Saturday, January 4, 2025

FOR AULD LANG SYNE—SIMPLE FOOD

 Old friends came visiting last week. Old friends and their younger offspring. What a joy to see them again and welcome them to my home. Being old myself, where once a dinner party for ten was a piece of cake, now I need to simplify the menu and spread the prep over a couple of days. 




Sunday lunch for eight. To start we have a (non-alcoholic) pomegranate punch for toasting; blue cheese dip with regañás crackers; home-cured olives (picked from the olive tree right outside the door), and my favorite winter salad of oranges, avocados and fennel with fresh lettuce and radishes from the garden. 

Chickens have been marinated with herbs then roasted with medium Sherry. Small chickens are done in one hour, ready to carve and serve.

The main course was my version of Chicken “Marbella.” As I have posted before, the “classic” recipe for Chicken Marbella, beloved for holiday meals (from The Silver Palate Cookbook by Julee Rosso and Sheila Lukins: Workman Publishing; 1979), is not really from Marbella. Just as the authors took liberties with Marbella, so have I with their recipe. I marinated four small chickens with caper brine, herbs, garlic and Sherry vinegar, then roasted them with home-cured olives, prunes and oloroso seco (medium-dry) Sherry. My son Ben carved the chickens and heaped it on a platter. The pan juices with jammy prunes and olives are ever-so-good spooned over quick-cook couscous. 



As a side dish I served a heaping platter of latkes, potato pancakes. These are a favorite food for the Hanukkah holiday and a wonderful side for any meal. One of my guests, from Cologne, Germany, declared the latkes were just like home, served with apple sauce and sour cream.

I fried three dozen latkes the day before the gathering and reheated them in a convection oven with fan. They crisped up nicely. I bet an air fryer would be perfect for reheating latkes. 







Dessert was Bread Pudding with Fruits and Nuts, waiting in the wings (freezer) for a special occasion. I served it with lashings of whipped cream. 

It was nearly sundown when lunch was finished, time to light the candles. And to wish old friends adios, hasta ahora


Here are links to the recipes for the foods served at my festive lunch:


Easy blue cheese dip served with crispy regañás. The recipes for both are here.


The recipe for Salad with Avocado, Oranges, and Fennel is here.




The recipe for my version of Chicken Marbella is here. Pictured here, four small chickens that have been marinated, ready for roasting. 






The recipe for Bread Pudding with Fruits and Nuts is here.





More about Peter Nielsen, artist and handyman who now lives in England (he is shown in the photo at the top), is here.

Saturday, December 28, 2024

A MERRY LITTLE CHRISTMAS

 

Christmas morning. My grandson, Leo Searl, home from university, is spending a few days at my house. He makes breakfast on Christmas morning--smoked salmon on toast with cream cheese and scrambled eggs. What a pleasure to catch up with what's going on in his life.


What's in this strangely-shaped present under the tree for Ben?





Oh, wow! Look what's in my Christmas box! It's a sampler of ibérico ham, a selection of sliced ham, shoulder-ham, chorizo and cured fat from Dehesa Monteros, made from ibérico pigs of the Rubio Dorado breed. They start out eating chestnuts in the forests of Ronda and are finished on bellotas, wild acorns. 









Christmas lunch for three. On a sunny afternoon we started with sopa de galets, a rich chicken broth with giant pasta shells stuffed with pâté. Marinated "standing rib roast" of ibérico pork centered the main course, accompanied by potatoes and squash roasted with onions and apples. 

The pork loin has been boned to facilitate carving, but the rack of ribs tied back on for roasting to keep the meat moist. Ibérico pork with its marbling of fat is especially juicy. Ibérico pork is usually cooked medium-rare to medium--still pink in the center. (The recipe for the pork marinade is here.)




A side dish of chard sautéd with garlic, raisins and pine nuts was served in a colorful hand-made ceramic bowl by Tara Chapman, Leo's mum. 





I bought a kilo of locally-grown pecans, called nueces americanas, from a chica in my aerobics class. The pecans, which I adore, inspired me to make a nut torte just for me! It was sugar-free and gluten free as well. (I used this recipe for walnut torte, swapping King Arthur baking sugar substitute and gluten-free bread crumbs.) For the guys there were also fig brownies with real sugar, sweet figs and lots of nuts. Both desserts are good served with a dollop of rich Greek yogurt or whipped cream.
Pecan torte with a dollop of rich Greek yogurt.



From my kitchen to yours, MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL.

Saturday, December 21, 2024

PESTIÑOS, A SWEET FOR DUAL HOLIDAYS

 

For whatever holiday you're celebrating: pestiños are honey-glazed fried pastries.

This year both Christmas Eve and the first night of Hanukkah fall on December 24. This recipe for pestiños, honey-glazed fried pastries, is perfect for both holidays. 


