Saturday, May 23, 2026

CABBAGE-CENTRIC

 


I’m in a cabbage state of mind. With a plenitude of cabbages from the garden, I have been searching my files for cabbage recipes. With only one or two people to feed, a single cabbage goes a long way—half a head makes a veggie main dish for one meal, coleslaw with another quarter, an addition to Asian stir-fry for the rest. I even pulled out The Joy of Cooking in search of a recipe for sauerkraut (but did not try it). This week it’s trinxat, a Catalan dish of cabbage and potatoes.


I posted a recipe for trinxat way back in 2014. The recipe was taken from Chef Jeff Weiss’s book, Charcutería, The Soul of Spain. With the addition of butter, that recipe is rather more cheffy than the traditional, rustic dish, which is made with pork fat and olive oil. 

The traditional recipe comes from the Catalan region of the Cerdanya, the top northeast of Spain, where the Pyrenees mountains divide Spain and France. It can be made with scraps of pancetta, bacon, pork sausage, or Catalan butifarra sausage. Trinxat means “chopped” or “mashed,” as the cabbage and potatoes are crushed while frying in pork fat. 

Trinxat makes a splendid supper dish or might be served as a vegetable side. (For a vegetarian version, omit the porky bits and use additional olive oil.) 

Hash-brown cabbage and potatoes are topped with bacon and garlic, served with tomato sauce alongside.



Catalan Cabbage and Potato Hash
Trinxat

The idea is to fry the cooked cabbage and potatoes into a sort-of cake, somewhat like a potato tortilla. Start by boiling the cabbage and potatoes. Drain them well. Fry them in bacon fat, crushing them with a wooden spoon or potato masher until completely smashed. Press the mixture into a round cake, firming up the edges, and let it brown on the bottom. Either flip the mixture over, like a thick pancake, or, in the manner of a potato tortilla, hold a flat plate over the skillet and reverse it, turning the vegetables onto the plate, then sliding them back to brown on the reverse side. Unlike a tortilla that is set with eggs, the trinxat is not firm enough to hold its shape. It will slump. Never mind. Spread it out into a cake again and let the bottom brown. If the mixture falls apart, just scoop it up and serve it like hash. 

Serve the trinxat, if desired, accompanied by a simple sofrito (fried tomato sauce). 

Serves 4.

8 cups coarsely chopped cabbage (½ cabbage, about 1 ¾ pounds)
2 ½ cups diced potatoes (1 pound)
Salt
6 tablespoons olive oil
4-6 ounces pancetta, bacon, butifarra, or pork sausage
2 cloves garlic, sliced
1/8 teaspoon cumin seeds
Freshly ground black pepper

Cook the cabbage and potatoes in boiling salted water until very tender, 20 minutes. Drain well. Return the vegetables to the pan over a low heat to evaporate all the moisture. 

Cut the pancetta or bacon into strips. If using sausage, remove from casings and break into pieces. Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a non-stick skillet. Add the pancetta and garlic and fry until pancetta is crisp. Remove the pan from the heat, tip it so the oil runs to one side, and skim out the pancetta and garlic. 

Return the pan to the heat. Add the cabbage and potatoes. Use a wooden paddle, spoon, or potato masher to chop and mash the vegetables until they are reduced to a lumpy mush. Stir some of the pancetta and garlic into the vegetables, reserving the rest to garnish the top of the dish. Season with salt to taste, cumin, and pepper.
Firm edges.

Keep turning the vegetables until they are thoroughly heated. Now press them into a cake, using the wooden paddle or spatula to firm the sides, pulling them away from the rim of the pan. Add 2 tablespoons of oil around the edges of the “cake.” Keep frying on medium-high until the vegetables begin to smell like they are browning on the bottom.
Slide hash back into skillet.
Lightly oil a flat plate that will fit over the top of the skillet. Hold it tightly on top of the skillet and reverse the cake onto the plate. Don’t worry if it loses its round shape. Add remaining 2 tablespoons of oil to the skillet. With a spatula, push the cake off the plate back into the skillet. Again, smooth it into a round cake and firm the sides. Let the bottom brown. 

