2024-07-21

Allioli Rapidísimo: quick and pungent -- using milk!

While I was researching recipes for sepia croquetas I came across a TV video which included a "allioli rapidísimo". Interestingly, it used milk as a base, which is something I've never heard of, and I've been working on various Spanish alliolis like toum for a while. As the name implies, it takes just a few minutes to make using a stick blender. It has a fiery burn from the raw garlic which mellows after a night in the fridge.


The chef said you can use whatever oil you like as the base, including a neutral one like sunflower oil, but we found this was too mild and created a sauce that was blindingly white, so we'll use a plain olive oil, then finish with extra virgin for flavor. The chef also added a bit of parsley at the end, but I think that distracts from the appearance.

A search shows that this is a Portuguese (perhaps Brazilian) called "maionese de leite", and that author shows that it's amenable to a variety of flavors including tomato or anchovy which sounds interesting.

  1 clove  Garlic, whole, peeled
 60 ml     Milk
120 ml     Olive Oil (perhaps not Extra Virgin)
as needed  Extra Virgin Olive Oil
           Parsley (optional)
to taste   Sherry Vinegar
to taste   Salt

Put the clove of Garlic in the cup of a stick blender, add the Milk and the first Olive Oil.
Whiz with the stick blender -- without moving the blender -- until the Milk and Oil merge almost completely.
Slowly drizzle in the Extra Virgin Olive Oil while blending, raising and dropping the stick blender to incorporate; it should start to thicken and fluff up. 
Add as much EVOO as you like to get the texture you want, I probably added 60 ml or so, not as much as I expected.
Add a bit of Parsley if you like and whiz briefly.
Add Sherry Vinegar and Salt, whiz a little, taste, and adjust. 




Croquetas de Sepia y su Tinta: crunchy and rich

Croquetas are little fried balls of bechamel containing something like jamón, chicken, bacalao, cheese and nuts, or in this case, squid with its ink. Almost every little café serves them as a tapa, but usually not the squid ink variety. This is my favorite flavor: the ink gives it a rich "earthiness" (which seems like the wrong word for a sea creature). The proteins are usually diced very small, to provide some texture without poking through the crunchy crust.

Croquetas topped with "allioli rapidísimo"

Sepia and Choco refer to the same species (cuttlefish), while Calamar (squid) is a different beast; both work fine. Many recipes add onions, cooked eggs, wine, nutmeg, etc, but I think those additions would be distracting. This video recipe is quite detailed, but he's using squid already cooked in its ink. Another video makes the bechamel with oil (no butter), and that seems very Spanish to me, I'll do that too. We get squid and separate frozen  packets of ink (4 for 0,69€), and we'll cook the squid then its ink in the bechamel's oil. The bechamel is equal parts by weight of fat (oil, butter, or a mix) and flour. The ratio of milk to fat+oil is about 2.5-2.8. I used Squid, an amount I had on hand.

These are easy enough to make, although the shaping/coating can be a little fussy so having a friend speeds the process.

One of my source recipes made an "allioli rapidísimo" which I made, and it turned out well, so I've written that up separately. 

Makes about 24, and a tapa-sized serving is probably 3 per person. After cooking and cooling, extras  freeze and reheat surprisingly well, baked.

100 g        Olive Oil (doesn't have to be Extra Virgin)
150 g        Sepia/Calamar, cleaned, body and tentacles, fine dice
  1 clove    Garlic, minced
  2 packets  Squid Ink ("tinta")
100 g        Flour
500 ml       Milk, whole
 to taste    Salt

Flour
Egg, beaten
Panko Bread Crumbs


Heat the Oil in a medium sized pan.
Add the Squid and Garlic and cook a few minutes until the garlic is barely golden.
Add the Ink and stir to distribute well.
Add the Flour, and mix thoroughly; cook 5 minutes to ensure there's no raw flour taste.



Add half the Milk to the Squid/Flour mixture, stir until it comes together;
add the rest of the Milk and repeat.
Cook to thicken and intensify, stirring continuously until you have a sauce thicker than cream, perhaps yoghurt-like: you want a stiff mixture when it's cool so you can form them.
Put in a tub, cover tightly with film, cool, then refrigerate; it should be quite stiff.


You can use this time to make an allioli if you like.

