Saturday, November 25, 2023

MÁLAGA RAISINS—THE SWEETEST OF THEM ALL

 

In former days, when I still baked cookies and cakes for family, I would happily spend 15 minutes de-seeding Málaga muscatel raisins, the sweetest, juiciest raisins in the world. In those days, there weren’t any seedless raisins to be had.  Now, if I need raisins for a recipe, I reach for seedless sultanas. Not because they’re delicious. They are a place-holder. 


Inspecting the seasonal display of gastronomic treats for the holidays at my favorite hipermercado, I spied  packages of pasas moscatel, sin semillas, seedless muscatel raisins, I grabbed them, without checking the label. 

They were seedless and they were maybe better than the usual sultanas. But they were not the real Málaga raisins. On the label, I discovered that these came from Chile! The raisins are coated in oil, a common procedure in packaging raisins, to keep them from sticking together into a gigantic clump. 

Official DO label.
I pulled out a package of the real deal for comparison. Authentic Málaga muscatel raisins—Pasas de Málaga—have the official seal of denominación de origen protegida (DOP) or “protected designation of origin.” This authenticates their origin and quality. 

Their origin is in the hillside villages of the Axarquía,  east of Málaga city, plus a sub-category, Manilva, on the western edge of Málaga province. The grape varietal is the Muscat of Alexandria, which may have been first planted here by the Phoenicians, who settled in southern Spain after 800 BCE. Centuries later, the Greeks refined pruning methods. The Moors, colonizing Spain from the 8th century CE, expanded on the artisanal art of drying the fruit. 

The grapes are picked fully ripe and the bunches spread on drying racks positioned on slopes inclined towards the midday sun. They dry in 10 to 15 days. The raisins are snipped from the stems by hand and packed in wooden boxes for distribution. The DO raisins are not treated with sulfites nor coated in oil. 

Málaga raisins on the left.
I spread the DO raisins next to the seedless ones. The Málaga raisins are noticeably larger and plumper. They are softer and, on tasting, juicier. The flavor is winey, floral, grapey-sweet, whereas the others are just sweet. Yes, the Málaga raisins have seeds. I chewed them up with the fruit, a pleasant crunch. (In the photo, the DO Málaga raisins are center-left; the imported muscatel raisins are on the right.)

Here are tasting notes from the Foods and Wines from Spain website: Raisins from Málaga DOP Tasting notes
The raisins still retain the muscat flavor of the grapes from which they are obtained, reinforced by an intense afterflavor. Its characteristic sweetness is counteracted by its noticeable acidity, giving it a distinctive acid-sweet balance. Depending on their size, moisture content and characteristic Brix, the raisins have an elastic and supple feel and their flesh is meaty and juicy in the mouth, resulting in tactile sensations that are not normally produced by the dry, unsupple nature of most dried fruit. Their color is an even violet black. As the raisins come from a berry that has not been subjected to treatments that break down the skin, this is of medium texture. The raisins may have stalks if they have been picked by hand. They still have their pips inside, and these are considered to be an extra source of fiber.

The famed Málaga moscatel wine also is made here, dry, sweet, raisinified, and in various degrees of sweetness and color.

Here is a recipe for using muscatel raisins.

Tender pork tenderloin cooks in a muscatel raisin sauce. 

With the pork, sides of sweet potatoes and chard. The sweet potatoes, another Málaga specialty, are mashed with olive oil and a little orange juice. The chard is sautéed with garlic, pine nuts and Málaga raisins.


Pork Tenderloin with Muscatel Raisin Sauce
Solomillo de Cerdo con Salsa de Pasas de Málaga

If using authentic Pasas de Málaga DOP, you will not need to plump them by soaking. Any other raisin should be soaked in warm water before using. You do not need to remove seeds—unless you really want to. Balance the sweetness of the muscatel wine sauce with vinegar to taste.  

Serves 2-3.

½ cup Málaga muscatel raisins (2 ounces)
¼ cup warm water (optional)
1 pork tenderloin (18-20 ounces)
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 cup chopped onion
¼ cup chopped carrot
3 cloves garlic, chopped
½ cup sweet Málaga muscatel or PX wine
1 cup chicken stock
1 bay leaf
Sprig of thyme
1 tablespoon Sherry vinegar

Trim tenderloin.
Place the raisins in a small bowl and add the warm water. Let them soak 15 minutes.

Trim the tenderloin of sinewy skin. For convenience, divide the tenderloin in half. Season the pork with salt and pepper and allow it to come to room temperature.

Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a heavy skillet. Brown the pork on all sides on medium heat. Remove the meat when browned.

Add the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil to the skillet. Add the onion, carrot and garlic. Sauté them slowly until onion is softened and beginning to brown, 5 minutes. Add the Málaga wine. Cook off the alcohol. Add the stock, bay leaf and thyme. Cook the sauce, covered, until carrots are soft, 15 minutes. Discard the bay leaf and thyme. Puree the sauce in a blender with the vinegar.

Finish pork in sauce.

Return the sauce to the skillet. Add the raisins and the liquid in which they soaked. Bring to a boil and reduce heat. Place the pieces of tenderloin in the sauce. Cook them until the meat is just done (internal temperature of 150ºF), about 5 minutes. 




Remove the meat to a cutting board. Keep the sauce warm. Slice the tenderloins. If prepared in advance, the sliced pork can be reheated in the sauce. Serve the pork with the raisin sauce. 




More recipes with raisins:




Saturday, November 18, 2023

THE SIDE DISH YOU’VE BEEN WAITING FOR

 
Rustic lunch or savory side dish--garlic-fried breadcrumbs topped with grapes and olives.


Migas—fried breadcrumbs—just might be the side you need, the dish that will fill the carb slot for breakfast, lunch or dinner. And fill it with plenty flavor, too. Oh, and might I add? This could be the turkey stuffing you’ve been waiting for. Use migas to stuff a bird or serve it as dressing on the side.


Migas is an old country dish, the sort of thing vineyard workers or shepherds in the field might cook up in a deep pan over a woodfire. While it can be as simple as crumbled bread fried in olive oil, it usually has bits of pork fat and chorizo added as well. 

Then, choose your toppings—olives, grapes, raisins, pomegranate arils, fried green peppers, even chocolate sauce. Add something substantial to make a meal—fried eggs, fried pork loin, grilled (or canned) sardines, lamb chops, roast chicken--- You see how adaptable these crumbs can be? 

Breakfast: garlicky fried crumbs with a fried egg. Add diced bacon to the migas.


Lunch: grilled sardines and a heap of migas. 

Dinner: Migas are a fine side dish for roast or grilled chicken. Use it to stuff a turkey, too.

Garlic-Fried Bread Crumbs
Migas Campesinas

Dice stale bread.

Start with a loaf of stale (day-old) bread, preferably of a dense, country loaf. The crusts can be removed or not. It’s easier to break up the bread into crumbs while it’s frying if crusts are removed. Dice or crumble the bread, dampen it, then fry the bread in olive oil while cutting it into smaller and smaller bits with the edge of a spatula. The object is to end up with crunchy crumbs.  

Use a deep skillet or pan; a flat-bottomed wok is perfect. Country-style, serve the migas right out of the pan in which they cooked. If plating the migas to accompany dinner, place slices of roast turkey right on top of the migas. Add gravy, or not! 

Dampened bread, ready to fry.
12 ounces day-old country-style bread, to make 6 to 7 cups of diced bread
½ teaspoon salt
Pinch saffron threads (optional)
2/3 cup hot water
½ cup olive oil
6 cloves garlic
Diced bacon or pancetta (optional)
Pinch of ground cloves
1/8 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 teaspoon pimentón de la Vera (smoked paprika)
Toppings or garnishes (as described in the headnotes)

Cut the bread into small dice, discarding as much of the crust as possible. Place the diced bread in a bowl. Dissolve the salt and saffron, if using, in the hot water. Sprinkle the salted water over the diced bread, turning to dampen all of the bread. Gather the bread into a dampened towel. Let it set at least 4 hours or overnight. 

Fry unpeeled garlic.
Heat the oil on a deep pan on medium. Lightly crush the cloves of garlic but do not peel them. (The skins keep them from burning.) Add the garlic and bacon, if using, to the oil until it begins to sizzle. Add the diced bread to the oil. Keep turning the bread with a spatula, wooden paddle or skimmer, cutting the dice with the edge of the spatula into smaller and smaller pieces. Regulate the heat so the crumbs don’t brown too quickly. 







Saturday, November 11, 2023

SHERRY WEEK, FROM COCKTAILS TO ICE CREAM

International Sherry Week is still happening, through tomorrow, November 12! Thousands of restaurants, bars, wine stores, wine educators and bodegas across the world are holding Sherry tastings, special menus, and other Sherry-themed events, to show how this Spanish wine pairs with a wide variety of dishes, from cheese and cured meats, to fish, seafood, stews, and desserts.


My contribution for Sherry Week is a bunch of great recipes, from appetizers to dessert, using Sherry. Many will see you nicely through holiday cooking and entertaining. 

Sherry for cocktails.

Aperitifs.
But, of course you pour Sherry with tapas--fino, amontillado, palo cortado, oloroso seco, all are brilliant with tapa foods. Maybe you serve the Sherry in proper Sherry glasses. Or not. 

