight and then put them into a pot with water, together with the beef, bacon, ham and knuckle bone. When it begins to boil, skim off the foam and let the preparation cook until the chickpeas are tender. Next take out the juices, leaving the chickpeas in the pot, and put in the green beans, marrow and peeled potatoes. Add a spoonful of hog lard and a little boiling water, and place over a low flame. In a mortar, grind cumin, garlic, pepper and cooked, peeled and seedless tomatoes. Pour this, mixed all together, over the chickpeas. Season and let cook a while longer. Finally, make a soup from the juices, adding garlic and a few very thin slices of bread.

    Ingredients

    300 g chickpeas

    200 g beef

    50 g bacon

    100 g green beans

    100 g marrow

    50 g potatoes

    2 tomatoes

    1 clove of garlic

    ham

    knuckle bone

    hog lard

    cumin

    pepper

    bread, water and salt

    Regards

     

  • 28339 in reply to 23976
     16-02-2008, 15:15

    Re: Recipes to cut out and keep (Los hidalgos’ cold soup)

    Los hidalgos’ cold soup

    Description

    This is a very summery and very Andalusian dish. It is linked in origin to the gazpacho and is listed in menus together with starters and salads. It is a soup with fresh vegetables, of a thicker texture than gazpacho, but with the same nutritional value. Being a traditional and simple dish, it may perhaps be a little undervalued, but it can satisfy the fiercest appetite and the most exquisite palate.

    Method

    Put the almonds in a bowl together with damp, but not soggy, breadcrumbs, garlic cloves and salt. Beat the ingredients for at least three minutes, adding water as necessary to obtain a thick, smooth cream. Allow to cool in a refrigerator in a closed container. Serve as individual portions, decorating the surface with grated hardboiled egg and green grapes.

    Ingredients

    1/4 kg peeled raw almonds

    2 cloves of garlic

    breadcrumbs

    salt

    100 ml olive oil

    1 hardboiled egg

    green grapes

    Baked apples with malaga wine

    Description

    Considered by the Bible as the forbidden fruit par excellence, the main ingredient of this dessert can be found in markets nearly all year round. The apple was introduced to the Spanish peninsula by the Romans and the Arabs, and Spain is now one of the biggest producers of the fruit.

    Method

    Core the apples using a corer so that they do not split, and place on a baking tray. Fill the centres with cinnamon and sugar and pour a generous amount of Malaga wine over them. Bake the apples in the oven for 20-25 minutes at 180 degrees.

    Ingredients

    apples , (the ‘reineta’ variety is the juiciest and sweetest)

    ground cinnamon

    sugar

    sweet Malaga wine

    Regards

     

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