- Time of past OR future Camino
- Too many and too often!
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On my first Camino a Spanish pilgrim introduced me to patxaran - the Basque sloe and aniseed liqueur. Though it is very hard to find patxaran here in west Wales there are usually sloes ready for picking this time of year. So I have just made this year's batch. Should be ready by the time I finish last year's vintage.I was wondering if anyone else discovered anything in the food and drink line during their Caminos which they now make at home to bring back happy memories of time in Spain?
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I hope those sloes have been touched by the frost!
What did you use for the aniseed?
I think Damsons are the wild plums.
We make a jam with them.
. I use star anise
Sloes are part of the plum family
Every now and then I get a hankering for tarta de Santiago. It takes me back.
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Bullace are very tasty but sadly very rare in my neck of the woods. Used to find them now and again when I lived in Suffolk. When I moved to Wales 20+ years ago I planted a lot of trees around my garden boundaries. Quite a few were cherry plums - myrobalan. Some produce very bland yellow fruit. The rest are bright red and very sweet. Some years there are none and in others there is a glut. The red ones make an excellent liqueur too. Especially if you infuse the fruit in plum brandy.He added bullaces to this ‘collection’ too …
He does love trees
I don't think so. They are native to southern Europe but they grow well in our fairly mild damp climate. I do see them occasionally in hedgerows or on roadside verges where they seem to have spread naturally.PS
I’ve been informed that myrobalan are mirabelles.
Oh yum, my favourites!!!
Are your trees native ones?
It was on my first Camino that I watched Joan happily dancing around the kitchen preparing his evening meal. The meal included Padron peppers prepared in the traditional way with olive oil and a sprinkling of salt. I had never before encountered Padron peppers. Following that experience, I moved to Barcelona where they became a regular feature in my kitchen.I was wondering if anyone else discovered anything in the food and drink line during their Caminos which they now make at home to bring back happy memories of time in Spain?
They are a delight and so simple to prepare! @Harington very kindly sent me some of her own seeds a couple of years ago and now they are another excellent seasonal reminder of Galicia. Hoping to save my own seed this year to keep things going!I had never before encountered Padron peppers. Following that experience, I moved to Barcelona where they became a regular feature in my kitchen.
Nice! I too hope to have a go at planting them in my garden. I might also add that it was on my first Camino that I too developed a serious passion for Patxaran. There is a lovely albergue in Artieda on the Catalan Camino where they sell several interesting locally produced types of Patxaran in their bar/restaurant. These include one infused with mint and another personal favourite with chili peppers added to the mix.They are a delight and so simple to prepare! @Harington very kindly sent me some of her own seeds a couple of years ago and now they are another excellent seasonal reminder of Galicia. Hoping to save my own seed this year to keep things going!
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Sounds like a variety of empanada. Often made with tuna.Also a thing that was a sort of tuna pie! No idea of its name
One of the advantages of star anise over green aniseed in making patxaran is that the pods usually float and are easily separated from the sloes when you think the anise flavour is strong enough. That allows for some fine tuning. I removed the star anise pods a couple of days ago and recycled them with a few other spices to make some anisette. A taste which I always associate with walking through France on hot summer days!What did you use for the aniseed?
In Spanish they are called "endrinas" and you'll sometimes see this on the label (espinak in Basque)I didn't know the name of sloe berries, always thought of them as wild plums, they are a kind of plums, but it's nice to know their actual name. Thank you!
As for the food, I learnt "ensalada mixta" from pilgrim's menu, I'm sure everybody knows it. Orange cut in round slices and cinnamon on it- good for breakfast. Developed the taste for olives, best if stuffed with anchovies.
Only a couple of years ago, whilst picking sloes (prunus spinosa - appropriately named) and damsons for my ‘hedgerow gin’ I chanced upon what I first thought were bright-yellow damsons which I later found to be Bullace plums. On checking with the one remaining aged local in my hamlet I found that the colloquial Cumbrian term for my fruit-picking was ‘bullasing’Bullace are very tasty but sadly very rare in my neck of the woods. Used to find them now and again when I lived in Suffolk. When I moved to Wales 20+ years ago I planted a lot of trees around my garden boundaries. Quite a few were cherry plums - myrobalan. Some produce very bland yellow fruit. The rest are bright red and very sweet. Some years there are none and in others there is a glut. The red ones make an excellent liqueur too. Especially if you infuse the fruit in plum brandy.
Most frequently tortilla de patatas and paella. Also sometimes bocadillos.On my first Camino a Spanish pilgrim introduced me to patxaran - the Basque sloe and aniseed liqueur. Though it is very hard to find patxaran here in west Wales there are usually sloes ready for picking this time of year. So I have just made this year's batch. Should be ready by the time I finish last year's vintage.I was wondering if anyone else discovered anything in the food and drink line during their Caminos which they now make at home to bring back happy memories of time in Spain?
