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Galician Empanada

9 Jul

During my trip to Spain, Walter and I visited the north of Spain – San Sebastián, Bilbao, Santander – mostly part of Basque Country.  I was a little apprehensive at first because even though I have always heard it is super beautiful, the Basque Country does not have the best reputation of safety. 

I am here to attest that I never, ever felt unsafe while traveling in the Basque Country of Spain. The coast of the Cantabric Sea is beautiful and is something that needs to be enjoyed and visited by all.  We wish we had more time to stay and visit with even more leisure than we actually did.

San Sebastian 2      Santander Bilbao

One of the fascinating things about this region is it’s in the path of the Camino de Santiago – the Saint James Trail.  The Camino de Santiago is a pilgrimage made by the followers and believers of St. James.  People walk from Roncesvalles in Navarra to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia to visit and honor the remains of the Apostle St. James, buried at the Cathedral.  People take about 1 month to walk the whole trail, about 800kms, staying in posadas or places specially designated for the pilgrims. 

Walter and I were taken by the Camino and its pilgrims.  The scallop shell is the symbol of the Camino and you can see tiles marking the way in many of the cities we visited.  Partly because of the religious significance and partly because the adventure and our love for Spain and travel, Walter and I decided we would definitely make the Camino de Santiago, specially on a Holy Compostellan Year , which is whenever July 25 falls on a Sunday.  I just learned this will be NEXT YEAR, in 2010. 

Camino SAntiago 1    Camino SAntiago 2   Camino Santiago 3

On this year, I was told you’re given a “passport” that is stamped at several intervals to testify you’re indeed a pilgrim doing the trail.  When you arrive at the Cathedral in Santiago, you get the final stamp and your country of origin is mentioned during the daily mass at noon to bless and celebrate the pilgrims.  I really want to do that!!!!

And what does this have to do with food, you might be asking yourself?  Isn’t this a blog about vegetarian food???  

When watching my other favorite Spanish cooking and traveling show, Spain on the Road Again with Mario Batali and Gwenyth Paltrow, they mentioned how these Empanadas Gallegas were super popular by the pilgrims because they are very portable, they are very nutritious, they keep well without refrigeration and best of all delicious.  I just have always seen them in the Spanish panaderías here in Puerto Rico since forever, but have not had one in many years because they’re made mostly with tuna or chorizo…

So in honor of our upcoming trip to the Camino de Santiago, here’s my interpretation of an Empanada Gallega…

 

 Empanada Gallega

 GALICIAN EMPANADA / EMPANADA GALLEGA

1 sheet of puffed pastry, thawed on the counter for 30 minutes or in the fridge overnight
1 medium onion, sliced thinly
About ½ cup of TuNo soy-based product
1 tsp of tomato paste
1 garlic clove, minced
About 3 tbs of white wine or apple cider vinegar
1 tsp of Spanish pimentón
 5-6 Spanish olives stuffed with pimientos – sliced
1 bay leaf
Spanish Olive oil
Salt and Pepper to taste
About 1 tbs of whole wheat breadcrumbs
1 tbs of buttermilk or butter
Some bench flour – whole wheat preferably…

 

