Showing posts with label Don Quixote. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Don Quixote. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2023

HAM FINALE: DOWN TO THE BARE BONES

Chicken-noodle soup with a difference--the broth is made with a ham bone as well as chicken and bits of ibérico ham garnish the soup.

 My gorgeous ibérico ham has finally come to an end. Ben sliced me a last plateful—one last mollete with tomato, olive oil and ham. Then he carved out some thicker strips and dismembered the bones. 


Diced ham for cooking.


Those strips, cut into taquitos, dice, I’ll use in cooking and for garnishes. The ham dice is terrific in omelets, with scrambled eggs, in croquettes. The ham should never be fried, like you fry bacon, or it hardens and becomes stringy. Fold in the ham at the end of cooking time. 

By the way, although the ham has darkened in the month or more since it was broached, the flesh is still juicy, as ibérico ham has a lot of fat marbling that keeps it from drying out. 

Nothing left but the pata negra, black hoof.

With some of the bones, I’m making ham stock to stash in the freezer. It’s the perfect addition to split pea soup and lentils and for soups such as picadillo, rich broth with garnishes (that recipe is below).

To make ham stock
Use 2 to 3 pounds of bones from cured ham, ibérico or serrano (preferably sawed into pieces). Place them in a large stock pot and cover with 3 to 4 quarts of water. Add a sliced onion, 2 carrots, 2 stalks of celery, 2 bay leaves and additional aromatics, as desired (pepper, cloves, thyme, etc.) Add 2 teaspoons salt. Bring the water to a boil. Keep skimming off all the foam that rises to the top. Reduce heat so the water bubbles gently. Cook the stock, covered, 90 minutes. 

Discard the bones. Raise the heat and boil the stock 10 minutes. Strain the stock through a colander. Once cool, strain the stock through a fine sieve or cheesecloth. Divide it into portions. Refrigerate or freeze.


Pictured at left are cubes of frozen ham stock, ready to add to soups. The background for the photo is a new apron (thanks Marina) that depicts bellotas, the acorns that ibérico pigs eat.


Should you be so lucky as to have the remnants of a ham, here are some ideas for how to use them.

A literary dish--Duelos y Quebrantos are what Don Quixote ate on Saturdays. Basically, eggs scrambled with ham fat, chorizo and diced ham.


A rice dish typical of the dehesa, the woodlands in western Spain where ibérico pigs are raised. Chunks of fresh ibérico pork go into the rice which is finished with a scattering of slivered ham.



Ham Croquettes
Croquetas de Jamón

Mince the ham scraps to incorporate in the thick bechamel for forming croquettes. Use some ham fat with the oil for the bechamel and infuse the milk with a piece of ham bone. The full recipe for ham croquettes is here.









In Andalusia, sopa de picadillo might be served as the first course of a special dinner or it might make an easy supper for the family, using broth leftover from the puchero pot.

Garnished Chicken Soup with Ham
Sopa de Picadillo

This Andalusian soup traditionally is made with the caldo, broth, from a puchero, a boiled dinner containing chicken, beef, ham bone and vegetables. Or, the broth can be quickly made with store-bought chicken consommé simmered 30 minutes with a chunk of ibérico or serrano ham bone. In my case, I added the frozen ham stock to a chicken carcass along with the usual aromatics. Be sure to skim the broth as it comes to a boil. After cooking, ladle the soup through a fine sieve so that it’s as clear as possible. The broth can be made in advance and refrigerated. Skim off any fat that congeals on the surface before reheating it. 

Be sure to taste the broth and add salt if necessary before cooking the noodles. Thin fideos—angel hair pasta—is the usual type of noodle cooked with this soup. But, any size vermicelli or other soup noodle can be used. Adjust cooking time as needed. Rice can be cooked in the broth instead of fideos.

Have all the additions to the soup—cooked chicken, carrots, egg and ham—at room temperature or warm before heating the broth and cooking the noodles. The additions can be added to the soup pot or tureen or dished into individual bowls.

Make a rich broth, add garnishes.

Serves 4 

6 cups chicken-ham broth
Salt, if needed
1 cup angel hair soup noodles (4 ounces)
1 tablespoon dry Sherry (optional)
5-6 ounces diced cooked chicken 
Cooked and sliced carrots 
1 hard-boiled egg, chopped
2 ounces ibérico or serrano ham, cut in dice or thin strips
1 cup croutons of fried bread
Sprigs of fresh mint

Place the broth in a pan, bring to a boil and add the noodles. Cook the noodles al dente, 3 minutes. Add the Sherry, if using. Remove the pan from the heat and divide the soup between four shallow soup bowls.