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Thank you for this information, because I could never work out why quince paste (made here) does not taste the same as dulce de membrillo.This time of year I also make a version of dulce de membrillo. The fruit is not the conventional quince. A very similar tasting large fruit from a Chaenomeles cathayensis bush.
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You are probably thinking of the more common ornamental Chaenomeles japonica. The C. cathayensis fruit are the size of my fist and weigh about 300g each! I have a C. japonica bush too. Pretty easy to spot the differenceFalse quince … ?
… very like quince … just smaller …
They’re not that easy to get much fruit-flesh from, are they?
Cumbrian? But I thought you lived in Wales! Shurely shome mistake.Only a couple of years ago, whilst picking sloes (prunus spinosa - appropriately named) and damsons for my ‘hedgerow gin’ I chanced upon what I first thought were bright-yellow damsons which I later found to be Bullace plums. On checking with the one remaining aged local in my hamlet I found that the colloquial Cumbrian term for my fruit-picking was ‘bullasing’
You are probably thinking of the more common ornamental Chaenomeles japonica. The C. cathayensis fruit are the size of my fist and weigh about 300g each! I have a C. japonica bush too. Pretty easy to spot the difference
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Cumbrian? But I thought you lived in Wales! Shurely shome mistake.
My mistake. I got them mixed up. I'll keep quiet now, and lay off the Rioja for a bit.Please forgive me if I’m being dim/ missing the joke here, but
@henrythedog lives in Cumbria
@Bradypus lives in Cambria (well, a bit south of it, I suppose).
But I’m a bit cognitively challenged atm … very recent general anaesthetic … marshmallow brain …
I have been following this thread in the background, really impressed by everyone's homemade tastes of the Camino! There is a dish I'd really like to try making at home, but I don't know what it is called. Maybe some of the skilled pilgrim-cooks here might know?
It is a Maragato dish that my husband tried at La Peseta restaurant in Astorga, translated into English as "cod with garbanzos in green garlic sauce." I have most of the ingredients available but cannot find recipes that fit. The sauce is very green, whereas most other recipes I've found with cod/bacalao and garbanzos don't have the same vibrant green color. This is what it looked like... Thanks so much for any advice! And Buen Camino.
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That would be empanada. Very different to the South American versions which are also delicious.Sad as it sounds I have been to Spain many times over the years but never ate tortilla until my Camino. Swiftly became my go to carbs lol. Also a thing that was a sort of tuna pie! No idea of its name
I tried pulpo two or three times before giving up. I may have to learn in Galicia some year.I have occasionally prepared pulpo a la gallega. If I hadn't had the real thing, I'd probably think it was amazing, but as it wasn't as good as the real thing, I gave up. I also prepare a kind of stew with beans, chorizo, greens and various other vegetables. It has a kind of Asturias vibe and in spite of being totally inauthentic, tastes bloody good. There has also been a trend in Spain for goat's cheese with quince jam on slices of baguette. This is also very good and very easy to make. Then, of course, there is the availability of Spanish wine. We live in Sydney but I know where to find Mencia.
I've done this a few times. The key is the quality of the ingredients. (Isn't it always.)Oh, nearly forgot - pan con tomate. It took me ages to figure out what they did with the tomato. They grate it, on a cheese grater. Get some baguette bread, olive oil, sea salt and black pepper and big tomatoes. Grate the tomatoes into a bowl and mix in a glug of olive oil, salt and pepper. Light toast the baguette. Slather it with more olive oil (and wipe a garlic clove over it if you like), then heap the tomato gloop on top. Then eat it. Breakfast of the gods. Serve with café con leche and you'll go like clockwork till lunch time.
David, thanks so much for this! Any luck in duplicating the vegetable soup served so often? It seemed to be either squash, pumpkin or carrot and came either pureed or more rustic, with vegetables.I've done this a few times. The key is the quality of the ingredients. (Isn't it always.)
That one I haven't tried yet. Some day, I may give Caldo Gallego a go.David, thanks so much for this! Any luck in duplicating the vegetable soup served so often? It seemed to be either squash, pumpkin or carrot and came either pureed or more rustic, with vegetables.
I love burnt Basque cheesecake. I had a goat cheese version at Jaleo in Orlando a week ago that was a nice variation. I think it was 50 50 cream cheese to goat cheese.Basque cheesecake. Chorizo cooked in ceramic cooker with hooch as fuel. Cal do de Gallego.
Always better with addition of onions! Interesting to hear stories if early days on the Cami Catalan.It is the Catalan variant though, and so made with onions as well, and more black pepper than typical, and lightly grilled in the frying pan after it's cooked.
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