Instruction from Madame, "I need a salad to take to a ladies evening, please". These ladies like to eat, so just plucking a few leaves from our Gardyn (hydroponic veggie grower) and knocking up a qhick vinaigrette wasn't going to cut it. Hence this salad - a way to really boost up the flavor of the nectarines. The basic thought came from this recipe
Showing posts with label sherry vinegar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sherry vinegar. Show all posts
Saturday, September 17, 2022
Caramelized nectarine, pecan, and Feta salad
2 Nectarines, cut in half lengthwise, pitted and then cut into 12 pieces each.
1/4 cup Sherry vinegar
1 t white sugar
salt and pepper to taste
Simple vinaigrette 2 parts good quality oil/1 part suitable vinegar - I used red wine vinegar. Sherry would have been too strong.
Handful of pecan halves, halved
1/2 jalapeno sliced very thinly
3 T red onion diced finely and soaked in water to remove bitterness
Lettuce greens washed dried, and torn into small, bite sized pieces
3 or 4 oz Feta broken into large pieces (i.e. not crumbled)
Place the sherry vinegar, sugar, salt into a non stick skillet over medium heat. Bring to a boil, and then add the nectarines. Stir to coat. Continue to stir as the pan dries. The nectarines should be coated on all sides. The pan should end up dry and sticky, leaving some light caramelization on the nectarines.
Chill the nectarines.
To serve, place the vinaigrette in the bottom of your serving bowl, and pile the greens on top. Then add all of the rest of the ingredients, except the Feta.. Just before serving toss the sald, bringing the dressing up from the bottom and over the salad. Serve individually with a small block of Feta on top.
Labels:
feta,
Gluten Free,
Nectarine,
Pecan,
sherry vinegar,
vegetarian
Sunday, August 2, 2020
Gazpacho
This is not your standard, boring blended salsa Gazpacho. It has stale bread. It has olive oil. It has a touch of sherry vinegar. Nothing is heated. The trick is to get as much flavor as possible out of raw vegetables, blending them, and then pushing the soup through a fine-meshed strainer.
The idea and techniques come from Serious Eats (where technique rules). However, when you get to the freezing step do make sure that you freeze the vegetables (especially the onion) in a freezer safe bag. Otherwise you end up with a very smelly freezer - the only thing to do then is to defrost and refreeze. Don't ask me how I know this!
Ingredients - these don't need to be terribly precise
2 or 3 slices of stale bread, sliced. We used a homemade sandwich loaf with 80% bread flour 20% whole wheat.
4-5 lbs ripe tomatoes, cored, cut into chunks. We typically use seconds and cut off any ugly/squashed bits.
2 Cucumbers peeled, cored and sliced into chunks
2 Red bell peppers cored and seeded, sliced into chunks
1 Medium red onion, peeled and cut into chunks
1 1/2 tsp kosher salt
4 garlic cloves, peeled and smashed
1/2 cup high quality extra virgin olive oil (first cold press, preferably Spanish)
8 tablespoons Sherry vinegar
Method
Tear the bread into chunks into a small bowl. place the chopped vegetables into a large bowl, sprinkling with the salt as you go. Leave the vegetables for 30 minutes to allow the juice to drain. Drain the juice over the bread to soften it. Set this aside, at room temperature, covered.
Gather the vegetables into 2 one gallon freezer bags. Lay the bags flat to even out the vegetables and press the air out. Freeze the vegetables until slightly mushy feeling. Not frozen solid, but not as firm as they were when they went in. If you let them go too long, that's fine - you will just need to let them thaw prior to the next step
Remove the vegetables from the freezer. Transfer liquid from the bottom of the bags over the bread.
Working in batches, place some of the vegetables, bread, olive oil and sherry vinegar into the blender. Blend on high power for at least 60 seconds. Transfer to a fine strainer and strain the pureed soup pushing it through with a metal spoon. There should be very little residue in the strainer, but what is left in the strainer will tend to clog it up. So you will want to clean the strainer between batches.
Chill until you are ready to serve.
Serving
When serving the soup, use chilled bowls, and some garnishes including chives, avocado, grated egg. We often freeze some of the gazpacho in ice cube trays (there go the freezer smells again). This helps keep the soup chilled, although the texture of the frozen pieces is a bit coarse. The ice crystals, are not ideal. Pour a little more olive oil and a few drops of Sherry vinegar onto the soup, and sprinkle some coarse crunch salt.
If you happen to have baguettes or other crusty bread handy, now would be a good time to serve them too. As you can imagine, we did and we did!
Labels:
garlic,
Gazpacho,
olive oil,
red onion,
sherry vinegar,
soup,
stale bread,
vegan,
vegetarian
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