I don’t cook Spanish food very often so this was exciting to try a style of cooking that I’m not used to! I am somewhat familiar with author of this recipe, Jose Andrese who owns something like 6 restaurants in my home town. I’ve only been to Jaleo, his tapas bar and there I had some of the best spinach I’d ever tasted (sautéed with raisins, apples and pine-nuts) and these awesome ham and cheese croquets. Andres was on NPR a few months ago talking about recipes that cost under 10 dollars, and you must go listen to it, he by far more cute and charming than any middle aged chef ought to be.
One of the best parts of this dish was not just making a recipe I’d never tried before but even within that recipe were all kinds of chances to do new things –making aioli from scratch, making a sofregit, cleaning and cutting up fresh artichokes. I felt so satisfied with the end result which was the product of nearly two hours in the kitchen. The aioli took nearly half an hour of persistent pounding (quite the arm work out!) and I recommend making it while you are doing the sorfegit since the sofregit is a relatively hands off dish. You can even make them both ahead of time. Having never cut up artichokes before I was very slow at it and I put too many tough leaves in the dish, which was the only downside to the completed dish.
One of the best parts of this dish was not just making a recipe I’d never tried before but even within that recipe were all kinds of chances to do new things –making aioli from scratch, making a sofregit, cleaning and cutting up fresh artichokes. I felt so satisfied with the end result which was the product of nearly two hours in the kitchen. The aioli took nearly half an hour of persistent pounding (quite the arm work out!) and I recommend making it while you are doing the sorfegit since the sofregit is a relatively hands off dish. You can even make them both ahead of time. Having never cut up artichokes before I was very slow at it and I put too many tough leaves in the dish, which was the only downside to the completed dish.
For the recipe, go to this month’s host Olga of Olga’s Recipes.
5 comments:
Great that the Daring Kitchen is increasing your baking/cooking skill set. Lovely picture of the finished dish and wonderful that your chicken version worked out so well. And yes artichokes can be tough to prepare and to eat if you take enough leaves off LOL LOL. Cheers from Audax in Australia
Wonderful job!! I'm so glad you enjoyed the challenge as much as you did =D. Your dish looks amazing!!
Audax thank you so much. But I used chorizo, (spanish style sausage). Where I live you can get it fresh and local so I usually cut the casings and saute as ground meat.
Lauren- thank you for your kind words!
I had chorizo last week and this post is making me want it again...
Yup, Chorizo is awesome! I'm lucky I can get it fresh and locally made so it's extra tasty.
Post a Comment