Sunday, June 29, 2014
Andorra - Recipes
http://foodsoftheworld.wordpress.com/2009/11/24/andorra-trinxat/
There’s not much industry in Andorra – 80% of GDP comes from tourism, and the main two industries are skiing and being a tax haven. Apparently the skiing is the best in the Pyrenees. And the food?
This is the recipe we used, although we halved the quantities shown and didn’t use the fatback.
We looked for savoy cabbage at Sunflower but they only had regular cabbage and napa cabbage, so we used regular cabbage. We also figured there would be enough fat from the bacon that we didn’t need the fatback. I mean, we have statins, but there has to be a limit.
The original recipe calls for cooking the cabbage whole and the potatoes optionally whole. It’s almost as though they don’t have knives in Andorra. After all, the potatoes and cabbage will be mashed so why not cut them smaller so they cook faster?
Anyway, that’s what we did, dice the cabbage and cut the potatoes in small chunks and boil separately, then when soft we combined them in a large bowl and mashed them together.
Then we fried the garlic in olive oil and mixed that with the potato/cabbage mixture. We also took half the bacon and cooked and shredded it in the pancake because it seemed that the pancake would be better with bacon in it rather than on it, but we did keep the other half to put on top.
After mashing up the cabbage and potatoes, with olive oil, garlic, and shredded bacon, we poured half the bacon fat in the skillet and made one big pancake directly in the skillet, mushing it down so that it filled the skillet from side to side and was of even thickness. After cooking for about 10 minutes to brown the base, we had to flip it.
Shaking the pancake in the skillet was a strange experience because it rippled. The base was crisp but the main part of the pancake was somewhat mobile, so it looked at though waves were flowing through it. Very strange. To flip it we put a large plate over the skillet and upended everything so the skillet was now crisp side up. We then poured the rest of the bacon fat into the skillet and slid the pancake back in, cooking the second side for another ten minutes.
http://curiositykilledthecook.blogspot.com/2006/05/andorra-catalan-spinach-salad-boiled.html
Catalan Spinach Salad
Serves 4
2 bunches of spinach, chopped and blanched
2 Tbsp olive oil
1 garlic clove, sliced
1/3 cup raisins
1/3 cup pine nuts (I used slivered almonds)
Wash, chop, and blanch the spinach. Warm the oil and garlic in a pan until the garlic turns golden, then add the raisins and nuts, cooking until the raisins are plump. Place spinach in a bowl and top with the raisin/garlic/nut mixture.
http://www.celtnet.org.uk/recipes/miscellaneous/fetch-recipe.php?rid=misc-honeydew-melon-carmelia-sauce
Ingredients:
1 Medium honeydew melon, peeled, de-seeded and cut into 2cm cubes 4 tbsp Sugar 2 tbsp unsalted butter 120ml White or red wine 1 tbsp runny honey The juice of half an orange The juice of half a lemon
Honeydew Melon with Caramelia Sauce Preparation: Method:
In a large frying pan, cook the sugar until it melts then add the honeydew melon and stir to coat in the sugar before adding the remainder of the ingredients. Continue cooking until the sauce begins to thicken and bubble then serve immediately with vanilla ice cream.
Andorra: Trinxat
Andorra is a little pimple of a country tucked in the Pyrenees between France and Spain, so you’d think it might share some exquisite cuisine with France or Spain, or even share in the Basque or Catalan cuisine. However, Trinxat, a potato and cabbage pancake, seems to be the closest thing to a national dish that we could find.There’s not much industry in Andorra – 80% of GDP comes from tourism, and the main two industries are skiing and being a tax haven. Apparently the skiing is the best in the Pyrenees. And the food?
Andorran cuisine … has been shaped by centuries of isolation. With snow having blocked the mountain passes for several months it’s very much centred around the local produce which could survive the harsh conditions and sustain the workers in the fields. Staples like potatoes, cabbage and beans, lamb from the hills and cured meats such as bacon and sausages.Trinxat is a truly basic and cheap meal. It has little more than potatoes, cabbage, and pork, three things that almost anyone can grow and raise, even in poor growing conditions. The potatoes and cabbage are boiled separately till soft, then mashed together. You create a pancake out of the potato/cabbage mixture then fry it on both sides till crisp, and put some pork or bacon on top. Here’s a picture of what Trinxat looks like – although our pancake looked better :)
This is the recipe we used, although we halved the quantities shown and didn’t use the fatback.
- salt
- 1 2-lb. savoy cabbage, tough outer leaves discarded
- 2 lbs. russet potatoes, peeled
- 12 thick slices of meaty salt pork or bacon
- 3 tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 clove garlic, peeled and minced
- 2 1/2 oz. fatback, rind removed, thinly sliced
- freshly ground black pepper
We looked for savoy cabbage at Sunflower but they only had regular cabbage and napa cabbage, so we used regular cabbage. We also figured there would be enough fat from the bacon that we didn’t need the fatback. I mean, we have statins, but there has to be a limit.
The original recipe calls for cooking the cabbage whole and the potatoes optionally whole. It’s almost as though they don’t have knives in Andorra. After all, the potatoes and cabbage will be mashed so why not cut them smaller so they cook faster?
Anyway, that’s what we did, dice the cabbage and cut the potatoes in small chunks and boil separately, then when soft we combined them in a large bowl and mashed them together.
Then we fried the garlic in olive oil and mixed that with the potato/cabbage mixture. We also took half the bacon and cooked and shredded it in the pancake because it seemed that the pancake would be better with bacon in it rather than on it, but we did keep the other half to put on top.
After mashing up the cabbage and potatoes, with olive oil, garlic, and shredded bacon, we poured half the bacon fat in the skillet and made one big pancake directly in the skillet, mushing it down so that it filled the skillet from side to side and was of even thickness. After cooking for about 10 minutes to brown the base, we had to flip it.
Shaking the pancake in the skillet was a strange experience because it rippled. The base was crisp but the main part of the pancake was somewhat mobile, so it looked at though waves were flowing through it. Very strange. To flip it we put a large plate over the skillet and upended everything so the skillet was now crisp side up. We then poured the rest of the bacon fat into the skillet and slid the pancake back in, cooking the second side for another ten minutes.
http://curiositykilledthecook.blogspot.com/2006/05/andorra-catalan-spinach-salad-boiled.html
Catalan Spinach Salad
Serves 4
2 bunches of spinach, chopped and blanched
2 Tbsp olive oil
1 garlic clove, sliced
1/3 cup raisins
1/3 cup pine nuts (I used slivered almonds)
Wash, chop, and blanch the spinach. Warm the oil and garlic in a pan until the garlic turns golden, then add the raisins and nuts, cooking until the raisins are plump. Place spinach in a bowl and top with the raisin/garlic/nut mixture.
http://www.celtnet.org.uk/recipes/miscellaneous/fetch-recipe.php?rid=misc-honeydew-melon-carmelia-sauce
Ingredients:
1 Medium honeydew melon, peeled, de-seeded and cut into 2cm cubes 4 tbsp Sugar 2 tbsp unsalted butter 120ml White or red wine 1 tbsp runny honey The juice of half an orange The juice of half a lemon
Honeydew Melon with Caramelia Sauce Preparation: Method:
In a large frying pan, cook the sugar until it melts then add the honeydew melon and stir to coat in the sugar before adding the remainder of the ingredients. Continue cooking until the sauce begins to thicken and bubble then serve immediately with vanilla ice cream.
Andorra Film - No pronunciaras el nombre de dios en vano (1999)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X9yzk7ndig8
Suzy said this is literally the worst film she has ever watched to completion. She would have stopped but out of a sense of duty and because it was only 35 minutes long.
No pronunciaras el nombre de dios en vano
(1999 Short Film)
In the year 2046, a powerful gang lord assembles a group of religious leaders, demanding to know what it takes to be a true messiah. Meanwhile, lying imprisoned in a garage somewhere nearby is a man who claims to be the son of God.Suzy said this is literally the worst film she has ever watched to completion. She would have stopped but out of a sense of duty and because it was only 35 minutes long.
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