Wednesday, 14 December 2011

How to make a Spanish tortilla: guest blog


Spanish tortilla

Done right, a Spanish omelette is a simple but gorgeous beast. My boyfriend Jon Yeomans, a fellow journo, writes an excellent blog about all things Spanish in the city called Vidalondon.net. Jon lived and worked in Valencia for 2 years, where he was taught the secret of a perfect tortilla. So I asked him to write a guest blog post for Pinch of Salt (which doubled as a cunning way of getting him to make a big fat tortilla for lunch). Over to Jon...

How to make a Spanish tortilla

All self-respecting Spaniards know how to make a tortilla de patatas, and they are all connoisseurs of the dish. A good tortilla will be met with a nod of knowing appreciation. The life expectancy of a Spanish tortilla should be very short indeed.

   
You'll need a good quality non-stick pan, but, crucially, it mustn't be so heavy that you can't perform acrobatics with it later on.

Everyone has their own way of making a Spanish tortilla, naturally enough, but all you need to know is the purist's form, with precisely two ingredients: eggs and potatoes.

Get some nice white, waxy potatoes. Peel them, and slice them into the thinnest possible strips.

Add enough vegetable oil to the pan to almost submerge the potatoes, and put it on a high heat. Once the oil is hot enough, slide in your potato shards and fry them on a medium heat for 4-5 minutes or until they are golden and soft. Don't let them get too brown and burnt. You're making tortilla, not fried potatoes.

While the potatoes are cooking, whisk up your eggs. My Spanish flatmates in Valencia reckoned on a simple formula of one egg per person plus one for luck. Depending on how big you want your tortilla, you may want to chuck in one or two on top of that.

Whisk your eggs in a bowl with a fork, like you're having a w*nk, as my flatmate's one-time, yokel boyfriend described it to me. Some cooking tips really stick in your head, don't they?

Add a little salt to the eggs. Once your potatoes are nice and soft, lift them out of the oil and drop them in the egg mixture.

Drain away most of your oil, leaving just tiny specks in the pan. Put it on a high heat and then pour in your potato-and-egg mixture.

Your tortilla should start to form in the pan. With a wooden spoon, scratch at the bits that don't have any potato in them; this will actually help shape the tortilla, even if it seems like you're tearing holes in the thing.

After a minute or so your tortilla should have a pretty solid skin underneath. Now comes the fun part. Turn the heat down and cover the pan with a plate (a plastic plate will be lighter and may help this next bit).

Hold the pan over the sink, in case it all goes horribly wrong. Place one hand on the middle of the plate. Flip the pan and the plate over. Remove the pan. Your half-fried tortilla should be sitting on the plate (ideally, someone else should shout "olé!" and clap at this point. If no one's around, you can shout it yourself).

Put the pan back on a high heat. Slide your tortilla back into the pan and fry the underside. Press down on it with a wooden spoon to get a nice golden colour.

After a minute or so your tortilla will be done. If you're feeling cocky, you can flip it again and serve it with first side you fried pointing up. If you don't want to tempt fate, just slide the tortilla out of the pan onto a fresh plate.

Serve with mayonnaise and a bit of guilt-assuaging salad.

Of course, like any omelette, the recipe can of be adapted to include garlic, onion, peppers, cheese, chorizo - anything you like. I once had an excellent potato and apple tortilla at a vegetarian restaurant in Valencia. But for some Spaniards, the only way to make a tortilla is the purist's way.

Sunday, 11 December 2011

The Mince Pie Project


The Mince Pie Project
Imagine the scene: it's Christmas Eve, the family are sitting around at home enjoying mulled wine, purple Quality Streets and a hastily compiled Spotify playlist of carols. You hand round the mince pies. They are the best mince pies you've ever eaten. 'Ooh, these are nice,' says gran, 'are they Taste The Difference?' No gran, they were whipped up exclusively for me...

...by Michel Roux Jr.

MRJ is just one of 36 top chefs taking part in The Mince Pie Project, a charity auction in aid of Action Against Hunger and the Jamie Oliver Foundation. Make a bid and, come December 22nd, Fergus Henderson, Anna Hansen or Edd Kimber could be baking you an exclusive batch of 50 mince pies. The pies will be couriered to you the same day by City Sprint. Bid on the batch you fancy, from Nigel Haworth's Swiss pastry numbers to Ashley Palmer-Watts' deep-fried pies.

The Mince Project is the brainchild of 23-year-old Pete Butler,who recently left his job in the City to pursue a career in food. Pete came up with the idea while on the treadmill in the gym just six weeks ago, and has pulled together an impressive roster of willing chefs in a really short space of time.

The auction closes at 6pm on 16th December. Head over to themincepieproject.com to place your bid and check out the leader board.



Thursday, 8 December 2011

Cookie mix in a jar


Cookie mix in a jar, image copyright IPC Media

How is it that everyday ingredients like flour, cocoa and, err, green peanut M&Ms look so much prettier when you put them in a Kilner jar?

I've created some Christmas food gift recipes and videos for goodtoknow.co.uk including Christmas cookie mix in a jar (and the Christmas cookies the recipients will turn them into), plus chocolate muffin mix in a jar.


Christmas cookies, image copyright IPC Media

All you need is a Kilner, some festive ribbon, the dry ingredients, and the ability not to mind if your work surfaces get a leetle bit covered in flour.

Are you making any homemade food gifts for friends and family this Christmas?
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