Saturday, October 23, 2021

COLORFUL AUTUMNAL PEPPERS

 

"Stoplight" peppers--red, yellow, green.



I was making meat loaf for dinner and wanted a sauce or side to go with it. Not gravy, thank you very much. I’m not a gravy person. And not mushroom sauce, because my version of meatloaf includes mushrooms in the mix. I settled on roasted semáforo peppers—part side dish, part sauce, a little bit relish.


Marketed in threes, these peppers are called semáforo, or stoplight, for their red, yellow and green stop-and-go colors. Their bright colors and zesty flavors make them a perfect accompaniment to autumn. 

Roasted pepper salad is a favorite in tapa bars. It’s also popular served alongside fried and grilled fish. It’s a terrific topping for pizza or the Catalan version, coca. The peppers are a perfect foil for grilled entrecôte (steak). Scramble the peppers with eggs for a pipérade. Use them as sandwich filling. 

Roasted peppers make a zesty sauce for chicken meatloaf with mushrooms.


Heap peppers on toasts and top with anchovies.



The perfect meatloaf sandwich--thick slice of meatloaf, toasted bun with a little mayo and lots of roasted peppers.



Roasted Bell Peppers
Pimientos Asados

Red, yellow and green peppers make a colorful mélange.


The peppers are oven-roasted and need almost an hour in a moderate oven. They won’t char, as they do on a wood fire, but the skins will loosen and the flesh will become soft. They can be finished after peeling or, as in this recipe, sautéd in olive oil with garlic.

 Use all red or mixed color peppers. 

Serves 4.

4-5 small bell peppers
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 clove garlic, sliced crosswise
Chile, to taste
Salt
¼ teaspoon Sherry vinegar
Anchovies (optional)
Toasts (optional)
Chopped scallions (optional)

Preheat oven to 400ºF. Arrange the peppers in an oven pan and place it in the oven. After 10 minutes, lower the temperature to 350ºF. 

Oven-roasted peppers don't char, but skins come off easily.


Roast the peppers, turning them over every 15 minutes, until they are soft and the skin has visibly loosened from the flesh, about 45 minutes more.

Remove the pan from the oven and cover the peppers with a cloth. Allow to stand 10 minutes.

Peel off skin, discard seeds.
Peel away the skins of the peppers. Working over a bowl to catch the juices, split the peppers open and carefully remove seeds. Save the juices, strained of seeds. Cut or tear the flesh into thin strips. Heat the oil in a skillet and add the garlic and chile. When garlic begins to color, add the peppers. Sauté them on moderately high heat for 5 minutes. Add salt to taste and the reserved juices (4 to 5 tablespoons). Cook on moderate heat 5 minutes more. Stir in the vinegar.Serve the peppers hot, room temperature or chilled, with toasts, anchovies and scallions, if desired.


Meat Loaf, My Way
Rollo de Carne de Pollo

Meatloaf, as I knew it growing up in the Midwest, was an economical family meal of ground beef. It doesn’t really exist in Spanish cooking. There are meat versions of brazo gitano (gypsy’s arm), with fillings of ham, cheese, cooked egg, and extra-large meatballs such as the relleno that cooks in a cocido. But plebian meatloaf, no.

My version is not how my mother made meatloaf. I usually use ground chicken thighs, never beef. And I tend to add Spanish flavors such as olive oil, pimentón, garlic, capers. I like to add a spoonful of Asian fish sauce too--it contributes umami. If not using it, you may need to increase the amount of salt in the recipe.

3 tablespoons olive oil 
1 cup finely chopped onion
½ cup chopped celery
½ cup chopped carrot
1 clove garlic, chopped
2 cups chopped mushrooms (6 ounces)
½ teaspoon smoked pimentón (paprika)
Pinch of thyme
Pinch of fennel seeds
1 tablespoon dry Sherry
1 teaspoon Asian fish sauce (optional)
1 cup fresh bread crumbs
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
1 ¾ pounds ground chicken thighs
½ teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper 
1 tablespoon drained capers

Heat the oil in a skillet and sauté the onion, celery, carrot and garlic until onions are beginning to brown, 5 minutes. Add the mushrooms and continue sautéing until mushroooms are softened, 5 minutes more. Add the pimentón, thyme and fennel. Add the Sherry and cook off the alcohol. Add the fish sauce, if using. Stir in the bread crumbs. Remove the pan from the heat and add the parsley.

Preheat oven to 400ºF. Lightly oil an oven pan.
In a bowl mix the ground chicken with salt and pepper. Add the onion-mushroom mixture and the capers. Mix thoroughly. Shape the meat into a compact loaf and place it in the oven pan. 

Place in the oven. After 10 minutes, lower oven temperature to 350ºF. Bake until meat tests done (160ºF), about 45 minutes longer.





More meatloaf recipes:



6 comments:

  1. That's a fantastic looking meatloaf - I've never seen a chicken one before. Fabulous semáforos too, with anchovies and sherry vinegar.

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    1. Mad Dog: Thanks. The meatloaf could almost pass as a rustic pâté, no?

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    2. Yes! Those mushroom bit (I think) look a bit like olives, which tempts me to add olives if and when I make it.

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    3. Mad Dog: The capers perform as olives in this meatloaf.

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  2. Shall certainly try the meatloaf 'your way' - it does boast of a few ingredients my usual ones do not have ! Love your peppers = in Australian supermarkets such are often available as a separate item under the name 'traffic lights' :) !!!

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    Replies
    1. Eha: Thanks for your comment--I've always wondered if the tri-color pepper packaging was called "stoplight" anywhere else.

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