The only thing better than a good recipe? When something's so easy to make that you don't even need one. Welcome to It's That Simple , a column where we talk you through the process of making the dishes and drinks we can make with our eyes closed.
When my fiancé warned me about the brutal summers in Seville, I dubbed him a dramatic sevillano . I was certain that the capital of Andalusia, Spain’s most southern region, had nothing on my native Houston’s grueling humidity. But when you walk everywhere in one of the hottest spots in Europe (unheard of in Houston’s car-clogged furnace) 104° F weighs heavy. So I looked to the citizens of Andalusia to lessen the load. And the Andalusians look to salmorejo.
If you were to sum salmorejo up as a dense gazpacho, an Andalusian would scoff at your gross generalization. In a conversation with author and food historian Almudena Villegas, PhD, she tells me it’s a historical symbol of Andalusian identity. My friend, Maribel, claims salmorejo is a religion. But, technically speaking, it’s a cold, spoonable emulsion of tomato, bread, garlic, and olive oil.
Salmorejo finds its ancient roots 90 miles northeast of Seville in Córdoba. According to Villegas, occupants of this area have been making a version of the dish since they started cultivating wheat. The base, gachas (old bread mashed with other ingredients), has been found in archaeological sites throughout wheat-growing areas in the western world dating back to 2000 BC.
Like the bulk of Andalusian cuisine, salmorejo was, and is, accessible and inexpensive. Though commonly associated with farmers in the rural south, its tradition stretched across economic classes and into urban areas. Women would use enormous mortar and pestles to mash bread, garlic, and olive oil into a paste that they’d keep in a designated cool area of their homes until it was time to eat. The tomato was incorporated sometime in the 18th century, and eventually the blender turned salmorejo into an undemanding emulsion and summertime salvation.
Salmorejo reveals much about Andalusia—its intense climate, agricultural economy, and resourceful citizens. “It reveals our ability to adapt to our means,” says Villegas. “It’s the capacity to use so few resources to make a nutritious and flavorful dish and turn it into a popular part of our gastronomy.”
These days, salmorejo continues to alleviate hunger and fight off heat, just as it has for centuries. It shows up on practically every menu from Córdoba to Seville (even as a sauce), with classic versions at cheap tapas bars and creative riffs at fine dining establishments.
When I asked about recipes, friends and family were confused: “What? It’s so simple!” Even so, my fiancé’s aunt, tita Conchi, offered a tutorial. She learned from her mother-in-law, who learned from her mother, who muscled it by hand. The adapted version of Conchi’s recipe with the Córdobes original goes like this:
Roughly cut 2 lb. ripe tomatoes (stems removed) in the palm of your hands—be careful!—over a blender. Add 1 clove garlic , a couple pinches of salt , and blend until smooth.
Tear 7 oz. white bread (a big hunk of something like a roll or a hoagie; some crispy crust is fine) into thumb-sized pieces into a bowl. Sprinkle some water over the bread and use your hands to get the bread nice and damp. The staler the bread, the more water and time you’ll need for it to soak in.
Blend the bread with the tomato until smooth. Depending on your tomatoes, bread, and preferences, you may need more water. You’re going for the texture of a smoothie.
While the blender is running, drizzle in ⅔ cup extra-virgin olive oil and blend until the mixture turns from pale red to orange. Taste for salt and chill in the fridge.
Top it with chopped hard-boiled egg like my friend Maribel, canned fish like my fiancé Carlos, or bits of cured ham if you're feeling fancy. And as tita Conchi says, always finish with a drizzle of extra-virgin olive oil. Welcome to 58% of your summer diet.
Megan Lloyd is a food and travel writer and recipe developer based in Seville, Spain.
Source : food
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