Showing posts with label olives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label olives. Show all posts

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Pan fried cod with sauce vierge

This dish is very easy to make and absolutely delicious. I wanted to make the best of the tomatoes and basil from the balcony while they last and this recipe really brings out their flavors. You could combine this sauce with other fish or even make it slightly thicker and use it over pasta or bruschette as an appetizer. Don't try it without really good tomatoes though... I omitted the peeling and de-seeding as I had laborously grown these gems from seed...




Ingredients:
ca. 1 dl good olive oil
a large handful of cherry tomatoes, chopped
a small handful of pitted olives, chopped (you could use capers or even some anchovies instead)
Three sprigs of basil, leaves roughly chopped
Juice of half a lemon
Salt and pepper

One piece of cod


1. In a small pan warm up your olive oil over medium low heat. The trick with this sauce is that it should under no circumstances be boiling/cooking. When the oil is warm add in the tomatoes and lower the heat if necessary. You want to warm it up as close to boiling as possible without getting there, if that makes any sense. After a few minutes, add the chopped olives.
2. Heat up a frying pan to medium high, season your fish with salt and pepper and fry it in oil of your choice. Depending on the thickness, turn after two to three minutes. It is done when it starts to flake under pressure.
3. Check and adjust the temperature of the sauce vierge if necessary. Add the lemon juice and seasonings to taste. Add the basil about two minutes before serving. This way it will keep it's color and some of the fresh taste. Pour the sauce over the fish and serve.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Fresh Winter Salad

Hello everyone!

Please excuse my prolonged absence! A challenging new job and an apartment hunt in a city that is notoriously difficult does take its toll... But things are looking up, so let's get back to business!

This delicious salad I just made is a fusion of the wonderful and unanticipated combination of oranges & raw beets (with a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkling of salt) and the citrus & green olive salads that seem to be quite the rage these days (check out Mark Bittmans version on the New York Times homepage).

Inspiration struck today (three oranges lying around from making orange vodka like here) and I tried this version:

(ingredients for a light dinner for two)
three oranges
one raw beet (red ones make for a stunning color combination)
a handful of green olives (de-stoned for convenience)
one small red onion
good olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

1. Start by cutting the peel off the oranges and slicing them, about half a centimeter thick. Spread them on a large enough serving platter.
2. Peel and slice the beet as finely as possible. Supposedly a little olive oil on your hands prevents them from taking on too much color...) Spread them over the oranges.
3. Chop your olives roughly. I cut mine lengthwise into slivers. Sprinkle over your oranges and beets.
4. Peel and slice your onion into half moons and spread over the platter.
5. Drizzle over your olive oil and add seasoning to taste.


The combination of the juicy fruit with the crunch, the sharpness and the saltiness is unbelievably good. I know it may be a bit late to try to get people to go for a winter salad, but if you try this one you will be looking for these ingredients long after the first local strawberries are being sold... Don't take my word for it. Try this one out for yourself!

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Linguine Salsa Nesa

This is a recipe I came up with about three years ago. A product of profound hunger, wanting something that packs a punch(flavor-wise) and a prolonged look into the storage cupboard. It's been my favorite pasta sauce ever since.

It's easy to make, quick, and has lots of flavor. And a well stocked pantry will have most of the necessary ingredients.
It's good with all kinds of hard wheat pasta. Linguine has really become a favorite lately.

Ingredients per person:
one splash of olive oil
one clove of garlic, sliced
chili to taste, finely chopped of fresh &crumbled if dry
one to two anchovy fillets, roughly chopped
one handful of de-stoned black olives, sliced or chopped
a handful of cherry tomatoes or one big plum tomato, roughly chopped

Heat a pan of water for your pasta. You can do prep work while it heats up, but in this case you actually have to be boiling the pasta to be able to prepare the sauce...

Drop the pasta into the salted boiling water. Then:
In a large enough frying pan pour in some olive oil, add the garlic and turn on the heat. Wait until you hear it sizzling and the garlic turns just the lightest shade of brown, then add the chili and the anchovy. Stir it a couple of times while frying for about a minute. Add the olives.

When it gets too hot take a table- or serving spoon and add a dash of the pasta cooking water. This will do three things; cool down the contents of the pan, add salt to the finished sauce and the starch in it will help bind the finished product.

Two to three minutes before the pasta is al dente, add your chopped tomatoes. They shouldn't completely disintegrate, but wilt and loose their form a bit.
Continue adding pasta water if it gets too dry.

When the pasta is just almost done(erring on the underdone side), save one cup of the water and drain the rest. Add the pasta into the frying pan with the sauce and stir. Mix well (the pasta will dry up a bit in the heat) and maybe add another splash of the reserved water if too dry.

As with all cooked pasta: Serve this spicy, salty dish immediately.