Either slide the cake out onto a clean serving plate or, again, reverse it onto the serving plate. Top it with the reserved pancetta and garlic. 



Trinxat shaped into individual patties.

Another rendition of trinxat. Here the cabbage-potato mixture is shaped into patties and fried. That recipe (along with a chef's recipe for sofrito tomato sauce) is here.

More recipes from my cabbage repertoire:











 
This cookbook explores the fascinating story of the deep and lasting influences that Islamic culture has left on modern Spanish cooking. 

Author and Spanish cooking expert Janet Mendel tells the story of the Moorish influence on Spanish cooking through 120 recipes and photographs for modern-day dishes, from salads and vegetables to fish, poultry and meat to sweets and pastries, that trace their heritage to foods served in medieval times.  (Hippocrene Books)    

 Order on IndiePubs (USA) 

Use PROMO CODE HIPPOCRENE40 for 40% off on all Hippocrene titles at IndiePubs online bookstore.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

RING COOKIES FOR A SAINT'S DAY

 

Rosquillas de San Isidro--ring cookies for the saint's day.


Did you pay homage to San Isidro yesterday (May 15)? Patron saint of Madrid, San Isidro is the cause for a week’s celebration in the city, with deliciously old-fashioned customs such as donning the traditional puffy-sleeved chulapa dress with a pair of red carnations tucked in your kerchiefed head (or for the gentlemen, white shirts and checkered vests) and dancing the chotis; drinking the curative spring water at the saint’s shrine, and, even if you don’t take a picnic to the Pradera de San Isidro (San Isidro's meadow), at least partaking of a few rosquillas listas y tontas.


La Pradera de San Isidro, sketch by Francisco de Goya (Museo del Prado)

Rosquillas are ring cookies, a kissing cousin to doughnuts. They come both “listas” and “tontas”—"smarties" or "dummies". They are basically the same cookies, but the “smarties,” with sugar glaze, are fancier than the plain “dummies.”

Did you know that Madrid is the only European capital with Muslim origin? At the time of San Isidro’s birth (1070), the village of Madrid was part of the taifa (Islamic emirate) of Toledo. His family belonged to the Mozarab population, Christians who lived in a Muslim culture. (The word “mozárabe” comes from Arabic and means “would-be Arab”). Following the Christian reconquest of Toledo, Madrid would become part of the Christian kingdom of Castilla. Known as the patron saint of campesinos, peasants and farm workers, the devout San Isidro is often depicted at prayer while angels plow the fields. 

Rosquillas de San Isidro
Ring Cookies for San Isidro Day

Rosquillas are perfect for a tea party--or a picnic.

These cookies are not overly sweet. Too much sugar makes a sticky dough that is hard to work with. If you like more sweetness, go for the rosquillas listas, with a white icing. The ingredients given for the icing/glaze, with a whole egg white, will make enough for 16 rosquillas. If you’re only glazing half of them, you’ll have leftover icing.

If you like the flavor of anise a lot, add a tablespoon of anise liqueur to the dough in addition to the aniseed. If you don’t like it at all, substitute cinnamon for the aniseed. 

Knead the dough very briefly with only a little additional flour to make a soft dough that, although slightly sticky, can be rolled into small balls. Let the dough rest before rolling into balls to shape the rosquillas. Dip fingers into additional oil to roll the dough. Place the rings well separated, as they will expand in baking. Some may even bake closed in the center. (I wonder if these are the smarties or dumb-ies?)


The ring cookies are perfect for dunking—in coffee, tea, milk, or an herbal tisane. They are also a perfect accompaniment to sweet wine. Pack them on a picnic to the shrine of San Isidro or serve them for breakfast or snack any time of the year.

Looped on cords of rushes for picnic




Makes 16 (3-inch) ring cookies.

2 ½ cups flour + more for shaping dough
1 teaspoon baking powder
¼ teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons aniseed
4 eggs (1 separated)
½ cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil + more for shaping dough
¾ cup confectioners’ sugar
2 teaspoons lemon juice

Sift together the 2 ½ cups flour, baking powder, and salt. Add the aniseed.

In a mixing bowl on medium-high speed, beat 3 eggs with the sugar until the eggs are light in color, increased in volume, and very slightly thickened. Beat in the oil. 

Add the flour mixture to the eggs and combine well to make a soft dough. Knead in just enough additional flour so that the dough can be gathered into a ball. Cover with plastic wrap and rest the dough 30 minutes at room temperature or refrigerate for longer. 

Preheat oven to 425ºF with convection fan (or 450ºF without fan). Line a baking sheet with parchment. 

Place a spoonful of oil in a small bowl. Dip fingers into the oil to prevent dough from sticking. Divide dough into 16 walnut-size balls (approx. 1.4 ounces each). Place them 1 ½ inches apart on the baking sheet.


Dip a finger into the oil and press into the center of each ball of dough to open a hole and stretch the dough into a ring.

Mix 1 egg yolk with 1 teaspoon of water. Brush the tops of the cookies. Bake them until nicely browned, 10 to 12 minutes. Cool cookies on racks.


Place 1 egg white in a bowl and beat until foamy. Add the confectioners’ sugar and beat at high speed 4 minutes. Beat in the lemon juice.


Place half of the cookies on a rack over sheet pan or paper to catch the drips. Either spoon the egg white glaze over them or else carefully dip them, topside down, into the egg white glaze. Place the rack in turned-off oven to dry for 15 minutes. The remaining unglazed cookies are the tontas. 


More recipes for roscos/rosquillas:



Orange-Scented Ring Cookies (Roscos de Naranja)
This recipe appears in FLAVORS OF AL-ANDALUS, The Culinary Legacy of Spain (Hippocrene Books; 2025). (See below for where to order.)








 
This cookbook explores the fascinating story of the deep and lasting influences that Islamic culture has left on modern Spanish cooking. 

Author and Spanish cooking expert Janet Mendel tells the story of the Moorish influence on Spanish cooking through 120 recipes and photographs for modern-day dishes, from salads and vegetables to fish, poultry and meat to sweets and pastries, that trace their heritage to foods served in medieval times.  (Hippocrene Books)    

 Order on IndiePubs (USA) 

Use PROMO CODE HIPPOCRENE40 for 40% off on all Hippocrene titles at IndiePubs online bookstore.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

THE TUNA ROUNDUP

 

Photo La Voz de Cádiz

The almadraba season is underway! The first glistening tunas, Atlantic bluefins, have been pulled from the waters on the Atlantic coast leading into the Straits of Gibraltar. 


The almadraba is a very ancient way of fishing tuna. The Phoenicians, who colonized southern Spain more than 3000 years ago, devised a system of capturing the tuna as they migrated from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean to spawn. The Romans came to conquer and stayed to fish. A few centuries later, the Arabs of medieval Spain gave us the word almadraba for the method of catching these big fish. Almadraba means “the place to strike.”

The almadraba nets, forming long chambers, like a series of corrals, are anchored to the bottom. Tuna swimming through are trapped in the nets. Fishermen in boats pull the nets into a tightening circle, until the huge fish are trapped in the middle. The men haul them on board—the levantá—where they are dispatched with a knife cut in the gills. In port, the tuna are butchered, ronqueo is the word indicating the sound—like a loud snore—of the knife cutting through the rough skin. The fish is cut into many parts, the choice lomo, or loin; the ventresca or fatty belly meat; the morillo, cut from the top of the head, etc.

More than half of the almadraba catch is bought up by Japanese entrepreneurs and shipped, frozen, to Tokyo. What’s left goes to local markets, restaurants, tapa bars and processors.  

The almadraba is sustainable fishing. The catch is monitored and subject to strict quotas imposed by ICCAT (International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas). The nets allow smaller fish to escape. The tuna run ends in June; no tuna are captured on their return from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. It is estimated that less than one percent of the tuna that pass through the Straits are captured. Last year’s catch on the Cádiz coast was about 1,600 tuna. 

Worldwide, however, blue-fin tuna is endangered. According to Fernando Huidobro, journalist, cookbook author, and founder of the Academia Andaluza de Gastronomía, the challenge to the survival of thunnus thynnus is the uncontrolled use of abusive fishing methods such as pelagic longline and, above all, the purse-seine net. 

Atlantic bluefin tuna—Thunnus thynnus—is atún rojo, red tuna, in Spanish.  Bonito del norte, Thunnus alalunga, is white tuna or albacore—not to be confused with Thunnus albacares or yellowfin tuna, also sometimes called albacore (rabil in Spanish).


This month (until June 8) is the XXIX Ruta Gastronómica del Atún in Conil (Cádiz), one of the main tuna-fishing ports. Twenty-nine different bars and restaurants have special tuna tasting menus. Zahara de los Atunes celebrates the XXI Ruta del Atún May 12-17. (The tuna route in Barbate has just finished.)

To whet your appetite, here are links to tuna recipes


This is salt-cured tuna, called mojama, aka "the ham of the sea." The word mojama comes from the Arabic, mushmarra, meaning “waxy,” because the slab of dried fish looks like bees wax. Mojama is made from thick slices of tuna that are packed in sea salt for a day or two, then washed and hung to air-dry. As it dries, the flesh becomes firm and the flavor intensifies. Mojama tastes moderately salty with a subtle iodine taste, but is not “fishy.” It’s a rich, umami flavor. It makes a superb appetizer.


Tuna Tartare. Did you know you should freeze any fish that's going to be served raw? As most fresh tuna comes to the market frozen, that step may already be done for you. This recipe has capers, of course, and pickled melon. 




In Valencia this easy dish is can be made with dry or fresh tuna. It's a simple tomato-pepper sauce, embellished with spices (cinnamon) and pine nuts. Serve it hot or cold.



A great party dish--let guests compose their own bowls. The raw fish can be bluefin or albacore tuna. (On the link is also a recipe for crowd-pleasing tuna cakes--perfect for when you have leftovers from a big fish.)

Cook the tuna on a ridged grill pan or on the barbecue to desired doneness--rare is best. Serve it with this sauce of sweet onions caramelized in PX sweet wine. It's an updated version of traditional atún encebollado, or "onioned tuna." 



A piece of fresh tuna is larded with strips of bacon which help to keep it juicy; slow-cooked in an onion-rich sauce with lots of olive oil, and carefully monitored so it doesn’t overcook and become dry. Unlike a beef pot roast, this one needs only about 30 minutes to cook. 

Too rare for you? Grill the tuna a little longer for medium. Moroccan preserved lemons add a briny accent to the sauce of chopped vegetables cooked in red wine.




This recipe for tuna with tomatoes is traditional in Andalusia, especially in the provinces of Huelva and Cádiz where bluefin tuna is taken. In its original version, the lesser cuts of the big fish would be cut into chunks and braised slowly with not much more than olive oil and cut-up tomatoes. Nowdays, the dish is usually prepared with choice pieces from the loin, briefly browned in oil then finished in tomato sauce to cook only for three or four minutes. Cooked in this manner, the fish stays juicy and moist. 



 
This cookbook explores the fascinating story of the deep and lasting influences that Islamic culture has left on modern Spanish cooking. 

Author and Spanish cooking expert Janet Mendel tells the story of the Moorish influence on Spanish cooking through 120 recipes and photographs for modern-day dishes, from salads and vegetables to fish, poultry and meat to sweets and pastries, that trace their heritage to foods served in medieval times.  (Hippocrene Books)    

 Order on IndiePubs (USA) 

Use PROMO CODE HIPPOCRENE40 for 40% off on all Hippocrene titles at IndiePubs online bookstore.