Add the chicken, carrots, egg, ham and croutons to the hot soup. Garnish each bowl with a mint sprig. Serve immediately.

The scent of fresh mint complements the savory aromas of this soup.


Eggs Scrambled with Ham
Duelos y Quebrantos



Duelos y Quebrantos is a very old La Mancha dish—what Don Quixote ate on Saturdays, you will recall. A simple dish of eggs scrambled with fatty bits of ham and, sometimes with the addition of lambs’ brains. Unconscionably delicious, though it might require increasing the cholesterol medication. 

Cook the eggs in rendered pork fat or in a combination of olive oil and fat. If you’ve got the remnants of an ibérico or serrano ham, dice some of the fat (tocino) as well as the lean. If no ham is to hand, use bacon for both fat and ham. Should you have reason to use lambs’ brains, blanch them in salted water, cut into small pieces and sauté them with the chorizo. 

With salty chorizo and ham scrambled with the eggs, salt is probably not needed. 

The following recipe, using two eggs, makes one serving or, if served as a tapa, two servings. If making a larger batch, instead of breaking the eggs right into the skillet, place them in a bowl and beat them lightly before adding to the skillet.

1 ounce chorizo
1 ounce ham fat, pancetta or bacon
1 ounce ibérico or serrano ham
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 large eggs
Freshly ground black pepper
Salt (optional)
Chopped scallions or parsley to garnish
Fried bread to accompany

Remove chorizo from its casing and dice it. Cut the fat in dice. Cut the ham in dice or thin strips.  

Break eggs right into the skillet.


Heat the oil in a skillet on medium heat. Add the diced chorizo and fat. Fry them gently, turning, until the fat is rendered and they are lightly browned, 4 minutes. 

Break the eggs into the skillet. Keep the heat on medium. Use a wooden spoon to stir the eggs, breaking up the yolks. As the eggs begin to set, fold in the ham. Remove the eggs when they reach the desired consistency, creamy-soft or completely set. Sprinkle with pepper and salt, if desired. Garnish with scallions. Serve immediately accompanied by triangles or croutons of fried bread.






Rice with Ibérico Pork and Ham
Arroz con Ibérico


This rice dish is layered with porky flavor—fresh pork, pork fat, ham stock and strips of ibérico ham. Fresh ibérico pork is widely available in Spain. Most hams and fresh ibérico meat are from cross-breed pigs that are fed pig feed. From specialty butchers, you might find fresh pork that is 100 percent ibérico de bellota—meat from all-ibérico pigs that have been finished on bellotas—acorns. 

Any of the usual cuts—lagarto, pluma, secreto, presa, solomillo—are fine for this recipe. For my version, I cut the bone away from a thick-cut loin chop and trimmed the excess fat to use for browning the meat. 

Ibérico pork is best cooked to medium-rare, still pink on the inside. The meat retains some of the fat, which keeps it juicy. It will be sufficiently cooked after the browning process. Remove the pieces of meat from the pan while the rice cooks and return them at the end of the cooking time.

Use medium-short-grained (round) rice, the same kind used for paella. Bomba is the best rice variety for this dish, which cooks with enough liquid to finish meloso, or a little soupy. 

The best liquid for cooking the rice is caldo de puchero—the strained soup made with chicken, beef and ham bone. If not available use ham stock plus chicken stock. Have the chicken stock hot when ready to add to the rice. If the ham and chicken stock are well-flavored, the rice will probably not need additional salt. 

Use a paella pan, perol (deep, two-handled frying pan), cazuela, flat-bottomed wok or skillet to cook the rice. I used a cast-iron skillet. 

Cut fresh pork in large chunks and brown them first.
Serves 2-3.

8-10 ounces boneless ibérico pork
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Olive oil
2 ounces mushrooms, sliced
1 cup chopped onions
¼ cup chopped carrot
2 tablespoons Sherry
2 cloves garlic
1/3 cup chopped green pepper
1 teaspoon pimentón de la Vera (smoked paprika)
½ cup crushed tomatoes
1 cup ham stock
½ teaspoon miso (optional)
1 cup medium-short-grained rice
3 cups hot chicken stock
Salt, as needed
Sprigs rosemary
6 asparagus stalks (optional)
1 ounce slivered ibérico ham

Browned pork and mushrooms.
Trim off excess fat from the meat. Dice the fat. Cut the meat into 1 ½-inch chunks Sprinkle with salt and pepper. 

Heat 1 tablespoon of oil in the pan. Add diced pork fat and cook on medium heat until the fat is rendered out, 2 minutes. Add the chunks of meat and brown them slowly on all sides, 6 to 8 minutes. Skim out the meat and reserve. Add the mushrooms to the pan with 1 tablespoon more of oil. Fry the mushrooms until browned and skim them out.

Keep the heat on medium. Add the onions and carrot to the pan and cook, stirring frequently, until they begin to brown, 5 minutes. Add 1 tablespoon of the Sherry and cook until liquid evaporates. Add remaining Sherry and cook it off. Add the garlic and green pepper and continue sautéing the mixture until peppers are softened, 3 minutes. 

Stir in the pimentón. Immediately add the tomatoes. Cook them 5 minutes until tomatoes are thickened and beginning to brown. Add the contents of the skillet to a blender with the miso, if using, and the ham stock. Blend to make a smooth puree.

Add 1 tablespoon of oil to the pan and add the mixture from the blender. Stir in the rice. Add the hot chicken stock, saving ½ cup to be added at the end of the cooking time. Taste the liquid and add salt if necessary. Add the fried mushrooms. Add a sprig of rosemary. Add the asparagus, if using. Stir to combine. Bring the liquid to a boil, then reduce heat slightly so that the rice bubbles. Cook, uncovered, 10 minutes. 

Use a wooden paddle to stir gently. Lower heat and cook the rice 5 minutes more. Add remaining ½ cup of the chicken stock. Do not stir. Place the chunks of meat in the rice. Cook 3 minutes more or until the rice is cooked al dente. 

Discard cooked rosemary. Scatter the slivers of ham on top of the rice and tent the pan with foil. Allow to set 10 minutes. Serve the rice in the same pan in which it cooked with a fresh sprig of rosemary on top. 



After browning, the ibérico pork is cooked medium-rare and still juicy. Return it to the pan after the rice is cooked.

If you're starting from scratch, here is the authentic recipe for Andalusian puchero, incorporating chicken, beef and ham bones, chickpeas and vegetables.

Saturday, February 22, 2020

A FAMOUS FEAST FROM LITERATURE

The most memorable meal in the story of Don Quixote by Cervantes is certainly that of the bodas de Camacho, the wedding feast of a rich man named Camacho (who doesn’t, by the way, get the girl).  Don Quixote and Sancho Panza encounter some 50 cooks at work preparing the meal.  A whole young steer stuffed with a dozen suckling pigs is roasting on a huge spit.  Lamb, hare and chickens are stewing in enormous earthenware ollas. Loaves of bread are piled into a mountain and whole cheeses, stacked like bricks, form a wall.  A treasure chest of spices is at hand.  Cooks are frying sweet pastries in great cauldrons of oil, then dipping them into boiling honey syrup.


Sancho, who famously is always thinking of his stomach, cannot contain himself.  He begs permission to dip a crust of bread into one of the pots and is bidden by the cooks to skim off what he likes--and take the ladle too!  Happy, he scores three chickens and a couple geese for breakfast.

A dish fit for a rich man's wedding--braised chicken and meatballs in an almond-saffron sauce.
This chicken stew, rich with ground almonds, might well have been stewing in the huge pots at that wedding feast. The addition of meatballs (or chicken balls) turns it into rather a grand version of chicken pepitoria, a favorite fiesta dish in Spain.

I’m not cooking for any wedding events this week. However, I made a batch of meatballs in almond sauce (albóndigas en salsa de almendras) for a video-chat with students in a class on “Food and Culture in Spain” (with Dr. Martha Daas at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA). It’s a recipe that shows off the best of Spanish cooking with its subtle Moorish influences and that's not one of those familiar ones, paella or gazpacho or potato tortilla.

Later, I upgraded the meatballs. I cooked chicken in the rich almond sauce and combined it with the meatballs to make a fancy meal.

The recipe for wedding stew that appears in my book, Cooking from the Heart of Spain—Food of La Mancha, calls for chicken breast for the meatballs. While chicken breast makes a delightfully light dumpling, veal, pork or a combination can be used instead.  Another version is similar to the rellenos, or bread dumplings, that go into a cocido. The balls can also be made with chicken livers combined with bread, parsley and egg.

If the chicken dish is prepared with gallina, hen, or a mature boiling fowl, it is slow-cooked in water with aromatics until completely tender. The resulting broth is used in the sauce and the cooked meat stripped from the bones and added to the sauce with the meatballs. If you’re using tender chicken legs, braise them right in the sauce.

Steamed white rice makes the perfect accompaniment to this sensuous chicken dish with its “gravy” perfumed with golden saffron and ground almonds.

No wedding needed--serve this easy chicken and meatball dish for a dinner party.

Chicken thighs and drumsticks are succulent.

The rich gravy goes well with steamed white rice.

I've sprinkled threads of saffron and fried almonds on top of the stew.


Options for the meatballs: all chicken breast, or a combination of veal and pork, chicken livers, bread and ham.



Wedding Stew with Chicken and Meatballs
Guiso de Bodas de Camacho

Serves 6.

For the meatballs:
The meatballs can be prepared up to a day in advance, poached, then refrigerated. Reheat them in the stew during the last 15 minutes of cooking.

1/3 cup flat-leaf parsley
2 tablespoons chopped onion
½ cup fine, fresh breadcrumbs
½ boneless, skinless chicken breast (12-14 ounces), cut in 1-inch pieces
1 egg, separated
1/8 teaspoon grated nutmeg
1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 ½ tablespoon lemon juice
4 cups chicken broth or water

Use a food processor to finely chop the parsley. Add onion, breadcrumbs, chicken breast and egg yolk. Process until the chicken is uniformly minced. Add the nutmeg, pepper, salt, and 1 tablespoon of lemon juice.

Beat the egg white on high speed in a small bowl until it holds stiff peaks. Beat in the remaining lemon juice.

Fold the egg whites thoroughly into the ground chicken. 

Dip hands in water and lightly roll the mixture into walnut-sized balls.

Bring the broth or water to a boil. (Broth can be used in the chicken stew.) Reduce to a simmer and poach the meatballs for 4 minutes. They may not be completely cooked through, but will finish cooking in the stew. Remove and reserve.


For the chicken stew:
2 ¾ - 3 pounds legs and thighs (about 8 pieces)
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Flour for dredging
¼ cup olive oil
1 slice bread, crusts removed
4 cloves garlic
1 cup blanched and skinned almonds
2 ¼ cups chicken broth
½ teaspoon saffron threads
1/16 teaspoon ground cloves
Grating of nutmeg
¼ teaspoon freshly ground pepper
1 tablespoon chopped flat-leaf parsley
1 teaspoon salt
2 hard-cooked egg yolks (whites can be used for garnish, if desired)

1 cup dry white wine
Chopped parsley for garnish
A few toasted almonds for garnish

Sprinkle the chicken pieces with salt and pepper and let them stand for 20 minutes. Then dredge them in flour, patting off the excess. Place on a tray.

Heat the oil in a large skillet. Fry the slice of bread on moderate heat until golden on both sides. Remove. Add 2 cloves of the garlic and the almonds. Fry them on a medium heat until golden. Remove with a slotted spoon and reserve.

Brown chicken pieces before braising.

In the same oil fry the chicken pieces on a medium heat, until they are nicely browned on all sides, 5 to 10 minutes. Transfer the pieces as they are browned to a large cazuela or deep sauté pan.

Crush the saffron in a mortar. Add 2 tablespoons of hot water and let it steep 10 minutes.


Grind bread, almonds.





Save a few fried almonds to garnish the finished dish. Place the fried bread, fried garlic plus 2 cloves raw garlic and remaining fried almonds in a blender with 1 cup of the broth. Blend until almonds are smoothly pureed. Add the saffron, cloves, nutmeg, pepper, parsley, salt and egg yolks. Blend again.

Pour the wine over the chicken pieces in the pan.  Raise the heat until the liquid begins to bubble. Add 1 cup of the remaining broth. Cover the pan and cook very gently for 30 minutes.

Turn the chicken pieces. Stir the almond-spice paste into the chicken. Taste for salt. Cover and cook until chicken is very tender, about 30 minutes more, adding additional broth as needed.
When chicken is tender, add the cooked meatballs to the stew and cook 15 minutes more.

Serve the stew in the cazuela or ladled onto a deep platter. Sprinkle with chopped parsley, a few toasted almonds and, if desired, sliced cooked egg whites.






More recipes for meatballs and dumplings:

And, another version of chicken in almond sauce: