Tapas: Classic Small Dishes from Spain
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About this ebook
Tapas are the wonderfully tempting little dishes of food that are traditionally served with sherry in southern Spain. Beautifully simple, tantalizingly delicious, and easy to prepare, they are perfect for all kinds of occasions.
The recipes and suggestions in this book demonstrate how simple ingredients can be quickly transformed into mini feasts designed to delight the senses. Among the recipes are salted almonds, bread with olive oil and garlic, salt cod, asparagus with two sauces, chicory and blue cheese, mushrooms with garlic and rosemary, eggplant puree, broad beans with ham, tortilla, pickled sardines, spiced mackerel, lamb ribs with paprika, beef in red wine, potted game, croquettes, empanadas and many, many more. In addition there is plenty of helpful advice including a selection of menus that show how to combine tapas to provide meals for every occasion—such as spring, summer, autumn, and winter parties, children’s tapas party, vegetarian tapas party and a no-cook tapas menu. The wealth of background information and the superb collection of recipes vividly evoke the spirit of a country where food is the essence of the community.
Elisabeth Luard
Elisabeth Luard is an award-winning food writer, journalist and broadcaster. Her cookbooks include A Cook's Year in a Welsh Farmhouse, European Peasant Cookery and The Food of Spain and Portugal. She has written three memoirs, Family Life, Still Life and My Life as a Wife. She is currently the Trustee Director of the Oxford Symposium on Food & Cookery, has a monthly column in the Oldie and writes regularly in the Times, theTelegraph, Country Life and the Daily Mail. @elisabethluard / elisabethluard.com
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Book preview
Tapas - Elisabeth Luard
Published in 2011 by
Grub Street
4 Rainham Close
London
SW11 6SS
Email: food@grubstreet.co.uk
Web: www.grubstreet.co.uk
Text © Elisabeth Luard 1989, 1991, 2011
Copyright this edition © Grub Street 2011
Photography by Michelle Garrett
Food styling by Jayne Cross
Design and jacket design by Sarah Driver
First published by Martin Books as The La Ina Book of Tapas in 1989
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the
British Library.
ISBN 978-1-908117-02-1
ePub ISBN 9781909808881
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopying, recording or any information storage and
retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Printed and bound in Slovenia
Recipe notes
Introduction
Basics
Salads and cold dishes
Vegetables
Eggs and tortillas
Fish, prawns, shrimps and shellfish
Meat
Chicken and game
Croquettes, pasties and pies
Choosing your tapas
Index
All recipes give ingredients in metric, imperial and cup measures. Use any one set of measurements, but not a mixture, in any one recipe.
All spoon measures are given in level spoons, unless otherwise stated.
1 tablespoon = one 15 ml spoon; 1 teaspoon = one 5 ml spoon.
Eggs are standard (size 2-3), unless otherwise stated.
Two mouthfuls make up a tapa portion, served on a small oval plate or saucer. More expensive dishes, or larger servings, can be ordered as a whole ‘ration’. This is a plateful: a small dinner plate crammed to capacity. Half-a-ration is a side-plate full. Quantity is dictated by plate-size. A small amount of food is never served in the middle of a large plate, as the aim is to appear generous and hospitable.
Breadcrumbs are white. Spaniards do not really approve of brown bread, although attitudes are changing in line with the rest of Europe. Make your own with stale bread, sliced and dried in a very low oven until it is crisp and pale gold. Crush in a food processor, or wrap the crisped bread in a clean towel and run a rolling pin over it until it is thoroughly crumbled. Store in an airtight tin and use as required.
The traditional Spanish sherry glass is the copita. It is tall, thin and tulip-shaped. Never fill it more than two-thirds full to appreciate the delicate aroma of the wine.
A small glass is a sherry glass filled to within a thumb-width of the top. A wine glass is about 125ml.
A finger’s width/depth is 1.5 cm. 2 fingers width/depth is 3 cm.
Sherry vinegar is a by product of the sherry industry. It is a fine, oak-flavoured, strong vinegar which adds richness and distinction to a dish. It must be used sparingly and diluted with water if the recipe calls for a large volume of liquid. To make vinaigrette with sherry vinegar, use a 1:6 proportion vinegar to oil instead of the usual 1:4. Substitute wine or cider vinegar, if unavailable (balsamic is too sweet).
Dry-leaf herbs – thyme, rosemary, sage, oregano – weigh just about the same dried or fresh: one can be substituted for the other. Parsley, marjoram and mint must always be used fresh.
Tapas, as I’m sure you already know, are those delicious little titbits served as the accompaniment to a glass of wine. You’ll find them in their original form in the bars of Seville in Andalucía, where the native wine is the clean, strawpale nectar of Jerez. Until very recently, the price of the glass always included a tiny dish of the house speciality. Nowadays it is more likely that the tapas will be priced and served in full or half portions – on one plate, but with a fork for each participant. But the tapa itself, a ‘lid’ for the glass it accompanies, is traditionally no more than a mouthful.
‘Que hay para tapar?’ ‘What is there to pick at?’ is the question every bartender expects to hear as he takes the order for a glass of wine. He’ll answer with a litany, rhythmic, almost singing. He can repeat it, too, if asked – word for word, rhyme for rhyme.
Tapas embody a way of life. Southern Spain lives outdoors, and in the long light summers, day and night merge into each other. Mediterranean sunshine, golden beaches, fertile valleys, whitewashed villages and herbscented hillsides, mark what to those of us who live under chilly northern skies as the road to happiness.
The Spaniard, as with all Mediterranean natives, is naturally garrulous. The world and his wife loves company, sits out on the street of an evening or takes a gentle saunter round the village square, exchanging news, inspecting each others’ impeccably turnedout infants and indulging, where appropriate, in a little light flirtation. The tapa habit is a reflection of this natural companionability, allowing the freedom to wander, lean an elbow on the bar, chat to acquain tances, settle down at a table under the awning and keep an eye on the children. And the tiny dishes of food which accompany the wine keep the wanderer comparatively sober and amiable. As Don Quixote was to the novel – picaresque, progressing in short bursts of selfcontained drama – so tapas are to a conventional meal.
The romerîas – local religious pilgrimages which turn into allday picnics – reflect a national delight in getting out and about on high days and holidays, and the rituals of the tapa bar seems to be an everyday extension of this pleasure. The habit is essentially peripatetic, a wander from bar to bar – in search of not only special dishes, but also entertainment. While the television rumbles on in one corner, an electronic Ancient Mariner who performs much the same function and to whom no one is obliged to listen, the life of the neighbourhood is reflected in the comings and goings outside and within.
It was not until I went to live in the 1960’s with my novelist husband and our four young children in a remote Andalucían valley that I learnt to appreciate the pleasures of this thoroughly Spanish way of eating. Long before the fashion for open kitchens in Michelinstarred restaurants, the humble provider of tapas cooked to order and set everything out on display. His clientele wouldn’t have it any other way, perhaps because the nation is visually articulate – think Goya, Velazquez, Picasso – and likes to know what it’s getting.
Our house was buried in a corkoak forest high in the hills overlooking the southernmost point of Europe, halfway between Algeciras, a busy seaport, and Tarifa, a small fortified harbour town, once a Phoenician stronghold. The region itself, Andalucía, had been under Moorish rule for seven centuries, and their culinary influence remained in the use of spicing, a taste for almondbased sweetmeats and a light hand with frying pan. It was the Muslim presence at both ends of the Mediterranean – the Ottoman Empire on the east and the caliphs of AlAndaluz in the west – which ensured that iron replaced earthenware as the cookingimplement of choice.
Meanwhile, once the children were settled in local schools, we began to look around for local entertainment. At the time there were no theatres nearer than Malaga. The red light district of Algeciras was the only area where good flamenco could be found – and that was not really family viewing. Films were poorly dubbed, cinemaaccommodation primitive and television in its squalling infancy. Feria – Spain’s local carnival – brought circus and bullfights and dancing to Algeciras in June, in September to Tarifa. For the rest of the year, we instituted a regular Saturday evening family tapahunt. With four children under ten we were perfectly in tune with local habit. In public places in Spain, children tumble underfoot everywhere. Babies and children accompany their parents on their evening outings, slumbering on a maternal shoulder when they’re tired, or curling up on in a corner while the adults gossip and flirt and argue over their heads.
From an early age children are given a splash of wine in their water – usually carbonated sweetened water known as gaseosa – to qualify them for a little tapa along with the grownups. The atmosphere is leisurely – browsing and grazing are not exactly urgent occupations – and conversation is the only necessary accompaniment to a tapa. That and the pale dry wines of Jerez or Sanlucar or Puerto de Santa Maria, the only wines made by the solera method, distinctive in flavour and fragrance. Or even the good red wine of Rioja or Valdepeñas or Jumilla if that’s what pleases you best. But there’s no doubt that the dry pale sherries of Jerez go wonderfully well with certain dishes. Particularly those, when, as they say in Cadiz, the very seaspray has been dipped in batter and fried in the olive oil of Sevilla. Or Toledo. Or Ronda. Or wherever you feel the rich green juice of the Mediterranean’s oldest cultivated fruit is at its best.
Since we did not live in a village, we would make our way to our chosen locale and do the rounds. The nearest settlement, Pelayo, was famous for its bakery, and the roadside bar served big chunks of bread with tiny bowls of snails in paprika sauce. The secondary bar, tucked away behind, was always full of old men playing draughts – and the kitchen had wonderful wild rabbit cooked with garlic. So that made a fine enough evening. If we turned east down the road towards the Atlantic we could have spidercrabs and seasnails in a bar set into the Moorish battlements of Tarifa, and then go on further, to the chozo down by the beach at Punta Paloma, for deepfried quail and the fattest crispest chips in Spain.
Algeciras, on the Mediterranean side, offered the more sophisticated delicacies of a busy seaport. Down by the harbour was a barwhich served big pink prawns as firm as lobster, baby cuttlefish fried to perfection, clams and razor shells opened briefly on a scalding hotplate and served with quartered lemons. And in the deserted market place someone would have set up a brazier to blister juicy octopus tentacles over the hot coals. Unlike most of the locals, we usually found we could not manage to tuck into a large meal afterwards – a shortcoming which had something to do with our English habit of still taking tea and thisandthat throughout the day.
In a simple bar in a small village, the tapa offered with your glass of wine will be correspondingly modest. A few homecured green olives, a bit of local goat’s cheese, a cube of Spanish tortilla – the thick potato omelette any Spanish housewife seems to be able to turn out to perfection. Big cities and towns – Barcelona, Seville, Malaga, Granada, Madrid – reflect in their bars and restaurants the affluence of their citizens. Customers progress from venue to venue, proud of their knowledge of house specialities – like truffle hounds scenting out the treasure.
Raw materials are very important in the cooking of Spain, as with all uncomplicated cuisines. Good bread and chorizo, the freshest of shellfish, a way of leaching and flavouring the best and plumpest of olives – each bar, chozo and tasca will have its own specialities. These may simply be the best saltdried mountain ham – maybe a pata negra, blackfoot ham from Jabugo; or a wellmatured cheese – a fine Manchego or a leafwrapped Cabrales. Or the house fame might rest on a little scalding casserole of angulas – baby eels bathed in olive oil and spiked with chilli. Or even some small delicacy which reflects the skill of the cook with the frying pan. No one fries better than a Spaniard – and among Spaniards, none better than the Andaluz.
Kitchen equipment dictates as firmly as ingredients. The plancha – a flat metal griddle heated with a gas jet or charcoal underneath – is used to grill sardines, prawns, thin slices of tuna or swordfish, pork fillet marinated with garlic and paprika. In Seville I have seen a heavy old smoothing iron smacked on top of a chop to speed up the cooking process. In the hills behind Cordoba there is a bar which serves only quails eggs fried on the plancha and dishes them on a piece of bread cut to scale. But the most basic cookingtool, a long metal tin filled with whitehot charcoal, dates back to the days of the Moors and is set up in the street in feriatime by fezhatted travelling peddlars who grill Moorishspiced kebabs, pinchitos – the name translates as ‘little thorns’ – to order for an eager queue of customers.
Which is not to overlook Spain’s original fryingpan, the cazuela, a shallow earthenware casserole of variable diameter glazed on the inside but not on the outside and which serves for both cooking and serving. A cazuela needs to be tempered before it can be placed on a naked flame and all housewives have their own method of making a new cazuela fireproof: the most popular method is to rub the glazed surface with a cut clove of garlic, fill the dish to the brim with cold water and set it in a hot oven till the water boils dry. Once tempered, the cazuela holds its heat for at least 10 minutes, allowing the contents to continue to cook. You’ll find singleportion cazuelas used to present luxurious little