The tomatoes at the farm stands are plump red and deeply flavorful right now, so when I was thinking of what to serve for an appetizer tonight I immediately thought gazpacho!
I found this recipe a few years ago (not sure where now) when I was planning food for one of my Spanish food and film fiestas. The featured movie was Pedro Almodóvar's Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown and there's a scene where Carmen Maura, who has been dumped by her married lover, is alone in her apartment making a batch of gazpacho for him in her blender. She throws in a handful of barbiturates at the end in order to kill him, but the conconction ends up getting served to several other people instead, putting them into a long deep sleep. Screwball comedy at its wildest.
My batch of gazpacho, the Spanish "liquid salad", won't include barbiturates as I'd like my guest tonight to be wide awake - and alive! This version of the recipe is the pinkish version that is supposed to be typical of Andalusia, but there are many variations. I process it very finely so it's drinkable from a glass, though you could serve it in small bowls.
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Andalusian Gazpacho
You can strain this soup so it's absolutely smooth, or if you'd rather not strain it, puree it more coarsely so the soup is chunky and tiny fibers aren't an issue. The recipe is typical of home cooks in Seville.
Serves four. Yields four cups.
2 cloves garlic, sliced
1 large green pepper, seeded and coarsely chopped
1 1/2 lb. (about 3 large) very red, ripe tomatoes, cut into large pieces
3-inch-long piece of baguette, sliced and dried overnight or until hard (I dried slices in a toaster oven since I hadn't planned ahead)
1/2 cup good-quality extra-virgin olive oil
2 Tbs. sherry vinegar or red wine vinegar
2 tsp. coarse salt; more to taste
freshly ground pepper (optional)
1 cup peeled, diced cucumber
1 cup diced onion, for garnish (optional)
Put the garlic, green pepper, tomatoes, bread, olive oil, vinegar, and salt in a food processor (I used two batches). Pulse until the ingredients begin to puree; continue processing until the mixture is as fine a puree as possible, 3 to 5 minutes.
Pass the soup through a large fine sieve set over a large bowl, pressing until only solids remain in the sieve; discard the solids. Stir in 1/4 to 1/2 cup water, or enough to give the soup the consistency of a thin milkshake. If you want a thicker soup, add less water, or none at all (I prefer to add none). Add more salt or vinegar to taste. Cover and refrigerate until well chilled.
Ladle the gazpacho into chilled bowls or cups. Grind fresh pepper on top, if you want, and pass bowls of diced cucumbers and onion, if using, so people can garnish their own.
¡Buen provecho!
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I have on hand the ingredients for a simple gazpacho: it's perfect weather for it, no? But I'd forgotten about the "special" ingredient... ;-)
(actually, I'd never seen *Women on the Edge* until relatively recently, when I watched it right after the Madrid terrorist bombings. The film definitely had a different twist to it in that context, joking as it does in passing about terrorists.)
Posted by: Lorianne | Wednesday, July 27, 2005 at 04:47 PM
it's perfect weather for it, no?
Absolutely! Anything *cold* to eat. I hear the weather is supposed to break tonight.
I hadn't thought about the terrorist angle in the movie - long time since I've seen it. More innocent times, and heady post-Franco years in Spain.
Posted by: leslee | Wednesday, July 27, 2005 at 05:02 PM
One of my absolute favorite soups -- though I'd never made it with bread (and have always kept the solids). I use lemon juice instead of vinegar, no salt or pepper, more garlic, and considerably more in the way of much-adored cucumbers....
Posted by: Elissa Malcohn | Wednesday, July 27, 2005 at 11:00 PM
Sounds great; I like it thick and chunky too.
How did it go with your guest?
Posted by: Natalie | Thursday, July 28, 2005 at 10:16 PM
Elissa: Sounds good. Any way to use those fresh tomatoes - and cucumbers!
Natalie: It went over extremely well. He said he hadn't had gazpacho that tasted like this since he was in Seville umpteen years ago. So apparently it's pretty authentic (and I used Spanish olive oil and sherry vinegar). He wants the recipe. I think he had 3 or 4 helpings!
Posted by: leslee | Friday, July 29, 2005 at 08:44 AM