But Sherry also works miracles in mixed drinks. Here are two, a Sherrytini cocktail, where fino Sherry stands in for vermouth in a martini, and a highball Sherry-Grenadine cocktail. Get the recipes on this post Cocktails with Spanish Flair. More drinks with Sherry: Rebujito (rebujito is a Manzanilla spritzer) and Triple-Manzanilla Martini.








Sherried chicken liver pâté served with crisp crackers and copitas of oloroso seco.
This chicken liver pâté gets depth-of-flavor from oloroso Sherry and ibérico pork fat. Serve the pâté with any Sherry--fino, amontillado or oloroso. The recipe for the pâté is here. 

Roasted squash soup with Sherry.
This Sherried Squash Soup might be the perfect starter for holiday dining. The butternut squash is roasted before cooking in chicken (or vegetable) stock. Serve it with a mellow oloroso. See the recipe on this post Oloroso Sherry--A Perfect Holiday Wine.



Monkfish with Sherry sauce (Rape al Jerez).
On to the fish course! Chunks of monkfish (angler) and shrimp are cooked in a sauce redolent of dry Sherry with a touch of Brandy de Jerez. Sherry pairs beautifully with many entree foods. Pour it into white wine glasses, rather than a catavino.  The recipes for the monkfish as well as for a tomato sauce with Sherry are here.


Steamed Fish and Shrimp Balls with Sherry Sauce.
A Spanish take on a Chinese recipe--these delicate steamed fish balls cook in a Sherry sauce with shrimp. The recipe is on this post These Fishballs are Gathering Steam. 


Kidneys and mushrooms in Sherry sauce.





Here's a classic tapa bar dish, bites of tender lamb kidneys and mushrooms cooked in a velvety Sherry sauce (riñones al Jerez). Serve with chunks of bread to soak up the sauce. The recipe for Kidneys in Sherry Sauce is here.



Chicken wings al ajillo.










This is a deluxe version of pollo al ajillo--chicken wings with garlic. The wings are glazed with mellow oloroso. They could be served as a tapa or, with a whole cut-up chicken, a main course. The recipe is on this post The Wine That Goes with Everything.









Rabbit roasted with vegetables on a sheet pan with amontillado.
Pieces of tender rabbit are roasted on a sheet pan with potatoes, eggplant and cloves of garlic. Amontillado Sherry gives them a special flavor. Serve amontillado with the meal. The recipe for Rabbit with Garlic and Amontillado is on this post Sheet Pan "Al Ajillo."


Chicken with Sherry.
Sherry is in the name--pollo al vino de Jerez. Chicken pieces braised with mushrooms in a savory sauce. Very homey, yet elegant too. The recipe and a description of the various types of Sherry wines are on this blog post Celebrate Sherry!




Small chickens stuffed with dried fruits with amontillado sauce.
A very festive dish--small chickens (picantones) or squab roasted with a stuffing of walnuts, raisins and dried apricots with a Sherry sauce. The recipe calls for a medium-dry Sherry, such as amontillado or oloroso seco. You only need a half-cup, but the wine is so delicious that you'll be delighted that you bought a bottle. Serve it with toasted almonds, Spanish ham and sausage, mushroom croquettes. The recipe for Chicken Stuffed with Dried Fruits, Amontillado Sauce is here.


Seared ibérico pork chops are finished with oloroso sherry.
Thick cut ibérico pork chops are seared, then finished in a covered pan with sliced apples. Medium Sherry to deglaze the pan creates a delicious sauce. The recipe for Pork Chops with Apples and Sherry is here.


Sherried fig compote.


And, on to desserts!

This Sherried Fig Compote is almost like a jam. Use it on toast, as a filling for layer cake, or, as dessert, topped with a dollop of whipped cream. I used a spoonful to sauce rare-cooked duck magret.  



Borrachos are "drunken" cakes.


Borrachos are "tipsy cakes," sponge squares soaked in luscious sweet Sherry syrup. Get the recipe on this post Sherry--the Wine That Goes With Everything. 






Prune-Sherry ice cream with burnt-sugar sauce.
Luscious prune-Sherry ice cream with burnt-sugar sauce and toasted almonds--a dessert grand enough for any occasion. The recipe for Prune-Sherry Ice Cream is here.





Did I mention? Sherry is the wine that goes with everything! 
Happy Sherry Week. 

Where to find Sherry Week events.

Saturday, November 4, 2023

OLIVES—SOME FOR EATING, MOST FOR OIL

 

Ben knocking olives into a tarp. Ten minutes later, the wind caught the tarp and dumped the olives into the brambles! Still, we took 70 kilos to the mill, and more to pick! 

It finally rained! Not enough to end the drought, but enough to plump the olives. Time to get picking. First, I pick enough fat Manzanilla olives to fill an earthenware jar, for curing for table olives. Next, my crew—son, Ben—starts the recogida of olives to take to the mill. 


