Author Notes
…for Basque land and freedom. Piperade is a classic Spanish/Basque dish. The Basques seem to have dropped in from outer space, as their language is unrelated to any of the romance or Germanic languages spoken in Europe. But then, hey, there they are overlapping the frontier between Spain and France like the Area 51 of the Pyrenees . Pintxo is the Gallician term for tapa. So this is a small plate which you can follow up with more pintxos as you drift from tavern to tavern at 3:00 a.m. The recipe here is portioned for two generous pinxtos but you can multiply as needed. Don’t skip the eggs.
"'These Basques are swell people', Bill said"---The Sun Also Rises. —pierino
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Ingredients
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6
anaheim chilis*
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1
red bell pepper
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1
sweet onion (vidalia, walla walla etc.)
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5 cloves garlic
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3 fat tomatoes (in season please)
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¼ teaspoon pimenton aka Spanish paprika (pimenton de la vera or piment d’esplette are preferred)
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Salt and pepper
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Spanish olive oil or California oil in the Spanish style
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2 eggs
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1 tablespoon white vinegar
Directions
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The ideal cooking and presentation vehicles for this would be earthenware cazuelas but you can use a deep, flat pan that you can cover
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Over a gas burner or on an outside grill roast the peppers until blackened. Place them in a paper bag and fold up the top to seal. Allow them to yield some steam for about fifteen or twenty minutes and then rub off the blackenend skin
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Stem, seed and thinly julienne the peppers
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Chop the tomato and crush the garlic
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In your pan or cazuela slowly heat up the oil short of the smoke point
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Add the garlic to the pan and allow it to color, follow that with the onions and then the peppers and tomato
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Season with pimenton, salt and pepper, reduce heat simmer slowly, covered for about 30 minutes
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About half way into the finishing stage for the piperade bring a pot of water to a boil, and add the vinegar
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Uncover the piperade and torque up the heat to sizzling
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Break and poach the eggs. I like a three minute egg that’s still runny. Portion your piperade and top with an egg and allow your guest to let that gooey goodness run all over it
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*Note to cook: when available, usually in August, by all means substitute Hatch chilis for the Anaheims if you can find them. The Hatch peppers can vary widely in heat level and there really is no way to know from color or anything.
Standup commis flâneur, and food historian. Pierino's background is in Italian and Spanish cooking but of late he's focused on frozen desserts. He is now finishing his cookbook, MALAVIDA! Can it get worse? Yes, it can. Visit the Malavida Brass Knuckle cooking page at Facebook and your posts are welcome there.
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