Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Sanlucar de Barrameda


Recommended Posts

Clb - dinner was pretty busy so I didn't take many photos and what were taken were quite unfocused etc.

This is one image of some of the meal.

gallery_1643_1309_63660.jpg

What we have here is oxtail stewed with red wine; chickpeas with morcilla (blood sausage with chopped up pig skin, maybe ear?) and butifarra sausage;was and Boronia de rota, which is a stew of pumpkin, squash, quince (or apple in this case), green peppers, tomato and onions.

The full menu was:

Combinado de Cava an excellent Cava cocktail of cava, rum, sugar, mint and a little lemon.

Various sliced sausages and hams, aparagus, salt cured tuna with Manzanilla to drink.

Fideus with clams, monkfish and butiffarra

Oxtail braised in rioya

Boronia de rota

Berza de col (cabbage stuffed with the liver morcilla, pork and chickepeas)

Chickpeas it morcilla and butifarra

Cabbage salad

Chickpeas with spinach

Leeks gratin (leeks in bechamel, flavoured with cheese and pinenuts, a Sanlucar recipe).

Tocino del cielo ("bacon/lard from heaven") and pavlova for dessert with Malaga and Australian fortified Tokay (actually muscadelle) to drink.

One advantage to the terrible Scottish weather is that you can cook Med. winter dishes in the summer.

Edited by Adam Balic (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The biscuits were eaten with Oloroso, but I would and have eaten them morning, night and noon just as they are.

Yes, there's a shop at the end of my road which sells them, and when I buy them they are indeed eaten morning, noon and night - but not by me. :angry:

That dinner sounds amazing - do I take it your friends have got slightly more adventurous in their tastes over the last few years? :raz:

clb

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Maybe a little so, but I just don't tell them what the ingredients are. It is difficult to sell 'pigs blood and liver, with chunks of fat and stuffed into a large intestine' as yummy.

:laugh:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

More market images, this time from the town market in Jerez. As you can see it is a typical 19th century affair. I arrived at 7:30 on saturday morning, but as the market was closed until ~8:30 I had to go an find some breafast for an hour. This is a very late opening market!

gallery_1643_1309_120446.jpg

Mostly the market is dominated by seafood and veg, but there are some good meat stalls:

Various sausages, including some I bought and took back to Scotland

gallery_1643_1309_573054.jpg

Mostly chicken, including the unformed eggs from slaughtered hens. Also on the right a block of blood (Not chicken blood?)

gallery_1643_1309_403418.jpg

Kidneys, tongues, hearts, sweetbreads, tails etc.

gallery_1643_1309_339579.jpg

The fish hall

gallery_1643_1309_14283.jpg

Porbeagle sharks

gallery_1643_1309_461232.jpg

The same sharks after a little more cleaning.

gallery_1643_1309_9558.jpg

Shrimp and crab legs

gallery_1643_1309_497391.jpg

A mixed bag, what a pity I couldn't take these back to Edinburgh

gallery_1643_1309_191264.jpg

Tiny Dover sole and hake roes

gallery_1643_1309_604297.jpg

Some beautiful Chub mackerel

gallery_1643_1309_403597.jpg

The veg

gallery_1643_1309_700554.jpg

How great do these peppers look?

gallery_1643_1309_470116.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
Two items I realy wanted to try in Sanlucar where fried sea anemones (ortiguillas) and the famous tortillas de camarones, which are crisp fritters made of tiny shrimp, wheat and chickpea flour. So being an idiot I ordered both at the same time. Delicious, but maybe a little too much fried food at once.

Ortiguillas and cabbage salad. The former has not much texture, merely a bite of mild creamy sea flavour. Suprisingly good.

gallery_1643_1309_117873.jpg

Tortillas de camarones. These are about 90% shrimp, which are tiny and cooked with their shells, which flavour the fritter. I saw these shrimp for sale at the market, where they hopped about like fleas. I have seen similar shrimp sold at the Rialto market in Venice, you can tell who has bought them by the rustling sound the shrimp make in the paper cones they are sold in. The tortillas were just fantastic, perfect with salty manzanilla. I felt a little ill after eating so many though.

gallery_1643_1309_587271.jpg

After 16 months or so I visited Sanlucar again last week. Essentially, it was a very similar relaxing week, but a couple of points from the last trip are worth addressing.

The deep fried sea anemones are shown here as they are sold at the market. From this I would guess that they are the type known as "Snake-lock" anemomes in english.

gallery_1643_2840_449853.jpg

The shrimp for the tortilla were sold by individual ladies in the alley leading up to the market entrance. I saw no evidence that they were sold within the market itself, so maybe catching and selling these is a very small scale enterprise? You can see the shrimp being sold here on the right.

gallery_1643_2840_513437.jpg

The shrimp themselves are tiny (2-3 cm) and I thought that they may be larval stages of some large shrimp that are common in the area. However, on close examination, so of them did appear to be have eggs, so prehaps some of them are adult stage at least.

gallery_1643_2840_548302.jpg

Edited by Adam Balic (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...