Chorizo al vino
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
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.

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