Thursday, 29 September 2016

Eight legs

Modern take on a traditional dish, Ignicio, Barcelona Spain)
It is funny how people fear anything with more than 2 legs - spiders, krakens, centipedes, millipedes....octopus...rightly so, I guess; the more the legs, the more the ability to hurt you, right? But does that fear have to extend by becoming a fear or distaste for eating these? I have been told that tarantula is quite good, Kraken? who knows but I know for a fact that Octopus is SUB-LIME. When fresh and well cooked, it is firm and meaty. Agreed that those suckers can be slightly off putting but trust me, have a bite and you will see it doesn't bite back....har har.

Gato Negro, Santiago de Compostella (Spain)
The Galicians, those ancient fishermen with modern fame for their sea food, make one of the most famous octopus delicacies that I know of: Polbo á Feira/ Pulpo a la Gallega or Galician Octopus. Tis a traditional dish made with octopus boiled in a copper pot, then chopped and drizzled with olive oil and sprinkled with coarse salt and paprika, set in a wooden platter over boiled potatoes. The cooking is a bit laborious as the beast has to be dipped a few times in the boiling water ( to curl the tentacles), then boiled and then left in the hot water..I'd rather eat this dish in a restaurant, to be honest!
Meson David, Barcelona (Spain)
You are supposed to accompany this with a fresh young red but I have had it with a bowl of white wine and found it refreshingly light and wonderful. This dish is ideal for cold and blustery climes and once you get over your initial squeamishness about eating anything with suckers on it, you will be as in love with this dish as I am! Yum!

Obviously, there are many, many more eight legged recipes but I thought I would share one of my favourite ones with you :-) 

Here is a traditional recipe in a tea towel, that is ancient now:

Can you decipher the Spanish?














Wednesday, 14 September 2016

Unusual dumpling delight


Funny how most restaurants, be they Chinese, Japanese, Mexican or whichever, try to outdo each other in how similar their menus can be. I prefer to leave these restaurants to their faithful flock and try new places or dishes and follow Star Trek's vision, "to explore strange new (foods), to seek out new (dishes) and new (restaurants), to boldly go where no (cowardly) one has gone before. Oops, sorry Ye Trekkies but shhhhhh, I am a trekkie too so am allowed!

The above is a meatball dumpling which has been covered in glutinous rice and steamed. Absolutely delicious and definitely to be tried out at home. 

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Quackkkkk

Pan fried duck, France
There comes a point when you get sick of eating chicken, beef and pork...your tastebuds, if they were an emoticon, would go like this ðŸ˜– This is when my heart desires duck or venison and then settles on duck as more easily available. That meaty, gamey taste is just so amazing and I would have it more often but organic duck seems impossible to find. 

Crispy duck, Bratislava, Slovakia
The Chinese make amazing crispy duck - the Chinese make pretty amazing everything, let's be honest - their cuisine is their all time most popular export, isn't it? and to reason. 

Duck Teriyaki, Nanayo, Barcelona
The Japanese are not far behind with the above version of duck teriyaki.

Roasted duck, Casa G Krauss, Sighisoara, Romania
But this wee beastie is made flavourfully by many nations. Roasted in its skin and bathed in a wine and cream sauce, tis heavenly too

Duck with mushrooms, La Palmera, Barcelona, Spain
And how about this delightful pan fried duck with seasonal mushrooms, in a port sauce? 

Somewhere in the catalan countryside, Spain
Add red wine reduction and oh my...


And lastly, with a berry sauce...

I WANT ME SOME DUCK NOW!

Friday, 5 August 2016

Some random beauties


The other day, I revisited a place I hadn't been to for ages, to order a tapa I hadn't eaten in ages but which had stayed in my head as THE tapa to eat. Tis called 'Pop a la brava' which translates as octopus on a 'brava', the 'brava' being the Spanish version of the English chip. You must like/love octopus to like this dish but even for those who don't like octopus, trust me, you will have an orgasm eating this. Imagine a firm and tender slice of octopus on a crunchy but tender piece of potatoe, with a spicy binding sauce in between. Yummmmmmm. Definitely worth the nearly 12€ you fork out for 6 bites of heaven.

