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#28083 - 07/10/02 04:55 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Fernando Offline
Executive Member

Registered: 07/05/01
Posts: 1551
Loc: Madrid, Spain
A bug! It was obviously refrigerator wink Otherwise you would have gazpacho ice-cream :p

I'm going to correct it before someone think that gazpacho may be unfreezed by heating it in the microwave...

Fernando

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#28084 - 07/25/05 12:19 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Puna Offline
Executive Member

Registered: 07/07/00
Posts: 1437
Loc: Charlotte, NC. U.S.A.
I'm resurrecting a very old thread -

First, praise to our resident Chef Fernando wink
It's been just about as hot here as in Madrid, so on Sunday I had a bunch of people over for Gazpacho and Ajo blanco - both recipes Fernando shared ages ago.

Smashing success - gracias once again Chef F laugh

I noticed a thread a few weeks ago reference Gazpacho and the question of canned tomatoes - as you will see above the fresh tomatoes need to be quite ripe ... give that a tryp before opening a can especially during the summer when there are good tomatoes ....
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#28085 - 07/25/05 01:03 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Fernando Offline
Executive Member

Registered: 07/05/01
Posts: 1551
Loc: Madrid, Spain
Resident chef Fernando here Puna! hahaha laugh

You may not believe it, but I've just eaten a gazpacho today (not to anyone's surprise... I eat it twice or three times a week in summer).

There are some interesting variants on the recipes I've recently heard of:

Gazpacho: Eliminate cucumber to have it taste more to tomato and be more thick.

Salmorejo: Use bread, tomatos, only a slice of garlic, salt, olive oil, and water. Eliminate the green pepper, the harricots and the onion. It is superb with some small slices of toasted cured ham over it. Hmmmmmm...

I've also learnt an incredible recipe with salmorejo....

Cover a plate with some salmorejo. Then put lettuce, some small pieces of tomato, tuna fish also in small pieces and fried chopped bacon. Et voilá! Ensalada de atún y bacon con salmorejo (tuna fish and bacon salad with salmorejo). It is incredible believe me...

Fernando

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#28086 - 07/25/05 01:13 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Puna Offline
Executive Member

Registered: 07/07/00
Posts: 1437
Loc: Charlotte, NC. U.S.A.
Because I dislike green peppers I never use them -you can substitute pimentos for the red pepper - or use both - for a bit more tang.

Now, I just wish I were somewhere in Spain eating my gazpacho - preferably at the beach ....

Will have to try Ensalada de atún y bacon con salmorejo!
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emotionally & mentally in Spain - physically in Charlotte
http://www.wendycrawfordwrites.com/

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#28087 - 07/25/05 02:02 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Jerezano Offline
Member

Registered: 10/12/04
Posts: 109
Loc: Fez/Jerez
I would amend Fernando's recipe by saying that the soup is really more delicious if its strained (so you don't end up with bits of onion and green pepper in your teeth) and I usually add in addition to vinegar a little lemon juice, and about a quarter teaspoon of powdered cumin. Esta requetebueno!
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#28088 - 08/21/05 06:41 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
OsoMajor Offline
Executive Member

Registered: 04/06/03
Posts: 330
Loc: Garden Grove, California
I just finished reading thru this discussion and wanted to make a comment regarding the use of canned tomatoes.

Gazpacho at it's best is simple, made with the freshest vegetables available. Whether to use canned tomatoes over fresh is simply to use the best quality canned tomatoes. The best ones to use are Italian canned tomatoes. Companies that can tomatoes only use fully ripened fruit, not green unripened ones that most people are accustomed to when buying them at the local grocery store. Ethylene gas is used to turn them red. That's why stored bought tomatoes don't taste as good as vine ripened ones.

I have made gazpacho with whole canned Italian tomatoes when I can't find vine ripened ones. The taste is very flavorful, more so than using unripened tomatoes! wink
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#28089 - 08/25/05 01:11 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Jana Offline
Member

Registered: 04/13/02
Posts: 188
Loc: Tucson
Just a note gadget-minded folks. I have all of them, but just bought a food mill for gazpacho. Peeling and seeding tomatoes is a pain and the food mill takes them out beautifully. I use a hand-held blender to start, as opposed to a regular blender or food processor. That way, I can puree a very large bowl at one time. Then I pour through the food mill into another bowl and chill. It goes really fast when you start making it regularly. My only problem is keeping my husband out of it so we have some for dinner.

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#28090 - 08/25/05 06:10 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Fernando Offline
Executive Member

Registered: 07/05/01
Posts: 1551
Loc: Madrid, Spain
Do you peel the skin off the tomatoes??? eek

That's hard work!

I always make gazpacho and salmorejo with the skin of the tomatoes, without peeling them. You just have to wash them with water to remove chemical products.

With the skin gazpacho is more thick and consistent.

But just my opinion... as always it is a matter of preferences.

Fernando

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#28091 - 08/26/05 12:08 AM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
Jana Offline
Member

Registered: 04/13/02
Posts: 188
Loc: Tucson
I definitely do not peel and skin them with the food mill. It does the work for me. However, when my Spanish friend made salmorejo at my house before I had bought the food mill, she peeled the tomatoes. Fernando, you are right, it is totally a matter of preference. Fiber is great stuff!!!

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#28092 - 09/08/05 05:01 PM Re: An excellent Gazpacho recipe, anyone?
JA Offline
Full Member

Registered: 09/28/01
Posts: 116
Loc: usa
Through Andalusia, in Search of Gazpacho
By ANDREW FERREN
SPAIN is a matrix of themed routes - rutas as they are known in Spanish - carefully mapped out for those looking to follow a lead. There is the Catholic pilgrimage route of Santiago de Compostela, the Ruta del Quijote, trailing Cervantes's beloved character from windmill to windmill in La Mancha, and, in season, there is even a Strawberry Train.

So doesn't gazpacho, perhaps the country's most persuasive gastronomic goodwill ambassador, deserve the same? Cold soup was addictive long before the actress Carmen Maura tossed a fistful of Valium into a blender of gazpacho in Pedro Almodóvar's 1988 film, "Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown." Perhaps the ultimate indication of its appeal today might be that for just one euro, a McDonald's meal in Spain can be supersized with a refreshing cup of the stuff.

A little research conducted among chefs, food critics and historians suggested that tracing the regional origins of some of Spain's most popular cold soups - gazpacho andaluz, and its chilly culinary cousins, ajo blanco malagueño and salmorejo cordobés, among others - would form the basis of a route for travelers through Andalusia, going bowl to bowl across the lovely patchwork landscape of olive groves and jagged mountain ranges dotted with castle-crowned hilltop towns. But along this Ruta de la Sopa Fría (Cold Soup Route), which took me from Córdoba to Carmona, near Seville, and down through Antequera to Málaga, I soon learned that I was probably the only person pausing to ponder whence cometh the cooling concoctions.

According to the historian and writer Inés Eléxpuru, who has written extensively on both historical Andalusian "rutas" and the region's rich culinary legacy, "Gazpacho and other cold soups have always just been part of the gastronomic mix" for Spaniards.

From Córdoba in the north of Andalusia to Málaga on the Mediterranean coast in the south, this proved to be the case. Gazpacho, which started out neither red (tomatoes and peppers didn't make the culinary scene in Europe until brought from the Americas at the start of the 16th century) nor cold (given the lack of refrigerators in the Middle Ages), has never stopped evolving.

Food historians trace antecedents of gazpacho at least as far back as the Romans in the third century B.C. though these were further refined by 800 years of Moorish presence in the region. Most versions evolved as a means by which peasants could make a meal using old bread, olive oil, nuts or vegetables as well as bits of ham, hard-boiled eggs and other ingredients that were either torn up into a salad or puréed with a mortar and pestle. In Andalusia, these versions developed into subtly refined soups, but in other regions, like neighboring Extremadura, they remained salads and are, in fact, often served that way, and described as gazpacho extremeño or en trozos ("in pieces").

So what we may think of as the classic gazpacho of tomato, cucumber, peppers, garlic, day-old bread, olive oil, water and salt - all blended up and iced down - was itself an arriviste not so long ago.

It's no wonder that so many distinct recipes evolved. In a less humble way, the process continues today in the age of nueva cocina, when Spanish chefs garner Michelin stars by making cold soups with unexpected ingredients - watermelon, cherries, mango or even sardines, for instance.

The celebrated Andalusian chef Dani García, whose restaurant Calima, opening soon in Marbella, will dedicate an entire section of its menu to both traditional and interpretive cold soups, explained some of the current trends. "Traditional malagueño ajo blanco was a slightly bitter soup of bread, almonds, olive oil, garlic, vinegar and water, so it was served with grapes or melon to add a note of sweetness," he said. "Today, chefs may use that melon or other fruits to make sweeter soups and so then garnish them with something savory."

Córdoba, the mythic capital of Al Andalus - as Moorish Spain was known - remains one of the most romantic cities in all of Spain. In the maze of narrow streets in the ancient Jewish quarter, in the shadow of the monumental Mezquita, or Great Mosque, one is transported back to the 11th century, when Jews, Muslims and Christians shared the city in relative harmony. With its forest of nearly 850 marble columns, the Mezquita is one of the great architectural wonders of the world and reason enough to visit the city.

But I was in town for cold soup, since the city lends its name to a dish known as salmorejo cordobés - a sturdy form of gazpacho that, depending on whom you consult, includes more bread and less (or no) water than gazpacho and also has both hard-boiled and raw eggs for added texture and richness. In fact, it's sturdy enough that it is usually served on a plate rather than a bowl and traditionally arrives at the table topped with morsels of succulent jamón serrano and some chopped egg.

The salmorejo at El Churrasco on Calle Romero, a charmingly overdecorated Andalusian mesón, did not disappoint. Advised of my interest tracing the origins of Andalusia's cold soups, the affable waiter Paco suggested I order some crisply fried eggplant as a vehicle for the creamy salmorejo.

Salmorejo was not the only dish I tried at El Churrasco. Though I was not meant to sample it until Málaga, the ajo blanco tempted me, and for good reason. It was a luscious purée of pine nuts instead of almonds, topped with a chunky dice of acidic green apple and sweet sultanas. It quickly became clear that cold soup respects no traditional borders.

Just down the street, Casa Pepe, a lively jumble of small rooms on two floors, with a shaded patio at its heart, offers its own inspired version of ajo blanco in which a scoop of tart green apple ice cream and four translucent cubes of raisin confit float. The chef, Juan Carlo Muñoz, also offers a gazpacho of cherries with a drizzle of chive oil - maintaining the sweet-savory balance - on top, served in a short glass to be drunk.

Since gazpacho andaluz is the patrimony of an entire province and no one particular town, I was free to select the next stop on the Ruta and chose Carmona, a town most likely as old as gazpacho itself. Perched on a highly defensible hill overlooking the vast Andalusian plains, Carmona was for millennia an important stop on the trade route between Córdoba and Seville, as seen by the picturesque town's high density of Roman and Moorish ruins as well as splendidly ornate Baroque churches and grand palaces.

Restaurant San Fernando occupies an airy second-floor dining room with large windows overlooking the treetops and giddy wrought-iron pavilion in the Plaza San Fernando below. While the luxuriantly creamy soup was about the closest thing I would sample on my journey to a classic gazpacho, it was served in a bowl made of decoratively interlaced cucumber slices.

Heading southeast out of Carmona across the wide-open fields where centuries before, gazpacho's early practitioners perfected their recipes between shifts picking olives or harvesting wheat, one passes such picturesque towns as Marchena and Osuna en route to Antequera. The namesake of a soup known as porra antequerana, Antequera is perhaps even older than Carmona, given the Bronze Age complex of vast cave chambers on the outskirts of town. The Municipal Museum includes more recent cultural relics, most notably the famous first-century Ephebe of Antequera - a beautifully preserved Roman bronze sculpture of a youth.