  1. Pre-heat oven to 375 F.
  2. In a small skillet over medium heat, add olive oil, onions and garlic.  Sauté for a few minutes until the onions start to soften and become a bit translucent.  Add the bay leaf to season.
  3. Add the crumbled pieces of TuNo and let it cook all together.  TuNo usually comes frozen, but you will not need to defrost it for this application.  Just let it defrost and melt in the pan with the onions. 
  4. Add the tomato paste, pimentón and the vinegar to the pan and let it combine well.  Add the olives and season with salt and pepper.  Let it cook for a few minutes and turn the stove off.  Set it aside to cool off for while you work with the dough.
  5. I cover the baking sheet of my toaster oven using a layer of aluminum foil and then parchment to ease up on the cleaning. 
  6. The puffed pastry usually comes folded in thirds, I don’t even bother to unfold it… dust it with a little bit of whole-wheat flour, cut it into two halves and flatten it out using a rolling pin.  Roll the two halves of puff pastry one a bit larger than the other… Place the larger half onto the baking sheet lined with parchment. 
  7. Add the breadcrumbs to the onion/TuNo mixture and remove the bay leaf.  Transfer the mixture carefully onto the puff pastry leaving about a ½ inch border all the way around.  Try to flatten the mixture a bit to make it an even layer. 
  8. Empanada Gallega - Relleno
  9. Cover the filling with the smaller layer of rolled pastry.  Bring the edges of the puff pastry together folding one onto the other and securing by pinching with the tines of a fork.
  10. Brush the top layer of pastry with the melted butter or buttermilk, whichever you have on hand.  Make 2 slits on the top for the steam to escape.
  11. Bake in the oven for about 30 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown and smells delicious.
  12. Take it out of the oven carefully and out of the baking sheet to cool off a bit into a cutting board.

   I just hope we can find a vegetarian version of this empanada like this along the Santiago Trail… what do you think??

 

Empanada Gallega 1

Getting a peak inside the filling…  yum!

Spanish Tortilla

8 Jul

A Spanish Tortilla is one of the most quintessential dishes in Spanish cuisine.   But if you ever visit Spain, please do not ask for a Spanish omelet or Spanish Tortilla… because a “madrileño” might reply you that ALL tortillas in Spain are indeed Spanish tortillas.

That’s what happened to us when visiting the island of Mallorca.  Mallorca is the largest of the Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean Sea.  In Puerto Rico, we eat a sweet bread original to Spain and specifically to Mallorca, that we just simply call “mallorcas”.  When my mom asked where we could buy some “pan de mallorca”, the gentelman replied: “All breads in Mallorca are “pan de mallorca”. 

Which made me think how many other food items we traditional know with the name of the region they originated from, but if you go to that country/city, no one will know them by that same name…  here are a few I could think of:

 

If you  visit: Do not ask for: Instead, call it:
Mallorca, Spain Pan de Mallorca or a Mallorca Ensaimada
Spain Spanish Tortilla Tortilla de Patatas
France French Fries Frites
France French Toast Pain Perdu
France French green beans Haricots verts
France French Bread Baguette
Switzerland Swiss Cheese Emmentaler
Belgium Belgian Waffle gaufre de Liege or suikerwafel
Greece Greek Salad horiatiki
Turkey Turkish Delight Loukoum
Poland Polish Sausage kielbasa

 Although, if you’re vegetarian… you shouldn’t be ordering that last one at all.

Notice that the title of this post is Spanish Tortilla and not Spanish omelet… why, because traditionally a Spanish omelet or Tortilla is made with potatoes, onions and eggs.  And even though some vegetarians consume eggs, the line I practice does not.

So my version of a Spanish Tortilla is egg-less.  And I ate a LOT of potatoes testing recipes to achieve a similar consistency of a tortilla without using tofu or soy products… I wanted to use ingredients right out of my pantry and that no one has to go out and buy specifically for this. And to make things even easier and with less oil, we’re baking it in the oven, instead of making it stovetop.

 

 Tortilla Espanola 1

SPANISH TORTILLA

3 medium potatoes, russet or Idaho work best here…
1 small onion, sliced thinly
1 garlic clove, minced
About ¼ cup of grated parmesan cheese
About 2 tbs breadcrumbs
Spanish Olive oil – about 3tbs or so… remember I do not measure much
Canola oil Spray
Salt and pepper to taste

 

