From tasty tapas to superb seafood and traditional roasts,
Spanish food is all about making the most of the best local produce. We asked
travel writer Annie Bennett, to pick ten of the best dishes to try on your
travels.
Don't leave Spain without trying...
Gazpacho
The reddest, ripest tomatoes, olive oil, garlic, bread,
peppers and cucumber are blended until silky smooth, then chilled and poured
into bowls or glasses. So delicious, so refreshing. In Andalucía in southern
Spain, people have it every day in summer and there is always a jug on the
counter in tapas bars. Also try salmorejo from Córdoba, a thicker version that
is often served with pieces of Ibérico ham on the top.
Paella
In the Valencia region, they claim you can eat a different
rice dish every day of the year, but let’s stick with the most traditional
version for now. Ingredients for paella Valenciana include chicken or rabbit,
saffron, runner beans and butter beans. But the all-important element is the
rice, ideally the bomba or calasaparra varieties grown on Spain’s east coast,
which are particularly good for absorbing all the flavours.
Tortilla Española
Eggs, potatoes, onions… that’s it – and some purists even
consider that adding onion is a gastronomic crime of the highest order. The
Spanish omelette is so much more than the sum of its parts. The potatoes and
onions are slow fried in olive oil then mixed with the beaten eggs for the
flavours to mix before cooking. Add
chorizo, ham, spinach, courgettes or whatever you have to hand to make a tasty
meal out of next to nothing.
Gambas al ajillo
You walk into a tapas bar, the barman is handing a customer
an earthenware dish of sizzling prawns, the tantalising aroma hits your
nostrils and you just have to order some too. To recreate it at home, just fry
some sliced garlic and green chilli in olive oil, throw in the prawns for a
couple of minutes and add some parsley. Couldn’t be simpler, couldn’t be
tastier.
Tostas de tomate y jamón
Black pigs roam among the holm oak trees in western Spain in
search of the acorns that give marbled magenta Ibérico ham its distinctive
nutty flavour. Rub thick pieces of toast
with garlic and tomato, pour on some olive oil and top with slices of jamón for
a quick, delicious lunch.
Patatas bravas
Perhaps the most ubiquitous of tapas, patatas bravas vary
quite a bit around the country, but all versions involve chunks of fried
potato. In Madrid, bravas sauce is made with sweet and spicy pimentón – Spanish
paprika – olive oil, flour and stock – but never tomatoes. Some people add
garlic, some a dash of fino sherry, while others selfishly insist of keeping
their secret ingredients to themselves.
Pollo al ajillo
Any Spaniard will tell you that the best garlic chicken ever
is the one their grandmother makes. And of course they are right. Unpeeled
cloves of garlic are fried in olive oil to flavour it, then taken out before
adding pieces of chicken. When that is cooked, the garlic goes back in with some
rosemary, thyme and some dry sherry or white wine. But there is no definitive
recipe for this much-loved dish.
Cochinillo asado
People might claim they are going to Segovia to see its
astounding Roman aqueduct, fairytale castle or elegant cathedral, but really
all that is just to build up an appetite for lunch. And in Segovia that means
either roast suckling pig or lamb. The meat is cooked in huge wood-fired ovens
and is so tender it is cut with the side of an earthenware plate.
Pisto
The Spanish version of ratatouille turns up all over the
country in different guises, but is most typical in the towns of villages
across the plains of La Mancha south of Madrid.
Onions, garlic, courgettes, peppers and tomatoes are slow fried in olive
oil – this is not a dish that likes to be rushed. It is usually served as a
starter, sometimes with fried eggs or chorizo, but is great as a side dish
too.
Turrón
Spaniards devour massive amounts of turrón, or almond
nougat, at Christmas, although it is available all year round. Most of it is
made in the small town of Jijona in the province of Alicante, using
locally-grown almonds mixed with honey and egg white. There are two basic types
- a soft, smooth version, called Jijona,
and hard Alicante turrón, which contains pieces of almond.
Sources -http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/howto/guide/top-10-foods-try-spain
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