According to most recipes, porra is basically gazpacho to which no water is added, creating a soup that is denser and slightly more acidic than most gazpachos. Most recipes call for topping it with bits of jamón serrano and hard-boiled egg, but in Antequera I didn't meet a porra that didn't also wear some tuna and tomato wedges as well. The best I had was at La Espuela, but it may have had to do with the romance of the location since the restaurant is inside the city's historic bullring.

Just 45 minutes south of Antequera is Málaga, cradle of ajo blanco. José Carlos Capel, perhaps Spain's leading food critic, suggested I go to the Michelin one-star restaurant Café de Paris to try the ajo blanco, which is allegedly garnished with a frozen red wine granita, "giving the soup a touch of nobility." I say "allegedly garnished" because Café de Paris was unexpectedly closed, so I booked at the recently opened Trayamar, where there were four cold soups on the menu - two gazpachos and two ajo blancos. The best of the bunch was a richly smooth, more or less traditional ajo blanco of almonds, but at the bottom of which floated diced mango macerated in anis-flavored liqueur.

Like Málaga itself - its historic center being rapidly revitalized - it seems that cold soups are preserving the best of their traditional incarnations, but freely updating. Five hundred years after the introduction of the tomato, it's worth considering that the Ruta de la Sopa Fría might be more about where the road is leading than where it's been.

RESTAURANTS

CÓRDOBA: Casa Pepe de la Judería, Calle Romero 1, (34-957) 200 744. Beyond cold soups, house specialties include Sefardi lamb with honey and hazelnuts. Lunch for two with wine, about $60 to $75, at $1.25 to the euro.

El Churrasco, Calle Romero 16, (34-957) 290 819. Known for its salmorejo and ajo blanco with pine nuts, this restaurant offers such specialties as humble but rich fried beans with jamón serrano. Dinner for two with wine and a glass of local fino, known as Montilla, about $100.

CARMONA: San Fernando, Calle Sacramento 3, (34-954) 143 556. In addition to the standout gazpacho, try the cumin-infused vegetable appetizers "a la Carmona." Entrees include chuletitas - tiny lamb chops - and codfish on garlic mousse with calamari sauce. Lunch $25 to $50 a person. Or try the 22-euro ($27.50) tasting menu.

ANTEQUERA: La Espuela, Plaza de Toros de Antequera, (34-952) 703 424. The restaurant specializes in traditional Andalusian dishes like rabo de toro (stewed bull's tail), as well as the porra antequerana. Lunch for two with wine, about $60.

MÁLAGA: Café de Paris, Calle Vélez Málaga 8, Zona La Malagueta, (34-952) 225 043. The restaurant is best known for several cold soups, among them an ajo blanco with red wine granita, and several fruit gazpachos as well. Lunch for two with wine, about $125.

Trayamar, Plaza Uncibay 9, (34-952) 215 459. The menu changes frequently, but beyond its interpretive versions of cold soups, Trayamar specializes in seafood such as grouper with three types of chard. Dinner for two with wine, $100 to $125.

HOTELS

CÓRDOBA: Hotel NH Amistad Córdoba, Plaza de Maimónides 3, (34-957) 420 335; www.nh-hotels.com. A four-star hotel housed in two 18th-century mansions and an adjoining building in the heart of the old city near the Mosque. Rooms are clean and modern. Double rooms from $106 to $190; not including breakfast ($18.70) and 7 percent tax.

MÁLAGA: Hotel Larios, Calle Marqués de Larios 2, (34-952) 222 200; www.hotel-larios.com. On the city's grandest pedestrian street, the hotel has a rooftop terrace bar with views over the city. Rooms, most with small balconies, are spacious and modern with a discernable Art Deco accent. Doubles from $120 to $187; not including breakfast ($15) and 7 percent tax.
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JA

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