Sunday, September 29, 2013

Moro x 2

A double header! I decided to take a week off work at the end of August and thought I might try making a soup for our lunches. It was time for this cookbook, a very special one for us:
Why is it special? Because it was one of the first gifts Katherine gave me! (The inscription is too rude to post here.) We've done recipes from it before, and they have always been rather unusual and introduced new tastes and combinations into our normal cooking routines. This time round was no exception. So, for the soup. I chose "Hassan's celery and white bean soup with tomato and caraway".
The key ingredient of this dish is CELERY. Take one bunch of celery, leaves and all:
Wait no, I'm getting ahead of myself. Start by heating up the cannellini beans:
 Then, while they're heating, cook the chopped celery with lots of olive oil:
Celery pieces are looking too big
Then crush caraway seeds:
And add the seeds to the celery, with garlic and scallions:
Definitely too big
Already looks good, huh? Cook until caramelised, add then add blanched, peeled, seeded, and chopped tomatoes:
  
Still too big
 Then add the beans:
They're not getting any smaller
But the best bit of all comes at the end. Serve the soup in bowls, drizzled with olive oil and lemon juice, accompanied by scallions and black olives, and pita:
Aren't the celery pieces too big?
We had the soup for a couple of lunches, and it was always good. But we agreed that I should have chopped the celery into smaller pieces: some mouthfuls were just too dominated by the celery. (You ended up just chewing away on celery for far too long.)

Anyway, the soup was just a teaser. The main event was another recipe, Chicken and Prawn Romesco:
The basic idea behind this dish is braised chicken thighs with shrimp, in a tomato and paprika sauce mixed with crispy garlic and crushed almonds. Take your seasoned chicken pieces:
and brown them:
Then slice the garlic:
 and brown it:
This dish requires many different elements, as you can tell. Next, you take onions and, yes, brown them:
Next it's the shrimp's turn. Peel and devein the shrimp:
Then brown them - no, don't brown them! The recipe actually calls for pre-cooked Atlantic prawns to be thrown in at the last minute. Well, you just can't get small shrimp here in the States. Who would want to eat them when you have Gigantic Jumbo King shrimp? To prepare them, I made a quick stock with the shells:
And then poached the shrimp in it:
Next, take some fresh tomatoes and peel them:
Chop, and add them, with the onions (and paprika) to the chicken, along with other nice things, including brandy and bay leaves, and some shrimp stock:
This is a very long recipe. Now for the most interesting part of the dish. Make a picada by blending almonds and the garlic:
In case it's not obvious, these are the almonds before going into the blender...
Then stir the picada into the dish, add the shrimp, cook some rice, cook some broccoli, and you're ready:
That was a lot of work. The result was a typical Moro dish: lots of lovely flavours which sit on top of each other and vie for attention on the palate but which don't integrate (and maybe aren't even supposed to). Definitely one to try again, I think, not least because we eat a lot of chicken and it's good to vary the way we prepare it!

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