Recently too, I had this yummy and wondrously stodgy 'tapa' of what the Spanish call 'Russian salad' but is unheard of in Russia. Boiled taters, boiled veg like carrot and peas plus lashings of mayo and there you have it, a dish to see you through any Siberian winter. Add a delicious cava and voilá!


I am not in general a fritter fan but once in a while, who can refuse hot and crispy fresh squid with an unctuous sour cream dip next to it, accompanied by my favourite summer rosé cava? 

Wednesday, 3 August 2016

The king of (non dairy) milks- Hail Horchata!

Tiger nuts
Spain has a wonderful tradition of drinking 'horchata' of 'chufa' or Tiger nut milk. 
Sounds cool, huh, TIGER NUTS- but, never fear, no tiger has been unmanned ( untigered?) for this delight so PETA adherents, calm down. Funnily enough, these nuts are not even nuts but the tubers of a sedge family! The plant was first introduced by the Arabs in the region of Valencia and over time, the resulting milk/drink, which is very popular in summer, can be found everywhere in Spain. Though grown in many countries, especially for animal feed, tis just in Spain that the tubers are harvested for their milk. Once the sun has started sliding towards the horizon, people start coming out of their homes and mill around 'horchaterías' which sell this cooling drink, along with ice cream. 


As you can guess, I LOVE this milk but generally find that most places make it so sweet that just one sip gives me diabetes. Argh. And then a few years ago, a friend told me that the 'Horchateria' near my home also does the sugar free version so imagine my delight when I asked for it! Over time, my order has come to be half of the sugary one, mixed with half a glass of the sugar-free one and I am in heaven! 

Recently, I wondered if I could make my own. At 1.90€ for a 100 ml glass, it ain't cheap and frankly, anyone who has made soya milk can easily make this so I decided to go for it. Weirdly enough, finding organic 'chufa' was not easy but I found a place. The nuts themselves definitely look like dried dwarf tiger nuts ( ergo the name?), or even monkey nuts. LOL And yes, you can eat them raw and I wonder why most people don't since they are so tasty, like a more intense and sweeter almond. Yum! Here goes the making of:

Makes 1 litre
Ingredients:
125 gms tiger nuts
1 litre water
6 drops stevia + 1 teaspoon muscovado sugar (optional) or demerara or refined sugar. Please, no saccharine or chemical crap - UGH UGH
Method:
Soak the nuts in water for 24 hrs and make sure to change the water 2-3 times.
Do a final rinse the next day and put them in your blender with a cup of your litre of water.
Blend away till you get a thick and mostly smooth sludge.
Add the rest of the water and mix well. And now for the fun! Sieving! Woot woot! 
Once you have sieved the milk, add the sugary stuff to your taste or don't. DON'T chuck the leftover dried sludge - integrate it into your pancake or bread mix or why not, to your chicken à la coco (tiger) nut - it's delicious!
I also add poppy seed, chiia and or finely chopped almonds to my horchata as a post workout drink full of all the goodness and protein that the expensive, chemical laden protein shakes claim to have. And why not blend it with a banana? Sluuuuuuurp







Saturday, 30 July 2016

Easy peasy Brown seeded bread



Makes 1 large yummilicious loaf
Ingredients:
400 gms wholewheat flour
100 gms white flour
7 gms of dried yeast
11/2 tsp salt
300 ml warm water
1 tbsp olive oil or butter
2 tbsp poppy seed
2 tbsp sunflower seed ( you can add a combo of whichever seeds you like)

Method:
Mix everything except the water in a large bowl. 
Now add the water and form a dough which should be soft.
Kneed for 8-10 minutes until elasticky. 
Now cover your bowl with a wet tea towel, pop the bowl in a warm place ( mine is the oven) and wait for an hour for the first rise. Watch a film/serie, knit or whatever to take your mind off the time.
Now grease a large bread tin and plop your mix in. Yes, 'plop' can be used as a verb too.
Sprinkle some more seeds onto the surface of your dough and press them lightly in.
Cover with the wet tea towel once more, pop back in your warm place ( ahem) and wait for the proofing which should take another hour.
55 minutes into your proofing, heat up your oven. Don't forget to add a baking tin with water in it. This is a baker's trick to get a lovely crusty bread and the only way a home baker can make their oven compete with a professional steam oven. 
Bake at 200ºc for 30-35 minutes. 
When your alarm rings, carefully take out your tin and tap the bottom for a hollow noise which means the bread is done.
ENJOY!

Below is a version I made with just white flour and flax seeds, poppy seeds, sunflower seeds...mmmmmm

Wednesday, 27 July 2016

The bare truth about croissants

Croissants in Port Leucate Sunday Market
Did you know that croissants are made not just with butter but also with margarine and wait....lard? Yes, pig's lard. Oh horror! The person who invented this wondrous light and flaky creation has been turning in her ( of course, it is a woman!) grave ever since the Spanish, to name just one, got their hands on the recipe and mistreated it. Grrrrrr. In this post, I will show you the 3 main aberrations that go under the name of 'croissant' and how you, as a self respecting Croissant Cognoscenti (CC), can discern the true croissant from the non faithful.

Being a gourmand ( a fancy French word which just means that I am obsessed with food), how can one resist croissants for breakfast? Every day would be abuse but tis a guilty pleasure on weekends when these go, oh, so well with freshly ground Colombian coffee ( ooh la la indeed) and general waking up. Therefore, in my quest for the perfect croissant, I have travelled the length and breadth not just of Barcelona but of many, many places. Alas and alack, imitations abound but the discerning CC will always find her/his perfect bakery and the nearer to home, the better.

So, have a hasty bite or two of something sustaining and do sit down in a quiet and comfortable place for, the following info on the 3 worst sinners is not for the fainthearted! 

Number 3: The bun pretending to be a croissant or the Bunsant: 
This baked item is often found in airports. It is normally made with margarine but for what it costs you, it could have been made of liquid gold. The texture is dry and it leaves a funny, plasticky coating in your mouth which you try to desperately ignore, along with the desire to direct very foul language at the establishment that is playing with your evident jet-lag. To add to the insult, it can come accompanied by some very foul coffee but at this point, you are so tired that you bow your head and accept this fodder. Community service recommended for those found selling this.

Number 2: The almost butter or the Half Half: 
This item is generally found in industrial bakeries and bars. It looks kinda right - tis flaky, it doesn't run away when you prod it but when you, the discerning CC, bite into it, warning bells ring and a rather impolite word or two comes to mind. For what do we have here but sneakiness basking itself as a croissant when in reality, tis made with half margarine and butter but named and costing the same as a real croissant! Oh my, the evil of some bakers! I firmly recommend a 5 year prison sentence for those found practising such aberrant baking practises!

And now, for the worst. The one that beats all in evil, of intention, of taste, of look...I recommend the death sentence for anyone found not just making but touting this...this thing! Are you ready?

Number 1: The ones made of lard or the Crab croissant, also known as the WTF for short:
These, Ladies and Gentlemen, and especially if you are a practitioner of a religion forbidding the consumption of pig, are pure evil for not only do they not have an atom of butter but they also have a sticky, sweet coating/ glaze to which your hair will most definitely stick as you barf this out after the first horrible dry bite. And like a terrible rosé giving you indigestion, this thing will leave an oily coating in your mouth for the rest of the day that no amount of coffee will remove. The worst is that they abound everywhere in Spain though, their very particular crab shape will betray them instantly so watch out! 

To tranquillise you, here is a photo of a particularly good croissant brekky I had: 
Feeling better?

Or this?