Showing posts with label dips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dips. Show all posts

Saturday, February 10, 2024

TIME TO RETHINK HUMMUS!


Chef Charo Carmona

Having become ubiquitous, the party dip for every occasion, hummus perhaps is ready for its remake. I tasted a version this week that I’m trying out in my kitchen.

It was not called hummus, but ajo pimentón, “garlic-paprika”. It was a thick spread—what is called paté in Spanish—of chickpeas, garlic, pimentón and a good dose of cumin. The spread was served with crisp toasts as an appetizer before a stunning meal at Arte de Cozina, a restaurant in Antequera (Málaga), where Chef Charo Carmona is famed for her interpretation of local, traditional dishes.

 Charo’s mission statement: Recuperar sabores desplazados, investigar sobre elaboraciones ancestrales y conocer la mejor manera de aprovechar los productos de la zona son nuestras máximas.  (To retrieve forgotten flavors, to seek out ancestral recipes and to discover the best way to take advantage of the products of our region.)

 Charo generously shares recipes for the dishes served at Arte, nicely printed on index cards. But I forgot to ask her for the ajo pimentón, so I am winging it in the kitchen.

Ajo Pimentón somewhat resembles Ajo Colorao, a dish of potatoes mashed with bacalao and lots of pimentón. But it’s most like Middle Eastern hummus, without the tahini and with pimentón that turns it a ruddy red. Serve it accompanied with toasts, regañás (crispy crackers), or pita crisps for spreading or dipping.


This dip, called Ajo Pimentón, is a little like hummus, made with chickpeas plus lots of pimentón. 

Serve with toasts or crisps for spreading or dipping.

Garlic-Pimentón Spread
Ajo Pimentón

Use both sweet and hot pimentón.
1 ½ cups cooked chickpeas
2 teaspoons pimentón de la Vera (smoked paprika)
½ teaspoon pimentón picante de la Vera (smoked hot paprika)
2 cloves garlic
½ teaspoon ground cumin
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
½ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Chickpea cooking liquid or water, to thin the spread
Sesame seeds
Toasts or crackers  to accompany

Combine the chickpeas, two kinds of pimenton, garlic, cumin, oil, salt and lemon juice in a blender. Add enough liquid, about ¼ cup, to turn the mixture into a thick cream. 

To serve, place in a bowl and sprinkle with sesame seeds. Serve with toasts or crackers.

Ajo pimentón is a smooth chickpea spread with pimentón.



Three dishes from Arte de Cozina. Clockwise from top left,  Chestnut Stew, Kid-Goat in Pastoril Sauce, and Olla Podrida, a soup/stew with chickpeas, chicken, pork, beef, pork belly, tongue, trotter, ear, tail, plus rabbit, partridge, kid, blood sausage, chorizo, turnip, cabbage, garlic, and saffron. Sprinkled with parsley. Intense flavors. 

The restaurant: Arte de Cozina.

Recipes from Arte de Cozina Season for "Spoon Foods."

Accompaniments to the dip:

Saturday, September 3, 2022

DIPS, CONJUGATED

 Dips, dipping, dipped. I dip, you dipped, he is dipping. They will have dipped. In Spanish, it’s dipear, although the Real Academia Española—protector of the true language—says the correct usage is “mojar un alimento en una salsa,” “to wet a food in a sauce.” Thanks to advertising, dipear is probably here to stay.  


The dips in my fridge are past tense. I had all the neighbors for drinks last week (we were nine people, French, Swedish, Argentine and American-Mijeño). I served trays of dips and accompanying dippers: guacamole with tortilla chips, hummus with pita chips, olive-caper dip with regañás crackers and mojo verde, a green-chile salsa, with wrinkly potatoes for dipping. 

Future tense for leftover dips--as salad dressing, sandwich spread, sauce for fish or meat, even soup. 

After the gathering, I was left with dribs and drabs of all the dips. The avocado we finished the next day. It really doesn’t keep well. The hummus, of garbanzos and tahini, I stashed in the freezer. The olive oil-rich olive-caper dip and the mojo both keep well refrigerated. The oil rises to the top and makes a protective seal. I am happily recycling the various dips and sauces for this week’s meals. I will dip again. Here’s how it’s going.

Hummus--more than just a dip.

Hummus, made with a jar of chickpeas, tahini (sesame paste), lots of garlic, lemon juice and olive oil, with smoked picante (hot) pimentón. I served it as a dip accompanied by pita crisps. I froze the leftovers. 

Hummus makes a terrific dressing for salads and cooked vegetables. It's a good sandwich spread. Stirred into chicken broth, it makes a very tasty soup, 

For a vegetarian lunch wrap: Slice eggplant, dip the slices in beaten egg and fry them in olive oil on moderate heat until tender and browned on both sides. Drain on absorbent paper and sprinkle with salt. Spread the slices with hummus and tuck them into pita pockets. Add chopped salad, shredded lettuce, crumbled cheese, harissa hot sauce. 



Spread creamy hummus on fried eggplant slices and tuck them into pita pockets. 


Olive-Caper Dip (Olivada con Alcaparras). This is not unlike the Provençal olive-caper paste called tapenade. Here it is made with canned anchovy-stuffed olives. Use additional anchovies if you like it really briny.  (Recipe below).

As a dip, it was accompanied by crunchy regañás, an olive-oil and sesame cracker. The leftovers have many uses--dressing for tuna-macaroni salad, stuffing for hard-boiled eggs, sandwich spread, as a sauce for simple grilled foods.



Olive-caper sauce is a tangy complement to simple, pan-grilled lamb loin.



Green Chile and Cilantro Dip (Mojo Verde)
I served this spicy dip in the classic Canary Islands manner, to accompany Wrinkly Potatoes, small, unpeeled potatoes cooked with lots of salt so that their skins get wrinkly. (The recipe for wrinkly potatoes and mojo verde is here.)

Leftover mojo makes a piquant sauce for fish. I served it with pan-fried fillets of pargo, a pink-skinned bream. 



Mojo verde is a Canary Island sauce with green chile and cilantro. For dipping, serve it with tiny wrinkly potatoes. Or use it to sauce pan-fried fish.

Olive-Caper Dipping Sauce
Olivada con Alcaparras

A smidgin of sweetness—a ripe fig—mitigates the saltiness of olives, anchovies and capers. Use a spoonful of honey if no figs are to hand.

1 (200-gram) can of anchovy-stuffed green olives (½ cup drained olives) 
3-4 anchovy fillets, drained (optional)
2 tablespoons drained capers
2 cloves garlic
¼ cup fresh bread crumbs
1 ripe fig (or ½ teaspoon honey)
1 tablespoon sweet wine (such as Muscatel)
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
Pinch of fresh thyme

Drain the olives, reserving the brine. 

Place the olives in a blender or food processor with the anchovies, if using, the capers, garlic, bread crumbs, fig, wine, oil, pepper and thyme. Let set 5 minutes to allow the bread to soften. Blend until smooth, adding enough of the reserved olive brine to make a thick, creamy sauce. 

Keep the sauce, tightly covered and refrigerated. Serve cold or room temperature.

The olive-caper sauce served with grilled lamb, potatoes, zucchini sauté.

More recipes for dips and dippers: