Saturday, June 27, 2026

TOMATO LOVE

 

A small selection from my Tomato photo file!

I love tomatoes. For breakfast, lunch, and dinner, on a hot summer’s day, there’s nothing better than a juicy, ripe tomato, sliced, salted lightly, and doused with extra virgin olive oil. As I am reveling in great tomatoes, from the garden and market, I am finding lots of ways to serve them without cooking. Gazpacho, obviously, but here are more possibilities.


Tomato with basil (albahaca) is so good that it’s a cliché. With sliced goat cheese, freshly ground black pepper, flaky salt, and olive oil it is, in my opinion, an ideal breakfast. But raw tomatoes are also complemented by oregano, mint, cilantro, tarragon (estragón), fennel (hinojo), and dill (eneldo). A few drops of vinegar enhance their flavor, but full-on vinaigrette overpowers their sweetness. Which is why I rarely put tomatoes in a mixed lettuce salad. 

Tomatoes stuffed with Russian salad (ensaladilla rusa).

Shrimp cocktail with tomatoes!

A Mediterranean version of succotash with corn, butter beans and tomatoes.

Tomatoes Stuffed with Russian Salad
Tomates Rellenos con Ensaladilla Rusa

For stuffing, choose large, round, firm-ripe tomatoes such as “Beefsteak.” (Want more about Russian Salad, the famous ensaladilla rusa? Check here.)

Makes enough Russian salad to fill 3 large or 4 medium tomatoes. 

Diced potatoes and vegetables for the filling.
3-4 tomatoes
Salt
1 ½ cups cooked potatoes cut in 1/8-inch dice
¼ cup cooked carrot, cut in 1/8-inch dice
2 tablespoons cooked and chopped green beans
1 tablespoon chopped red pimiento from a can
Freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon chopped chives or parsley + more to garnish
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil + more for drizzling
1 tablespoon Sherry vinegar
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
Salad greens to serve

Scoop out pulp for tomato shell.
Cut the tops off the tomatoes. Scoop out the pulp and seeds, leaving a shell. Salt the insides of the tomato shells and invert them in a colander to drain. Discard seeds and hard core from the pulp. Strain the remaining pulp and save the juice for another use (I'll add the juice to gazpacho tomorrow). Chop the pulp and set aside to use in the stuffing.

Combine the potatoes, carrots, beans, and pimiento in a bowl. Add ½ teaspoon salt and pepper. Add the chives and the reserved chopped tomato pulp. In a small bowl mix together the oil, vinegar, and mayonnaise. Fold the dressing into the vegetables. Taste and add more salt if needed.

Before filling the tomato shells, drizzle them with a little oil. Spoon the salad into the tomato shells, mounding it slightly. Garnish them with additional chopped chives. Serve the stuffed tomatoes on a layer of salad greens.



Shrimp Cocktail with Tomato
Salpicón de Gambas con Tomate

A summer twist on shrimp cocktail.

Salpicón is a versatile dish that can be made with any combination of mariscos, shellfish, or with a single one. Besides shrimp, you can add mussels, crab, chopped octopus, scallops, lobster, or even chunks of fish. Salpicón without the tomatoes is a favorite starter for Christmas holiday meals. But I learned to make it in tapa bars where it was made, similarly to pipirrana, with tomatoes and other summer vegetables.

I used very small gambas rojas ("red" shrimp, though they're actually pink), plunged into boiling, salted water, drained, and chilled in ice water before peeling. If using larger shrimp, cut them into approximate ¾-inch pieces. 

Serves 4

1 cup peeled and chopped tomato
½ cup chopped green pepper
3 tablespoons chopped scallions
Jalapeño, minced (optional)
½ cup chopped avocado
1 hard-boiled egg
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon Sherry vinegar
Salt 
¼ cup chopped parsley or cilantro
1 cup cooked and peeled small shrimp
Lettuce leaves to serve

Combine the tomato, green pepper, scallions, jalapeño if using, and avocado in a bowl. Separate the egg yolk from the white. Chop the white and add to the tomatoes.
Mash the yolk in a small bowl with ½ teaspoon salt. Stir in the vinegar until mixture is smooth. Slowly whisk in the oil.

Immediately before serving add the parsley or cilantro and shrimp to the tomato mixture. Add the egg yolk dressing, saving a little to spoon over the top of the cocktails. Place lettuce leaves in cocktail cups and divide the shrimp-tomato mixture between them. Drizzle with remaining dressing and a little chopped parsley.







Succotash
Salteado de Maiz y Alubias

For this version of succotash, chopped raw tomatoes are added at the finish.

This is a Mediterranean interpretation of an old-fashioned New England dish of corn and lima beans. I've never found fresh lima beans in Spanish markets. Fava beans, which limas somewhat resemble, are not in season, but canned butter beans are a good substitute. I used fresh sweet corn, stripped off the cobs, but frozen or canned corn kernels are an easy substitute for fresh. Add the chopped tomatoes at the end of the cooking time. The residual heat will draw out the juices of the tomatoes without actually cooking them. I serve succotash as a side dish or, with the addition of smoked ham and a fried egg, a satisfying lunch or supper dish. 

3 tablespoons olive oil
2 ounces chopped bacon 
1 cup chopped green and/or red pepper
1 cup chopped onion
2 cloves garlic
1 ½ cup corn kernels
1 ½ cup drained butter beans
1 teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Pinch of oregano or thyme
¼ teaspoon pimentón picante de la Vera (smoked, hot paprika)
1 tablespoon Sherry vinegar
1 cup peeled and chopped tomatoes
Lacón ahumado (smoked ham) (optional)
Salad greens if serving cold

Heat the oil with the bacon in a heavy skillet. When bacon begins to brown, add the peppers, onions, and garlic. Sauté on medium-high until onion is softened, 5 minutes. Add the corn and beans, season with salt, pepper, oregano, pimentón, and vinegar. Cook on medium 10 minutes. Add the tomatoes and immediately remove the pan from the heat. Add diced lacón, if using. 

Serve the succotash hot or cold.

Uncooked Tomato Sauce
Salsa de Tomate Cruda 

Noodles with uncooked tomato sauce and basil.

This sauce is quick to prepare and has many uses. Spread it on toasted multi-grain bread for authentic pan con tomate. Add the sauce to canned beans, season to taste, and serve hot or cold. It’s delicious with pasta too. 

I like ripe Roma tomatoes because they are easy to peel. (The Roma or “plum” tomato is called “pera” in Spanish.) The tomatoes get chopped in a food processor. Because they are not strained, it’s best to skin the tomatoes first. For a truly uncooked sauce, I don’t dip the tomatoes in boiling water to facilitate peeling. I peel them with a potato peeler. It took me only 5 minutes to peel the 6 or 7 tomatoes for this recipe. 

1 ½ pounds tomatoes (6-7 medium)
1 teaspoon salt
1 clove garlic, crushed
Basil leaves
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
Optional additions: red pepper flakes, chopped anchovies, capers

Peel the tomatoes and quarter them. Place in a food processor with the salt, garlic, and 2 basil leaves. Process until the tomatoes are thoroughly chopped, but not pureed. Transfer the tomatoes to a sieve set over a bowl. Let the tomatoes drain. Save the juice for another use.

Pan con tomate--just add ham.
Scrape the tomato pulp into a bowl and stir in the oil, pepper, and any optional additions. Cover tightly. Keep at room temperature for up to 4 hours, but refrigerate for longer storage.

If serving the sauce with pasta: Cook preferred pasta according to package directions. Drain it, saving a little of the cooking liquid. Add a olive oil and grated cheese to the hot pasta. Ladle the uncooked tomato sauce over the pasta. Scatter chopped basil and additional cheese on top. 



This photo was taken by my son, Ben Searl, on the summit of Mulhacen, Spain's highest mountain peak. Carried aloft in the backpack, it is astonishing against that colorless background.



More tomato recipes:





Imagine life before tomatoes! Here's a whole cookbook, The Flavors of al-Andalus, with nary a tomato. Although the recipes are from contemporary Spain, they are based on the cooking of Moorish Spain, before there were tomatoes, a New World contribution. There are several gazpacho recipes, all them very traditional, but without tomatoes. A fine addition to your cooking 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, June 20, 2026

ON MY KITCHEN TABLE

 


Two things appeared concurrently on my kitchen table: a heap of leeks from the garden and a copy of Mastering the Art of French Cooking (Child, Bertholle, and Beck; 1966), a cookbook I’ve never owned before. (The neighbor who brought the book over had no way of knowing that I am gradually divesting myself of cookbooks!) It seemed pre-ordained—I would cook a leek recipe from Julia Child’s selection.


Leek and potato soup (Vichyssoise) I adore, but I did not need a new recipe for this cold soup. Leek gratin with cheese sauce didn’t excite me—sort of old-fashioned. A cold dish, leeks à la Grecque was enticing. But a leek tart it would be, a recipe special enough for my lovely leeks.  

My version is an adaptation of Julia’s recipe—I don’t use butter in my kitchen, only extra virgin olive oil. I used a cured sheep’s milk cheese such as Manchego instead of “Swiss” and I opted for seasoning with thyme and pimentón instead of classic nutmeg. 

In Julia's cookbook, the quiche is called “flamiche,” which, apparently, means “cake” in Flemish. That translates to “torta” in Spanish. In English, I suppose we would call it a tart or quiche. 

Leek tart makes a gorgeous starter or luncheon dish.


Bacon scattered on top is optional.


Serve the quiche with salad greens.


Leek Tart (Flamiche or Quiche)
Torta de Puerros

Store-bought refrigerated pie crust dough is a useful ingredient—no rolling needed, just fit it in your pie pan. Where I shop there was, in addition to refrigerated pizza dough, phyllo, and hojaldre (puff pastry), only one pie crust dough, called pasta quebrada, flaky pastry; or masa brisa, Spanish for brisée dough (they are the same thing). According to the label, it was not made with butter nor lard, but palm oil. If you prefer to make your own pastry crust, see the links below for olive oil pastry dough. 

If possible use a round tart pan with removable sides, 8, 9, or 10-inch. (If you have too much filling for the smallest pan, bake the extra in a muffin cup.) Bake the crust blind before filling it so that the liquid filling doesn’t make the dough soggy. Place the pan on a baking sheet to catch any possible leaks.

Serves 4 as a luncheon dish or 8 as a starter.

Pie crust dough
1 pound cleaned and sliced leeks (4 cups)
1 onion, quartered and sliced
3 tablespoons olive oil + more to drizzle on top
2 ounces chopped bacon (optional)
1 teaspoon salt
¼ cup water + additional if needed
3 eggs
1 ½ cups cream and/or evaporated milk
2 ounces grated cheese (¾ cup)
Freshly ground black pepper
Pinch of thyme
Pinch of pimentón picante (hot paprika) or cayenne

Line a 9-inch tart pan with the pie dough. Prick the dough all over with a fork. Place a round of baking parchment on the dough and fill with pie weights. Refrigerate until ready to bake.

Preheat oven to 400ºF.

Bake the pie crust 10 minutes and remove. Remove weights and discard parchment. Lower oven to 375ºF.

Heat 3 tablespoons of oil in a pan with the bacon. Fry the bacon until crisp. Skim it out and reserve. Add the leeks and onions to the pan with remaining fat. Sauté them on medium heat 4 minutes. Add the salt and water. Cover the pan and cook, stirring occasionally, until leeks are very soft, 15 to 20 minutes. Add additional water if needed. Remove the lid and raise heat to cook off any remaining water. Cool slightly.

In a mixing bowl beat together the eggs and cream. Stir in half of the cheese and half of the bacon, reserving the remainder for the top of the quiche. Add the leeks. Season with pepper, thyme, pimentón, and salt, if needed. Pour the mixture into the pie shell. Spread remaining cheese on top and scatter remaining bacon. Drizzle with 1 teaspoon of olive oil. 



Bake the quiche until set, when a thin skewer comes out clean, and golden on top, 30-35 minutes. Cool on a rack 10 minutes before removing the sides of the pan. Slide the quiche off the bottom disk onto a serving plate or, alternatively, place it on a cutting board and slice into servings. The quiche can be served warm, room temperature, or cold.



Recipes for pastry dough made with olive oil:




More recipes with leeks:




This leek and potato soup, porrusalda, is Basque, not French. The recipe is here












 

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, June 13, 2026

WHEN THE BRANDY IS GONE

 

Pork tenderloin with whisky sauce is a Sevilla specialty.

I reached for the brandy, the perfect finishing touch for a sauce, and there was none. Instead, I made solomillo al whisky, pork tenderloin in Scotch whisky sauce.


While it seems a little far-fetched—whisky in Spain?—this is actually a favorite dish in Sevilla tapas bar. I always supposed it came about when a cook ran out of brandy and swapped whisky in its place. But, as the story is related by Shawn Hennessey, cognoscenti of tapas in Sevilla, (see her The Curious Tale of Solomillo al Whisky), the dish was invented in the Bar Rioja Pasaje in the late 1960s in imitation of a French dish.

That explains the butter in the recipe, but not the whisky, hardly a French ingredient! Perhaps whisky was intended as a substitute for pricey French Cognac? In fact, the dish is often made with “coñac,” Spanish Brandy de Jerez, in place of whisky. 


