Spain, Canadian-Style

By / Magazine / July 12th, 2013 / 3

Deep fried rabbit ears. Plate that for your dinner party and watch your guests squirm. I would bet even your most daring friends — you know, the ones who secretly fancy themselves bonafide gastronomes — would get that bunny-in-the-headlights look in their eyes.

“This is what?” Suddenly your dinner party is a theatre of the absurd without an intermission.

Serve the same thing as part of a 30-course meal at the top restaurant in the world — the hardest place on the planet to get a reservation — and watch what happens. That’s exactly what happened in 2002 at El Bulli the night I ate there. The three-starred Michelin restaurant closed last summer due to financial loss, but it dramatically changed the culinary landscape on a global scale with its wild creations.

The set of transparent, vascular, hairless and entirely recognizable bunny lobes arrived pointedly in front of me with a patch of crispy scalp attached. It was the third course at El Bulli, the small restaurant in Catalonia, Spain that received about two million requests for tables each year but sat only 8,000 patrons during its six-month season. I remember landing a Saturday evening reservation for mid-August, the January before, and instantly planning a trip around the booking.

Sitting there on the legendary deck, the surf lapping the coast below, the Blonde and I dined through course after course of madness that leaped over the line from epicurean to preposterous. The raw fish squares dunked in warm pig fat, slapped on the plate, chilled, and called “tunaham.” The pasty grey slices of rabbit brain — presumably from the same creature that lost its ears. The gob of gooey tapioca that glued a hunk of gelatinous cuttlefish to the plastic tongue dispenser doubling as eating utensil. The liquid squid ink floating in hundreds of gelatin balls — caviar-esque — served with boiled baby octopus.

With these dishes, chef Ferran Adrià cracked away the candy coating of cultural consent that keeps us from thinking too hard about what we’re actually putting in our mouths. I was feeling as though I had taken the scalpel to old Peter Cottontail himself, given my heebies jeebies by about the 10th course. Hippity, hoppity.

Our squeamishness is irrational, of course. We devour colossal colonies of live bugs knowingly and call it yogurt; we roast whole turkeys and use the birds’ hearts, livers, gizzards and necks to make gravy; and we think nothing of nibbling on frogs’ legs, fish eggs, and blood sausage in all their fancy forms. If we’re familiar with it, of course it’s not weird.

Pigs’ belly cut in strips and fried makes a great breakfast. Bottom feeders such as lobsters and crabs boiled live, plucked from their shells at the table, are good eats. And of course, wine is just grape juice with a goodly measure of yeast by-product known as alcohol.

Ah yes, lobster dinners with wine. Summer just wouldn’t be summer without it. Nor would kicking back in the evening with plates of food and grazing into the wee small hours on the deck with other adults, eventually talking about things you would never otherwise discuss if it weren’t for the fact you had just shared three pitchers of sangria together.

Sangria. Truth serum. The stuff that tastes at best like fruit juice, but affects you like a martini. Not because it’s strong. But because you guzzle it. It’s served with spicy, salty finger foods that only satiate after a good gulp of fizzy, cold sangria. Which reminds me. I have a secret to share.

When I was in London, I scored the best sangria recipe. Ever.

I used to go to this great little tapas bar on Fulham Road in South Kensington. No, don’t look for it. It’s gone under too — no theme intended. But one night, I asked the bartender for the sangria recipe, which was my reason for going so frequently. And he shared it.

Since then, I’ve developed a drier version too. On that note, to add voltage to your summer, I’m sharing with you the two sangria recipes along with a corresponding tapas menu with a decidedly Canadian twist.

Dry Sangria

Spain, Canadian-Style

Rating: 51

Ingredients

  • 1 750 ml bottle of dry, full-bodied, inexpensive red wine (Casillero de Almansa Reserva, $12, works well)
  • 1 750 ml bottle of San Pellegrino sparkling water
  • 1 oz of brandy
  • 1 oz of Triple Sec
  • Chopped fruit (any kind will do but I usually opt for orange, lemon, lime, and mixed berries)

Instructions

  1. Combine in a jug of ice and stir gently. And don’t make it ahead of time, because you don’t want to lose the effervescence.
https://quench.me/magazine/spain-canadian-style/

Sweet Sangria

Spain, Canadian-Style

Rating: 51

Ingredients

  • 1 750 ml bottle of dry, full-bodied, inexpensive red wine (Casillero de Almansa Reserva, $12, works well)
  • 1 750 ml bottle of lemon-lime flavoured carbonated beverage such as Sprite or 7UP
  • 1 oz of brandy
  • 1 oz of Triple Sec
  • Chopped fruit (again, any kind will do)

Instructions

  1. Combine in a jug of ice and stir gently. And don’t make it ahead of time, because you don’t want to lose the effervescence.
https://quench.me/magazine/spain-canadian-style/

menu

maple smoked indian candy

Cured in maple syrup and hot smoked, this West Coast favourite is an ideal match to sangria. Available ready to serve, all you do is serve it on a cutting board with a knife. Or, cut it into 1-inch pieces and pile them into a clay bowl.

walnut-fed wild boar cacciatore

It’s the closest we could come to unicorn charcuterie. This magical meat is a dry-cured salami with a nutty aroma, sweet-spicy flavour, and a slightly gamier character than pork. Killer match for sangria. Slice it, serve it, watch them swoon. [Available through Cumbrae’s in Toronto.]

bacon-wrapped scallops

Spain, Canadian-Style

Rating: 51

Ingredients

  • 24 large sea scallops
  • 12 slices partially cooked bacon

Instructions

  1. Cook the bacon in a skillet until flexible but not crisp.
  2. Rinse the scallops under cold running water and pat them dry.
  3. Cut the bacon strips in half, and wrap each piece around a scallop, securing with a toothpick.
  4. Grill or broil for them about 10 minutes, turning frequently to crisp the bacon.
https://quench.me/magazine/spain-canadian-style/

salt cod fish cakes

Spain, Canadian-Style

Rating: 51

Ingredients

  • 1/3 lb salt cod
  • 1 medium russet potato
  • 1 small onion, minced
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tbsp minced parsley
  • 4 chives, minced
  • 1 tsp dried savoury
  • 1/2 tsp freshly ground pepper
  • 1 cup dried breadcrumbs
  • Peanut oil for cooking

Instructions

  1. Soak the salt cod in cold water overnight in the fridge. Change the water, and soak for another 4 hours, then rinse.
  2. Peel, chop, and boil the potato until tender. Drain and mash it. Add the onion, 1 egg, ½ cup of the flour, parsley, chives, savoury, salt and pepper.
  3. Flake the fish with a fork and stir into the potato mixture.
  4. With your hands, form golf ball-sized balls of the mixture. Then flatten slightly.
  5. Place the remaining flour, the other raw egg (whisked) and breadcrumbs in separate bowls.
  6. Roll each fish cake in the flour, dip it in the egg, then toss it in the breadcrumbs.
  7. Deep-fry the cakes in batches in 2 inches of oil at about 375°F (190°C) until golden. Drain on paper towels.
https://quench.me/magazine/spain-canadian-style/
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Wine book author and critic Carolyn Evans Hammond first fell in love with wine during her first trip to France many moons ago when she picnicked in the vineyards of the Cotes du Rhone. Now she makes wine accessible with her witty and light approach to the topic. Carolyn’s latest book, Good Better Best Wines: A No-Nonsense Guide to Popular Wine, is the first book to rank the best-selling wines in North America by price and grape variety, with tasting notes and bottle images (April, 2010, $12.95, Alpha Books). Within weeks of release, it soared to #1 wine book at Amazon.ca and the #2 one at Amazon.com and remains a bestseller to this day. It’s available at bookstores everywhere. Watch the trailer at www.goodbetterbestwines.com Her first book, 1000 Best Wine Secrets, is a compilation of trade secrets designed to illuminate the topic and help wine drinkers make more satisfying wine choices. It too is a bestseller, earning critical acclaim and international distribution (October, 2006, $12.95, Sourcebooks, Inc). As well as an author, Carolyn’s reviews and critical articles appear regularly in Taste and Tidings magazine, she has talked about wine on radio and TV throughout North America, and has contributed material in such eminent publications as Decanter and Wine & Spirit International in the United Kingdom, as well as Maclean’s in Canada. She issues a weekly newsletter, publishes a blog, runs a Facebook wine club, twitters, and conducts seminars and private consultations. Constantly learning, Carolyn spends much of her time tasting wine and meeting with winemakers and industry professionals. She is a member of the Circle of Wine Writers in the UK and the Wine Writers’ Circle of Canada; she holds a Diploma from the Wine & Spirit Education Trust in the UK; and she earned a BA from York University where she studied English and Philosophy. She has lived in many cities in North America and Europe, and now resides in Toronto, where she was born.

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