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Chorizo al vino
 Chorizo is fantastically savoury, and makes a great tapas dish just frizzled up in its own oil in a pan, with no adornment. But if you feel like doing something a bit special with it, your chorizo will be even better cooked and marinaded in red wine, creating gorgeously boozy, smoky, spicy, porky juices to dibble lots of bread in. It's worth preparing a couple of cured chorizos at once, even if there aren't that many of you eating - this recipe keeps well in the fridge, the flavours becoming deeper and richer, so you can bring the dinner table to Spain again in a couple of days' time. Once again, I don't recommend that you use your best wine for this. A Spanish vino tinto (bog-standard red wine) will be absolutely fine. To serve four to six as a tapas dish, depending on how many other dishes you are serving, you'll need: 2 cured chorizos (I prefer a spicy one, but if you don't like chillies, choose a mild chorizo) 1 bottle red wine  Prick the whole chorizos all over with a fork, and put them in a saucepan with the whole bottle of wine. The pan should be small enough to allow both sausages to be covered with the wine. Bring the wine to a gentle boil and continue to simmer it for twenty minutes with the lid on. Remove the wine and chorizo from the heat, and set it aside with the lid on overnight at room temperature for the flavours to marry. When you are ready to eat, remove the chorizo from the pan, reserving the wine, and chop it slantwise into chunks about 1½ cm thick. Put the pieces of chorizo in a large frying pan with half the wine, and cook over a high heat, turning the chorizo frequently, until the wine has reduced to a few tablespoons and the chorizo is crisp from the heat and dark from the wine. Pour the chorizo, the wine reduction and the savoury oil released by the cooking into a dish and serve with plenty of bread to mop up the delicious juices. Labels: chorizo, savoury, Spanish, starters, tapas
Golden winter vegetable soup with frizzled chorizo
 Soothing, sweet, buttery, winter vegetables are a real blessing when the weather's cold. Plants keep a store of energy in the form of sugars in their tubers and roots, and those tubers and roots make for some surprisingly uplifting eating. This soup is passed through a sieve after being liquidised to ensure a silky, creamy texture. If you don't own a food processor you can still make it - at the stage where the ingredients go into the processor bowl you can just mash them with a potato masher for about ten minutes, then pass the resulting mush through a sieve, pressing it through with the bottom of a ladle. You will end up muscular and with a very good pan of soup. Because of all the plant sugars in these vegetables, you'll find you need something salty to counter the sweet taste. I've cut chorizo into coins and fried it until it's crisp and friable - a lovely contrast in texture with the silky, creamy soup. The result is a lovely sun-coloured dish at a time of year when the sun is a distant memory. To serve four as a main course, you'll need: 1 small celeriac 3 small sweet potatoes 1 small swede 1 small butternut squash 1 small onion 2 shallots 1 parsnip 3 carrots 1 leek 3 tablespoons butter 1 litre chicken stock (vegetarians can substitute vegetable stock and use croutons instead of the chorizo) 200 ml double cream 2 teaspoons salt ½ a nutmeg, grated 10 turns of the pepper mill 2 tablespoons chopped chives Peel all the vegetables and cut them all into 1-inch chunks. Melt the butter in a large pan with a heavy base (this will help the soup cook evenly - I recommend Le Creuset pans, which are made of enamelled cast iron, and disperse heat beautifully) and sweat the vegetables, stirring regularly, until they begin to soften. You'll find that the sweet potato pieces may brown a little. Don't worry about it; they contain so much sugar that it's hard to prevent a little of it caramelising, and it just gives depth to the soup. When the vegetables are softening evenly, pour over the hot stock. It's best if your stock is home-made, but some of the liquid stocks you can buy at the supermarket these days are a good substitute if you don't have any in the freezer. Bring the stock and vegetables to a simmer, cover with a lid and leave for 20 minutes or until all the vegetables are soft all the way through. While the soup simmers, slice a chorizo into pieces about the same size as a pound coin and fry over a medium flame in a dry frying pan, stirring and flipping the pieces occasionally. The chorizo will release its fat and the pieces will become crisp. After about 20 minutes, when the chorizo is crisp and dry, remove the pieces and drain on paper towels. Reserve the oil. Transfer the vegetables and stock to a large bowl and liquidise in batches, passing each processed batch through a sieve back into the large pan. You will find you need to push the soup through the sieve with the back of a large spoon or ladle. Return the pan to a very low heat and stir in the cream, salt and pepper and the grated nutmeg. Bring to a simmer and serve with a drizzle of chorizo oil, some chorizo scattered over (keep some more in a bowl for people to help themselves) and a sprinkling of chopped chives. Labels: butternut squash, carrot, celeriac, chorizo, cream, parsnip, savoury, soup, Supper, sweet potato, Vegetables, vegetarian
Tortilla Espaniola
 We've done Spanish omelette before - this one really takes the biscuit, though, and deserves its own spot. Asparagus is appearing in the shops (early - it's from continental Europe); tiny, sweet sugar snap peas (Kenya - the food-miles-goblin has been doing his work this week) are on the shelves, and suddenly my habit of buying emergency chorizo whenever I see it does not look so daft. This recipe works best when the vegetables you use are sweet either through long, slow cooking (the onions and red pepper) or through their near-raw freshness (the asparagus and peas). Combined with soft potato, which takes on all the flavour of the onions, and with salty, spicy chorizo, these sweet vegetables become something very special. I particularly enjoy this dish cold (it's often served as a cold tapa in Spain). It's also good hot, but try it if you have a lunch party in the summer; you can make it the night before and serve it at room-temperature alongside other nibbles. This quantity will make enough for six (or for three, hot, for dinner and three, cold, at lunch tomorrow). You'll need: 2 large onions, sliced finely 2 red peppers, cut into strips 5 small potatoes, peeled (not new potatoes if possible) 2 rings of chorizo, cut into coins 10 stalks asparagus cut into thumb-sized pieces 1 handful sugar snap peas 10 eggs 1 handful cheddar cheese, grated 1 small knob butter Salt and pepper Start by sauteeing the onions gently in the butter for ten minutes in a large non-stick frying pan, stirring occasionally. Add the potatoes and the peppers, and continue to cook for another 15-20 minutes, until the potatoes are not so soft they're collapsing, but pleasantly toothsome. Mix the chorizo, peas and asparagus with the ingredients in the pan, and quickly beat the eggs with some salt and pepper. Pour the eggs over the mixture and cook for another ten minutes. Sprinkle the tortilla with the cheese (don't smother it; this is for colour and a kick of flavour, not a duvet) and bung the whole pan under the grill for 5-10 minutes, until the egg mixture is cooked through and the top is bubbling and crisp. Serve with a green salad. Labels: chorizo, egg, omelette, savoury, Supper
Spanish omelette
 No apologies here, but this is not quite a Spanish omelette, or tortilla. It's Span-ish - Spain filtered through my fridge contents. There's only one trick here. It's all in the onions. You'll need: 3 red onions, sliced finely 1 chorizo ring, sliced into coins 2 pointed peppers, sliced lengthwise into thin strips 1 large potato, cut into 2cm cubes 8 eggs, beaten gently 1 large knob butter 50g grated parmesan Salt and pepper Melt the butter, and put the onions in the frying pan with a large pinch of salt over a medium heat. Now go and do something else, and don't look at them again for twenty minutes. Give them a stir. Do something else for another twenty minutes; if your house is like mine, something somewhere is crying out for a duster. Stir again, and add the potato cubes. Surf the web for the next twenty minutes (you'll find some interesting links on the right). Stir again, this time adding the peppers.  Your onions have been sauteeing now for an hour with a little salt, which has driven lots of the liquid out of them. They will have turned soft, brown and caramelised. They will be sweet and buttery. You will have trouble not eating them straight out of the pan; restrain yourself. Better things are on the way. Continue to saute, stirring now, for five minutes, or until the peppers have become soft. Spread the sliced chorizo evenly over the top of the pepper and onion mixure, and then pour over the beaten eggs, which you've grated some pepper into.  Keep the pan on the heat until only the top is wet. Sprinkle over the parmesan, and then put under a medium grill until the egg has set and the cheese is turning brown. Gorgeous red juices will be leaking from the chorizo. Slice and serve with some salad and crusty bread. This tortilla is also absolutely wonderful served cold as part of a picnic. Labels: chorizo, omelette, picnic, savoury
Spanish, no flies
We had two sets of friends round for lunch today. This presented a bit of a problem; first off, they've both got very small children I like spending time with, and the children create problems with punctuality. It is remarkable, according to parents I know, how nappies are filled, vomit is produced and knees grazed the very minute you want to leave the house. I needed to cook something I could leave on the stove for an hour or so, in case of lateness, and which would also need little attention if I wanted to play with the kids.
I ended up with a weasely interpretation of a Gordon Ramsay chorizo casserole, first introduced to me by my teetotal mother-in-law. I am not, of course, worthy to make changes to recipes by the divine Gordon, but I am also considerably too big for my boots, so I have made changes with gay abandon.
The original recipe reads:SPLIT RED LENTIL AND SPICY SAUSAGE STEW Serves 4 Split red lentils are a real store-cupboard essential, ready to be thrown into a winter soup or stew as a natural thickener. Chorizo is another useful winter standby - it keeps in the fridge indefinitely and will jazz up all manner of dishes.
1 medium chorizo 2 tbsp olive oil 1 tbsp paprika 2-3 cloves garlic, finely chopped 1 medium onion, finely chopped 2 sticks celery, finely chopped 2-3 red peppers, finely chopped 1l brown chicken stock 6 plum tomatoes, skinned and deseeded 250g red lentils 2 tbsp freshly chopped coriander 2 tbsp freshly chopped parsley
1 Cut the chorizo sausage into fairly thick chunks, about 2.5cm long. Heat the oil in a large sauté pan or casserole, add the paprika and garlic, and cook for 30 seconds. Add the sausage, onion, celery and peppers. Cook for 2-3 minutes or until the sausage begins to sizzle. 2 Add chicken stock, tomatoes and lentils, reduce the heat and simmer for 1-2 hours. 3 Sprinkle with the fresh herbs and serve immediately.
I mess with this recipe in a thoroughly disrespectful manner, especially considering that it's from the pen of Gordon, Canon of the Casserole; for six people I use two chorizo, a couple of tablespoons of paprika, a teaspoon each of fennel and cumin seeds with the paprika, and four peppers, leaving the amounts of onion, celery, stock and tomato the same. (I cheat and use two tins of plum tomatoes.) Towards the end I add a wine glass of marsala (anathema to my poor mother-in-law, who doesn't know what she's missing) and about half a lemon's worth of juice.
What is it with the British and paprika? Here, it's sold in pathetic quantities; you buy it in spice jars of the same volume as those they sell star anise, coriander seed and . . . everything else in. For a while now I've been buying spices and herbs at Daily Bread, a wholefood warehouse in Cambridge where they sell them by the jam jar or by the enormous plastic bag. They're mildly barking wholefood Christians, but the spices are great, so I ignore the God stuff and just pillage their shelves, thinking wicked, gluttonous thoughts.
There is no point in buying a pathetic pot of paprika from the supermarket; this recipe (like many Spanish and Hungarian recipes) requires two tablespoons of the stuff, which means a good half-pot in supermarket terms. Paprika is powdered, dried capsicum or red pepper; it isn't chile-hot like cayenne pepper, but has an almost smoky, deep sweetness. Here is a phenomonal amount of powdery redness with the fennel, cumin and garlic.
I fry all the spices together in olive oil, then add the chopped vegetables, and stir-fry with vigour, dancing all the while in an inappropriate manner to a kid's album by They Might Be Giants, in an attempt to get in the mood for the four small visitors who are arriving soon. The chorizo rings do contain some chili, but not enough to hurt little mouths.
Once the vegetables are blanched, I add the lentils, stir fry a little longer, and then add the tomatoes and liquids. This will now be perfectly happy sitting on the stove for a few hours, which gives me ample opportunity to do my dinosaur impressions in the living room once my guests arrive.
A word of caution; I am not a parent, and so I'm very prone to over-simplify around child-feeding-philosophy. I do believe that bright colours go down well, though, and that bite-sized bits work well too. The neophobe toddlers I've been playing dinosaurs with (I feel that I have done my work for the day in inculcating feelings of omnivorous superiority to the herbivore Brontosaurus. The kids and I have decided that he is beneath contempt, lacking any normal, healthy interest in sausage) are especially interested in eating this once they've had a stir and dropped some extra sausage in. (Later, we go into the garden and pick our own apples and pears. A miracle occurs - suddenly the children are interested in eating fruit.)
 We serve up lunch with a good splodge of cous-cous, flavoured with shallots, fennel, cumin and coriander. The kids throw a lot of it around, but also ingest a surprising amount. My work here is done. The children later gravitate to the television, which we have pre-prepared with lots of DVDs of cartoons by Hayao Miyazaki. We grown-ups sit around the kitchen table, drinking a ridiculously potent chestnut liqueur which I bought in France on holiday. One Dad tells me that we must invite them round again soon; he likes the way I cook.
Labels: chorizo
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