But Scotch whisky has another connection to Spain. In my liquor cabinet are three bottles of Scotch (all were gifts from guests), one of which claimed that it was aged in Sherry casks. In fact, many of the finest malt whiskies are finished in casks from Jerez, where cooperage is a very ancient and respected craft (the coopers’ guild was established in the 15th century). 
That’s another curious tale, of Scotch whisky’s Spanish lineage. Back in the 18th and 19th centuries, Great Britain was a huge importer of Sherry wines which were transported by sea in Sherry casks from ports in Cádiz. Distilleries in Scotland bought the empty wooden barrels, finding them perfect for ageing whisky. Barrel staves soak up as much as 15 liters of liquid; the spirits ageing in the casks extract their essence, contributing aroma and flavor nuances to the whisky. Sherry “seasons” the wood (the term in Spanish is envinar). Oloroso Sherry is the type that contributes the most character. 

However, shipping Sherry in casks to Great Britain came to a definitive end in the 1980s, when the Sherry regulating board (DO Jerez-Xérès-Sherry) stipulated that all wines with the official Sherry label had to be, not only made from grapes of vineyards within the denomination, but bottled at origin. In any case, the casks are highly valued for continued use in the solera method of ageing Sherry. They can be used for more than a hundred years.  

Sherry Cask label.
The whisky distillers that continue to tout their product as “aged in Sherry casks” are, in fact, buying barrels made expressly for whisky. These casks, made of new oak, are seasoned with young wine and aged for two years. The resulting wine will never become Sherry. After the seasoning it is undrinkable and is used for distillation. The official Sherry board eventually lent its name to the manufacture of casks, in 2015 designating the “Sherry Cask” seal, guaranteeing that the casks had contained wines from the Jerez region. The seal was intended to protect tradition and prevent the name of Sherry casks from being used by operators with no right to it. (Most Scotch whisky is aged in used bourbon barrels; only about 10 percent is finished in Sherry casks.)

If the whisky label says “aged in Oloroso casks,” the cask could come from anywhere, because Oloroso is a style of wine that is made elsewhere—for example, in the Córdoba wine region of Montilla-Moriles. (See this site for more about Demystifying sherry casks in whisky ) 

Back to my kitchen. The solomillo al whisky is a delicious dish of tender pork in a mellow sauce. I wonder how it would taste made with bourbon?

Serve the pork with patatas fritas, Spanish fries. I served it with red wine, but a fine amontillado Sherry would go nicely.



Pork Tenderloin in Whisky Sauce
Solomillo al Whisky

Variations are fine. Substitute Brandy de Jerez for whisky. Use ibérico pork instead of regular pork. Slice the tenderloin thickly or thinly. (Just take care not to overcook it.) Thicken the sauce by swirling in cold butter or with a little cornstarch. My cheat: add a small knob of dark miso paste to the stock. The fries are not negotiable; serve them alongside the meat. You could even make double the quantity of sauce and serve them over the fries as well. Accompany with bread. 

Sear pork medallions, then add to sauce.
Serves 4

1 ¼ pounds pork tenderloin
Freshly ground black pepper
Sprigs of thyme
1 lemon, grated peel and 2 teaspoons juice
3 tablespoons olive oil
8 cloves garlic
Onion wedge
Sliced mushrooms (optional)
¾ cup Scotch whisky
1 cup chicken or meat stock
Salt to taste
1-2 tablespoons cold butter in pieces (optional)
1 teaspoon cornstarch (optional)
Chopped parsley
Fried potatoes to serve

Remove excess fat and membrane from the tenderloins. Cut medallions about 1-inch thick. Sprinkle them generously with pepper, a few sprigs of thyme, and grated lemon peel. Allow the meat to come to room temperature.

Heat a heavy skillet on medium-high. Oil the skillet lightly and sear the tenderloin slices on two sides, removing them as they are browned. They do not need to cook through.

Add remaining oil to the skillet. Lightly crush the garlics to split their skins, but don’t peel them. Add the garlic to the skillet with the onion wedge and mushrooms, if using. Fry them on medium until onion begins to brown. Add the whisky and cook off the alcohol, 1 minute. Add the stock. Add salt to taste. Bring to a boil, lower heat, and cook the sauce 15 minutes. Stir in 2 teaspoons of lemon juice. 

Return the slices of tenderloin to the skillet and cook them until thoroughly heated. Remove the meat. Thicken the sauce by either 1.) swirling in cold butter with the skillet off the heat or 2.) mixing cornstarch with a little water, whisking into the sauce, and cooking until thickened slightly.

Serve immediately garnished with the peeled cloves of garlic, mushrooms, if using, and chopped parsley. Serve with fries. 


More about Sherry wines and how they are made: Celebrate Sherry!



 

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.