For shaping and coating, it helps to have a friend: one scoops, shapes, and coats in Flour, the other then coats in Egg and Panko.
Set out separate bowls of Flour, beaten Egg, and Panko.
Scoop out a bit and make a bite size ball or cork-like shape; a #30 disher/scoop can help here. 
Drop in the Flour, transfer to Egg and coat, then to Panko to cover; this can get messy.
Repeat until all the Squid Bechamel is used.
I like to chill these before frying but it's probably not necessary.
Fry in batches in hot oil, about 190C/375F, until golden all around;
if they soften and leak the filling, remove immediately.


Drain on a paper towel lined plate.
Serve with an allioli or other sauce. 
Eat promptly, while hot.

How it turned out, next time...

The texture was good, creamy rather than liquid or stiff. The filling didn't have enough fishy/squiddy flavor, and wasn't as dramatically black as I wanted. The squid shrank a lot when cooking and was not very apparent in the bite.

Next time, bump up the squid to 200-300 g. Cut it into larger pieces, pea sized, since it shrinks so much. Double the ink to 4 packets.

Consider boosting flavor by adding a seafood stock to the bechamel and cooking it down to intensify.


2024-07-07

Ajoarriero Aragonés: bacalao, potato, and egg -- cool and smooth

We had this at Tasca Angel in Valencia and it felt like comfort food for the dog days of summer: a cool mashed potato or brandade-like texture that was fine on its own or smeared on bread. This version from Aragon is different from the one with the same name from Navarra which is a stew that adds tomatoes and peppers. The recipe originated with mule drivers (arrieros) who could carry potatoes and dried salt cod on their overland journeys, and is very similar to "atascaburras" ("something that blocks a donkey's way") from Castilla-La Mancha.

Garnished with parsley, served with toast

Unsurprisingly, there are wide variations. Many recipes make this with chopped eggs, some with chunky potatoes; others add onion or bread crumbs.  In this video for "atascaburras o ajoarriero", Chef Teresa Carrascosa whips a LOT of olive oil into the cooked potatoes then mixes the shredded bacalao by hand. It's frequently garnished with quartered boiled eggs, walnuts, and/or parsley. 

Recipes range from 4:1 potatoes to bacalao to about 1:1 by weight; we'll start with 2:1. Here, I'm looking for a smooth texture and minimal ingredients.   I've got a potato ricer which makes a really smooth mash, but we can't pass bacalao through it; if you've got a potato masher, you can mash them both together.

Makes 600 ml, 555 g, and serves 4 as a hearty first course but you'll probably want some later.

A few simple ingredients

If needed, desalt the Bacalao in multiple changes of water for two days, or use ready-to-cook "al punt de sal" without hydrating.

200 g      Bacalao (desalted)
400 g      Potato (for baking, mashing, not waxy)
 75 ml     Olive Oil, Extra Virgin, good quality
  2 clove  Garlic, minced
  1        Egg, beaten

In a small pan, lightly sauté the Garlic in a small amount of the Oil to tame it for Irene, remove from heat after 5 minutes (normally it's added raw, mashed with a mortar).
In a medium pot, gently simmer the Bacalao in water 4-5 minutes until almost tender, remove, discard any skin and bones, then crumble or chop finely.
Bring the water back to a boil, slice the Potatoes 1/2 cm thick, and cook until barely done (maybe 15 minutes?)
Drain Potatoes, reserving some of the water.
Add the Garlic Oil to the now empty pot.
Pass Potato slices through a potato ricer into the pot with Garlic Oil. 
Add beaten Egg to the Potatoes and combine, ensuring they doesn't coagulate in one place.
Add the Bacalao and combine.
Drizzle in the rest of the Oil and mix to a smooth consistency like loose mashed potatoes; if it seems too thick, add a bit of the reserved water and more Oil.
Adjust Salt if needed but the Bacalao will probably bring enough of its own.
Allow to cool to room temperature then cover and cool.
Serve cold, cool, or room temperature, garnished with parsley; spread on bread or toast.
In cold weather, this could be served hot and warming like an intense potato purée.


How was it? Next time...

This turned out well, but not as smooth as at Tasca Angel -- I suspect they passed theirs through a tamis. 
I used the medium holes of the potato ricer and that let some skins through so use the smallest holes next time.
Irene said it needed more bacalao flavor so next time reduce the Potato to 300 g.

2024-07-04

Almendrados: Spanish almond cookies, 3 variations

I saw a recipe that needed roasted skin-on almonds, got them, then forgot what I wanted them for: definitely something Spanish, probably dessert-like. So I hit upon Almendrados, almond cookies. I found some variations and decided to make three. Below, the first two are similar techniques and I used the skin-on whole almonds (ground up), while the final one was more fussy and I used store-bought finely ground almonds; you can see the difference in the color. It's not quite a fair comparison, and I probably wouldn't buy the whole skin-on nuts again: they give the cookies an unappealing "health food" look. 

Variations: #1 bottom, #2 top right, #3 top left

TL;DR: the first recipe below is the easiest and was quite good; the second was quite dry and requires a glass of sherry; the last is visually the most appealing (pale finely ground almonds) and was like a shortbread, similar to Spanish polvorónes we see in wintertime.

#1: Spain On A Fork: 3 ingredients -- an easy treat

Some of the other recipes I've made from his site turned out well, and his videos are quite helpful. 
These had a good chew and definite sweetness that made them a treat.


260 g Almonds, ground fine
120 g Powdered Sugar
  1   Egg, separated

Grind the Almonds as fine as you can in a food processor or blender, but watch out it doesn't go so far as to turn into nut butter. Mine are not as fine as I'd liked, and I wouldn't use the skin-on nuts again.
Add to a large bowl, and add the Powdered Sugar.
Separate the Egg into White and Yolk.
Whisk the Egg White about 15 seconds to fluff and add to the Almonds and Sugar.
Mix together and when it starts combining, use your hands to squeeze it together; if it's too sticky, add a bit of ground Almonds or Flour; if too tight, add a little water.
He shapes them into "chicken nugget design" but I kinda rolled the mass between cling film to a bit under a centimeter then cut into rectangles with a knife -- it was easier.
Set on a parchment-lined baking sheet, and press grooves into the tops of each.
Whip the reserved Egg Yolk and paint each one.
Bake convection at 190C for about 10 minutes.
Remove from oven, then dust with a bit more Powdered Sugar, and let cool.

These didn't look too impressive but they were a treat to eat: sweet, a bit of a chew, and much more fun than the ease of this recipe would suggest.
I expect using finely ground, pale, store-bought ground almonds would make this more appealing.

#2: Spruce Eats: similar technique, more fussy -- dry, no joy

Spruce Eats recipes seem well-researched and others I've made have turned out well.
This one, however, made me think of "health food": dry, almost no sweetness -- it didn't bring joy.
I halved their recipe here to accommodate the amount of ingredients I had.
Perhaps it would have been better with store bought almond powder but the extra work compared to the first recipe doesn't seem justified.

Not appealing, in looks or taste; this shouldn't be "health food"

1/2   Lemon, zest
  1   Egg
227 g Almonds, ground
125 g Sugar, granulated

Zest 1/2 Lemon.
Separate Egg into White and Yolk; use an electric whisk to whip the Whites in a glass until stiff peaks formed. 
Mix the Yolks then gently combine with the whipped Whites, don't worry about getting it uniform.
Add the Sugar, Lemon Zest, Ground Almonds, and combined Egg to a bowl.
Mix with a spatula then your hands until it's well combined. 
I used a disher (miniature ice cream scoop) to load the dough, compress, then emplace onto a parchment-lined cookie sheet.
Bake at 190C convection about 15 minutes until golden; this was hard to tell with our skin-on almond color, but no problem.
Remove and cool.

These were too dry, with almost no sweetness; any hints of lemon were lost. They cried out for Sherry.
I'm surprised how "sad" these seemed compared to the previous recipe since the ingredients are basically the same; I would have figured the inclusion of yolks would have made these richer but, the the whipped whites would have made them puffy, but it wasn't the case.
I probably wouldn't bother with these again.


#3: Visit Southern Spain: totally different technique -- impressive looking, shortbread-y

This was a totally different technique and yielded cookies that looked ... like cookies. It involved chilling, rolling, and cutting the dough but wasn't really that difficult. 
They had a shortbread crumbly texture, almost like the "polvorónes" that appear everywhere here in Barcelona around Christmastime.

Appealing and rather good "short" cookies
200 g Flour
4.5 g Baking Powder (1 tsp)
125 g Sugar, white, granulated
125 g Butter, room temperature
  2   Eggs (one reserved for garnish)
   Sliced Almonds, for garnish

Sift Flour into a large bowl.
Happily, the bag of store-bought ground Almonds was 125 g so I didn't have to do anything.
Add Almonds and Baking Powder.
Make a well in the center and add Sugar, Butter, 1 Egg.
Combine as well as you can with a spatula, then use your hands to bring it all together.
Form into a ball and wrap in a large piece of cling film; refrigerate for 30 minutes.
Remove and spread out film, top with another layer of film, and roll out to about 3/4 cm thickness.
Chill in fridge again for about 10 minutes.
Use a glass to cut circular cookies; I dipped mine into ground almonds to keep it from sticking, but the amount of butter in these would probably prevent any stickage.
Place on parchment-lined cookie sheet, whip up the reserved Egg, and paint with the egg wash; garnish with Sliced Almonds.
Bake about 12 minutes at 190C convection until browned.
Shape and roll the remaining dough, cut, and place on another parchment-lined sheet, wash, and garnish; bake.
Remove and let cool.

These are fairly impressive looking, like something you'd get at a bakery.
They're rather good, maybe a bit crumbly -- "short" -- for my taste, but worth the trouble of chilling, rolling, cutting.



2024-07-02

Arroz Negro Valenciano

We just got back from a trip to Valencia, home of Paella, and rode bikes to Albufera -- the lagoon and nature reserve where the special rice is grown. On the ride back, we had Arroz Negro at a sea-side restaurant in Valencia, La Dehesa Joaquín Castelló. We pestered our waiter about technique: only home made seafood stock, Albufera rice, squid ink, and a bit of squid. It was coal-black, strongly flavored, rich, but pure in flavor; no sofrito, no vegetables, not even salt, and only a small amount of squid. Take a look at the photo below of their dish: the surface is jet-black, with a lava-like texture of something boiled hot and fast leaving a surface of of proteins and starch congealed in time. The rice is only 2-3 grains deep, and the protein was minimal (like the Paella Valenciana we had the previous day). Our waiter told us the usual Bomba is used by slacker restaurants who depend on its ability to absorb liquid without exploding; his was the real deal from Albufera, and we brought back a kilo bag of it. Naturally, now that we'd tasted the Arroz Negro verdadero, I had to try to recreate it. 

2024-07-01 Attempt #1: too crunchy, not intense enough

My version is not so rich, needs work

Here's what I was aiming for, from our lunch at Restaurante La Dehesa Joaquin Castelló:

 Joaquín Castelló: look at that jet black craggy surface, ¡que rico, que fuerte! 

My first attempt here was OK but has lots of room for improvement, I wouldn't serve it to guests yet.  Ideas for improvement follow this recipe. 

This can't be made ahead: it takes about 30 minutes to cook. In Joaquín Castelló we had snacks (olives, peanuts) while we waited, in a paella restaurant we had an array of lovely starters while it cooked.

This serves two as a light meal. Consider following with a bright tomato-based salad.

       Olive Oil
166 g  Valencian Round Rice (1/3 of a 500g bag)
500 g  Seafood Stock
  8 g  Tinta de Sepia (2 packets)
150 g  Squid, cleaned, tubes cut in half


Film a 30/25 cm paella pan with Oil and sauté the Rice gently until it turns a little translucent.
Combine the Stock and Tinta de Sepia in a small pot, bring to simmer, stir to combine, and keep it warm.
Add the Stock to the Rice a bit at a time, and let it cook over medium-high heat to absorb.
Repeat, turning the paella pan to ensure even heating.
In restaurants, they use live fire: our old induction burner does not heat our pan over the full width, so I have to keep shifting the center to get the outer rice to cook at all; it still wasn't even enough.
Continue cooking until the stock is used and the rice is barely cooked with just a trace of "bite"; do not overcook to the point where it explodes (Bomba is more forgiving here).
I had to add some more water to the finish cooking, continuously rotating the pan to expose the edges to the heat.
This will probably take about 30 minutes.
Serve, topping with a couple lemon wedges.
Diners can spoon out the rice themselves to plates, or eat directly from the pan.

How it turned out...

The depth was good, 2-3 grains deep.
In my rendition, the rice wasn't quite cooked enough, especially around the perimeter where our induction cooktop failed to heat evenly.
The center started developing the crunchy crusty bottom -- the "soccarat" -- but there was none at the edge.
It could use a touch of salt: our stock didn't have any.
It needed more squid ink to match the intensity of the restaurant.

Next time...

Use 16 g (4 packets) Squid Ink.
Add a touch of Salt to the Stock.
Add the Squid at the beginning to take on the ink color.
Use more Stock, try 4 * 166g = 664g.
The texture comes mostly from the rice, but the taste comes from the Stock; perhaps we should add a lot more Stock, and cook over high heat to intensify the flavor and create a bubbly surface; when we peered into one kitchen, the paellas were cooked over quite hot wood fires.
Consider adding all the Stock at once rather portioning it in over time so it has room to bubble vigorously.
Keep rotating the pan and shifting to expose the edges to the heat, or try cooking over open flame on the BBQ.