In Spain, where nowadays most Christmas sweets are store-bought, pestiños are one of the few that are still homemade. Family and neighbors might gather on a chilly evening to roll, shape and fry pieces of a simple dough. Children can help with the dough, though frying is left to the grownups. 

Ready for 1st night of Hanukkah.
Hanukkah, the "festival of lights," is a Jewish holiday that marks the victory in the 2nd Century BCE of the Maccabees over an occupying force and the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem and the re-lighting of the menorah. Miraculously, the olive oil for the menorah, enough for a single day, lasted for eight days and nights. For that reason the holiday is also a celebration of olive oil when it’s traditional to serve fried foods, both sweet and savory. 
Serve pestiños for a tree-trimming party.

How to serve pestiños? For a Hanukkah party serve the pestiños with pomegranate or grape juice (with or without vodka); mulled wine or hot apple cider. They're equally good for a Christmas tree-trimming party with eggnog.

In Spanish homes, when friends come to visit during the holidays, it’s typical to serve a platter of homemade sweets such as pestiños as well as store-bought mantecados and roscos, accompanied by sweet Málaga wine, aguardiente (anise liqueur) and Spanish brandy de Jerez. 

It's an occasion to catch up on family news and marvel at how much the children have grown, to view the Belén, Nativity scene, and compare recipes for for Noche Buena, the  Christmas Eve festive dinner.

Pestiños are also good for breakfast or afternoon snacks with coffee, hot chocolate, tea or herbal infusions. For dessert, serve pestiños alongside a winter compote of apples and pears stewed with raisins and figs. 

Honey-Glazed Fritters
Pestiños

Serve pestiños for breakfast, snacks, dessert, parties.

These little pastries are fried in oil then dipped in warmed honey to glaze them. Olive oil in the pastry dough is traditional and adds flavor. Olive oil also is best for frying but less expensive sunflower oil (aceite de girasol) can be used instead. 

After dipping the fritters in honey let them dry on a rack for 30 minutes. They will soak up some of the honey but will still be somewhat sticky. If you prefer not to finish them with honey, instead dredge them in sugar while they are still hot. Place the fritters on a rack to cool. 

The dough can be made several days before using and kept refrigerated. Once fried, the fritters are best soon after they are made but can be stored in an air-tight tin up to five days. 

Makes 40 fritters.

¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 strip of orange peel
1 teaspoon aniseeds
2 ¼ cups all-purpose flour plus additional for rolling out the dough
¾ teaspoon salt
¼ cup orange juice
¼ cup white wine
Oil for frying (olive or sunflower)
½ cup honey
2 tablespoons water
1-2 teaspoons toasted sesame seeds
Granulated sugar (optional)

Place the olive oil in a small saucepan with the strip of orange peel. Heat it until it begins to sizzle. Add the aniseeds and remove the pan from the heat. Let the oil stand 5 minutes. Skim out and discard the orange peel.

Cut dough in diamond shapes.


Place the flour in a mixing bowl and stir in the salt. Make a well in the center and pour in the oil with aniseeds. Stir some of the flour into the oil. Add the orange juice and wine and mix them into the flour.  

Turn the dough out onto a work surface and knead it until smooth. The oil in the dough keeps it from sticking, so additional flour probably is not needed. Divide the dough in half and wrap each half in plastic wrap. Refrigerate 1 hour or up to 2 days.

Pinch dough firmly.

Cover a sheet pan with baking parchment. Lightly flour work surface. Unwrap one of the balls of dough and pat to flatten it. Roll it out into more or less a rectangular shape 8 to 10 inches wide and as thin as a penny. Use a knife or pastry wheel to cut strips about 2 inches wide. Cut again on the diagonal, making diamond (rhomboid) shapes of dough. 

Pick up a piece and pinch together the two points that are closest together. Pinch firmly so the dough does not open when fried. Place each folded piece of dough on the sheet pan. Gather up any scraps and roll out again. Save a small bit of dough to use to test the oil temperature. (If desired the sheet of shaped dough can be refrigerated for several hours before continuing with the frying.)

Roll, cut and shape the second ball of dough in the same manner.

Put oil in a pan to a depth of 1 inch. Heat on medium-high. Drop a small ball of dough into the oil. When it begins to sizzle, the oil is hot enough (360ºF). Add the pieces of dough without crowding the pan. When golden-brown on the bottom, carefully flip them to brown the reverse sides. Skim out the fritters and drain on paper towels. Continue frying remaining pieces of dough.

Dip in warmed honey.

 Place the honey in a pan with the water. Bring it to a boil and remove from the heat. Set a rack over a sheet pan to catch drips. One by one dip the fritters into the warm honey. Place them on the rack. Sprinkle with sesame seeds. Allow the fritters to dry. They will soak up some of the honey but will still be somewhat sticky. Sprinkle with sugar if desired.



Recipes for winter compotes to serve with pestiños:





More fried pastries: