This is dramatically black, surprisingly rich, and not that difficult to make. Serve it over cooked white rice for good contrast.
Squid with ink sauce served over rice |
The recipe is adapted from "¡Delicioso! The Regional Cooking of Spain" by Penelope Casas, "Cipirones Rellenos en su Tinta". I've streamlined it to avoid removing the squid from the sauce and overlap cooking and prep times. The squid we get, by Town Dock, frozen and available at BJs Wholesale, does not need the 2+ hours cooking time hers do; this should take about an hour total. Makes two servings.
Stuffing
1 pound Squid, about 2-4 inches long, cleaned, defrosted; separate tentacles and tubes
1 Tbs Olive Oil
1 medium Onion, chopped very fine
2 cloves Garlic, minced
1.5 Tbs Parsley, minced
Salt
Pepper
I used a 3 Quart Pot, about 6-inches tall, but narrow enough that the sauce mostly cover the Stuffed Squid when it cooked later.
Finely chop the Squid tentacles and fins, saute in Olive Oil with Onion, Garlic, Parsley, Salt, and Pepper.
Cook about 10 minutes.
Move it to a bowl and reuse the pot for the Sauce.
Sauce
1 tsp Squid Ink
1/8 C Dry Red Wine
1/8 C Fish stock, clam juice, liquid from defrosting the Squid, or Water
1 Tbs Olive Oil
1 medium Onion, chopped fine
2 clove Garlic, minced
4 ounces Bell Pepper, cored, seeded, finely chopped (we used an orange one)
4 ounces Tomato
Pepper, black
In a bowl, combine Ink, Wine, Fish Stock and set aside to dissolve a bit; the Ink is quite thick and wants to stick to itself and everything else.
Heat the Oil and saute Onions, Garlic, Peppers, Tomatoes, Parsley, Black Pepper for 5 minutes. Cover and cook slow for 15 minutes to break down the vegetables.
Stir in the Ink/Wine mixture and any liquid from the defrosted Squid.
While the sauce cooks, stuff the squid.
Stuff the Squid
Load a wide-tipped pastry bag with the cooked stuffing; you can use a spoon but it's fidgety.
Stuff each of the Squid tubes, but don't over fill.
Close each with toothpicks.
Combine, Cook
Whiz the Sauce with an immersion blender and pass through a fine sieve to strain out tomato skins, seeds, and leave a smooth sauce. Return to pan.
Add Stuffed Squid to the Sauce and cook until the squid is tender enough, ours took about 20 minutes.
If the sauce is thin, leave it uncovered or slightly covered; if thick, put a lid on it.
It should be like a thick gravy, not a loose liquid.
Taste the sauce and add Salt if needed, but be careful since the Ink is pretty salty.
While this is cooking, cook some Rice.
Serve
Add cooked Rice to warmed plates.
Remove the Squids one at a time, and remove the toothpicks; arrange squids on the rice.
Cover with the cooked Sauce.
Garnish with some minced Parsley for contrast.
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