  1. In a medium skillet over medium heat, add a drizzle of olive oil and sauté the onions.  Add the garlic clove, season with salt and pepper and cook until the onions are soft and translucent.
  2. Spray a medium sized pyrex dish with Canola Oil Spray and sprinkle with about 1 tbs of breadcrumbs.  Shake the pyrex so the breadcrumbs coat the dish as much as possible… just as if you were flouring a pan to bake a cake…  Set aside.
  3. Using a mandoline, slice as thinly as possible the potatoes.  Place in a bowl and add about 2 tbs of olive oil, the grated parmesan cheese, the onions, some additional salt and pepper.   Toss well to combine the potatoes, onions and seasonings.
  4. Place the potatoes and onions into the breaded pyrex dish.  Place them with your hands trying to create layers after layers of potato and onion.  It does not need to be perfect, but try to lay them all flat.
  5. Sprinkle some added breadcrumbs over the top and add a bit more parmesan cheese to create a nice crust on top.
  6. Because I do this in a toaster oven, I never pre-heat… but place it in a 400F oven for about 1 hour.  If you feel the top is browning too fast, just cover with a piece of aluminum foil with parchment paper underneath so the aluminum does not touches the food.

 

The potatoes collapse onto each other and create this creamy consistency…  it’s not a traditional Tortilla de Patatas, but it sure tastes like that…  Buen Provecho.

 I love Tortilla de patatas

Tomato Bread / Pan Con Tomate

7 Jul

I am a bread lover… I inherited that from my dad.  And I already established I am also a tomato lover…  so what would be best than to put those two loves together??

Pa amb tomàquet, as it is called in Catalan, is the official bread tapa of choice in Barcelona and all of Cataluña.  You get a plate of it as soon as you sit down in any restaurant.  And it’s also used as the bread of choice in a bocadillo or sandwich in that area.

Hloc_cas_12

It’s a true testament of how great ingredients come together in a beautiful harmony…

 Pan con Tomate

 PAN CON TOMATE

1 demi baguette whole grain bread
2 ripe tomatoes, organic preferably
Spanish olive oil – Spanish oil made from arbequina olives from the Penedés region would be extremely appropriate in this application
Salt and Pepper to taste
 
  1. Slice the baguette into 2 halves.  Drizzle with a bit of olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper.  Place bread in a grill pan or pannini grill to toast.  I use my George Foreman grill…
  2. Meanwhile, take 1 tomato and chop it into small pieces.  Set aside.  The other tomato, slice it in half and set aside as well.
  3. When the bread is toasted to your satisfaction, take one of the tomato halves and rub the flesh against the bread.  The tomato flesh will kind of disintegrate and soak the bread with its juices and goodness.  You’ll be left with just the skin of the tomato in your hand.  Use one tomato half for each half of bread.
  4. Sprinkle some of the chopped tomato on top of the bread halves and a bit more salt and finish with a final drizzle of olive oil. 

Cut into pieces and serve as an appetizer or tapa.

 

Running of the Bulls in San Fermín- My tribute to Spanish Cooking

6 Jul

Two summers ago I had my second visit to Spain.  My first I was just 17 years old and I spent close to a whole month in Spain traveling with my parents to cities like Madrid, Segovia, Toledo, Barcelona, Valencia, Mallorca, Ibiza, Marbella, Torremolinos, Cádiz, Jerez, and Sevilla.  I was in LOVE… in love with Spain.  I may have been a Spaniard in another life and I remember telling my mom I would move to Spain in a heartbeat if given the chance…

I tried to grab that chance “by the horns” in 1992 (no pun intented)  when Puerto Rico was recruiting students to work in the Puerto Rico pavilion at 92 Seville’s World Fair, the first and only to date for the Island.  I wish my French was as good then as it is today… I may have made it.  Still, it took me almost 20 years to return to Spain and it was even more beautiful than before.

I arrived with my friend Walter in Barcelona… much cleaner and nicer than what I remembered.   Barcelona was the start of a 3 week tour around Spain that would take us to Villafranca del Penedés, Zaragoza, Pamplona, San Sebastián, Bilbao, Santander, and Madrid.

cabecera_logo

Our trip coincided with the infamous week-long festival called Los Encierros de San Fermín, which are celebrated in Pamplona every year from the 7th to the 14th of July.    They have become internationally known because of the running of the bulls, where the bulls are lead through the streets of the old part of Pamplona as far as the bullring by runners.   I’ve never liked, condoned or promoted bullfights, as I know what the ultimate fate of the bull is, but attending the Encierros is something else.

guia_encierro_es

The fiestas are celebrated in honor of San Fermín, patron saint of Navarra, although the religious aspect would seem to have taken on a secondary role over the last number of years.   Nowadays, the fiestas are seen as a mass gathering of people from all the corners of the world and where the partying, the fun and the joy of it all are the most outstanding ingredients.

I saw my first Encierro from a balcony… tour companies rent you the apartment balconies along the route of the bulls.   I have to thank my friend Ana Yolanda for this…  You must be at the balcony by 6AM to be ahead of the street crowd, because at 8AM sharp a rocket goes off and the bulls are let out of the stable.  They serve you a very small breakfast to keep your stomach in check until right after the encierro, when we are all let out to roam the street of Pamplona at leisure.

Vacaciones Espana - Julio 2007 443

  Vacaciones Espana - Julio 2007 447

Vacaciones Espana - Julio 2007 475

   zezenburu_g  Vacaciones Espana - Julio 2007 483

This is how some balconies in Pamplona are decorated, with big life-like cutouts of the kukuxumusu bull.

Several things fascinated me about my experience in San Fermín…

  • The history and traditions behind this event
  • The energy of the people running with the bulls and around the city in general , as so many people use it as a rite of passage for important moments in their lives – I met a US father who had run with the bulls in Pamplona right after he finished his tour in Vietnam and that day his son was running too after being released from a tour in Afganinstan…  death wish anyone?
  • The marketing developed by a local company, kukuxumusu, from which you’ll see various artworks throughout this Spanish Delicacies series… – they have these wonderful drawings of bulls and the runners.  They’re the official designers for San Fermín.  They’re original to Pamplona and have the best T-Shirts ever!!!  I have a few of their creations… the one on the left is the one from 2007 and the one on the right is the one from this year…  cute, huh?  What’s cool is that this year’s t-shirt is exactly the view I had from our balcony…

porelbull_g

AC0RLD21930_2_1

Today at noon Spain time (which happened at 6AM for us in Puerto Rico and the US East Coast), the Txupinazo marked the start of the Sanfermines…

guia_txupinazo_es

urmeneta

A big rocket is launched and everyone gathered in front of the Ayuntamiento opens up Cava bottles to celebrate 8 days of festivities.  Therefore we’ll be opening a bottle of the finest non-alcoholic apple cider and commemorate my love for San Fermín with a collection of Spaniard recipes…  all my vegetarian interpretations of Spanish food I love to eat.  Enjoy…

1 de enero, 2 de febrero, 3 de marzo, 4 de abril

5 de mayo, 6 de junio, 7 de julio, SAN FERMIN

A Pamplona hemos de ir…

VIVA SAN FERMIN, GORA SAN FERMIN

Vacaciones Espana - Julio 2007 480

Meeting new friends in the streets of Pamplona

If you would like to join me follow the Encierros LIVE, just tune into www.sanfermin.com all this week at about 1:30AM EDST where a live feed from CUATRO, a Spanish TV station, is aired.  The Encierro starts at 2AM sharp… which is 8AM in Spain.

sftv_m

Tomato Bread / Pan con Tomate

Pan con Tomate

Spanish Tortilla / Tortilla Española

Tortilla Espanola 1

Galician Empanada / Empanada Gallega

Empanada Gallega

Rioja-Style Potatoes / Papas a la Riojana

Papas a la Riojana

Piquillo Peppers Stuffed with Manchego Cheese

Piquillos rellenos de Manchego

Tortilla Sandwich

Bocadillo de Tortilla

Spinach Croquetas

Churros

Green Salad with Sherry Vinaigrette

Ana Yolanda’s Sangría

Brandad-Stuffed Piquillo Peppers

Goat Cheese Tapa

Queso de Cabra Tapa - KFC

Asturian Tomato Salad

Ensalada Tomates Asturiana - KFC