To produce good oil, olives need to get to the mill as soon as possible. If they pile up in bins or sacks, they start to ferment/rot and the oil is not worth pressing. I learned the hard way—sacks of olives, laboriously picked, rejected by the guys at the mill. I also remember the really bad olive oil and its pervasive, funky smell from 40 or 50 years ago, before producers learned that the best, fruitiest, oil does not depend on variety, but on the freshness of the olives. 

Ben delivered our first picking, about 70 kilos of olives, to a nearby mill, garnering us a vale for seven liters of virgin olive oil. When we take the remainder, we’ll come home with new oil. The price of olive oil has soared this year—I paid almost €50 at the grocery store for a five-liter jug last month—so our oil, the fruit of out labors, will save on the grocery bill. 

Cracking olives to cure for eating.

I’m curing the table olives in the old-fashioned way that I learned years ago in the pueblo where I live. The olives are first cracked by hand, just to split them open, soaked in several changes of water until their bitterness is gone and, finally, left in a brine with thyme, fennel, lemon and garlic for a few weeks. 

Draining olives, ready for herbs and brine.





These brine-cured olives can be purchased at markets in Spain, but are not widely exported, I think because they have a shorter shelf-life than commercially produced bottled/canned olives. 

Commercially-made olives, both black and green, are hand-picked when still green and unripe. The curing process entails first soaking in an alkaline solution to remove the bitterness. For black olives, they are allowed to oxidize and darken and the black color is fixed with a ferrous gluconate solution. Then the olives are left in a brine to ferment, which converts the olives’ natural sugars into lactic acid. This is what gives them that wonderful tangy flavor. They are canned or bottled whole and unpitted, pitted and stuffed.

If store-bought bottled green olives are all you can get, I suggest marinating them with garlic and herbs to add some of the traditional flavor. Here’s how, plus a recipe for an olive sauce that can be made with any green olive.

Store-bought Manzanilla olives have been marinated a few days with thyme, fennel, garlic and lemon to give them the taste of traditional, home-cured olives.


Green olive sauce makes a terrific accompaniment to grilled swordfish. 

Marinade for Olives
Aliño para Aceitunas

Use “Seville,” Manzanilla, Gordal or any other green, pitted olive. Drain off their liquid (save it for salad dressings or to brine a chicken before roasting) and marinate the olives with herbs, Andalusian style. Use fresh thyme and wild fennel stems, if available. Otherwise, substitute dried thyme and fennel seeds.

Thyme, fennel, garlic, lemon.
20-ounce jar of pitted Manzanilla olives
2 teaspoons salt
3 cloves garlic, slivered
3 lemon wedges
Sprigs of fresh thyme or ¼ teaspoon dried thyme
Piece of wild fennel stem or 1/8 teaspoon fennel seeds
½ tablespoon extra virgin olive oil

Drain the olives. There should be about 2 cups of drained olives. Place them in a bowl and cover with water. Soak for 10 minutes and drain them.

Place 2 cups of water in a clean jar. Add the salt and stir to dissolve it. Place some of the olives in the jar, add some of the slivers of garlic and a lemon wedge, sprig of thyme and fennel. Add more olives, garlic, etc. Repeat, using all of the olives. Add the olive oil. 

Let the jar of olives set in a cool, dark place for 24 hours. Use a wooden spoon to stir the contents. Leave 48 hours more, stirring once a day. Olives are ready to eat at this point. Store them refrigerated. 

Green Olive Sauce
Salsa de Aceitunas Verdes

Olives added to tomato sauce give a special tang.


Olives give this simple tomato sauce a tangy edge that complements fish and many kinds of meat. It is especially good with grilled swordfish, tuna or octopus, with lamb chops or steak. 

Use any kind of pitted green olive, chopped or sliced, for the sauce. If using the herb-marinated olives, in the above recipe, they will have the thyme and fennel flavors. Otherwise, add those herbs to the sauce. Use salt sparingly, as brined olives will contribute more salt. 

4 tablespoons olive oil
1 cup finely chopped onions
2 cloves minced garlic
¼ cup white wine
1 cup grated tomato pulp
½ teaspoon salt
Sprig of fennel or fennel seeds (optional)
Sprig of thyme (optional) 
1 cup drained and chopped pitted olives
3 tablespoons chopped parsley

Heat the oil in a skillet and sauté the onions on medium heat until softened, 5 minutes. Add the garlic and sauté 2 minutes more. Add the wine and cook off the alcohol, 1 minute. Add the tomato pulp, salt and fennel and thyme, if using. Cook the sauce, stirring occasionally, until reduced, about 15 minutes. Stir in the olives and cook gently 4 minutes. Immediately before serving the sauce, stir in the parsley.


How olive oil is madeOlives to Oil.

More recipes with olives: