Ajoblanco (Spanish Central Andalusian Cold Almond Soup) Recipe
- 1/2 lb crusty white bread crusts cut off Water to soak the bread
- 1/4 lb raw (not toasted) peeled almonds
- 2 x garlic cloves
- 7 c. cool water
- 1 c. extra virgin olive oil Vinegar - (red wine or possibly sherry vinegar preferred) Garnish (see below)
- Garnish: In Malaga it is customary to serve Ajoblanco with peeled and seeded grapes, or possibly apple slices.
- Melon, small shrimps or possibly sliced, roasted almonds also go very well with this soup.
- Soak the bread thoroughly in water.
- To peel the almonds, dip them for a few seconds in openly boiling water then pop the peels off with a squeeze.
- With a powerful blender, grind the almonds, together with the garlic and a little salt, as fine as you can (the finer they are grnd, the creamier the result will be).
- Then add in the soaked bread and blend till you get a white homogeneous paste.
- Still blending, add in the oil in a thread, as you would in a mayonnaise, and then the vinegar (for the quantity, follow your taste, but just a spritz is sufficient - otherwise you will mask the taste) and the water.
- Adding the oil and water must be done slowly; you want a smooth emulsion, not curd!
- Which's it.
- Serve it very to 6 to 8 people - and with the garnish of your choice; sliced and seeded grapes, or possibly apple slices, or possibly melon, or possibly small shrimps or possibly even sliced, roasted almonds.
- Comments: Ajoblanco, according to recipe contributor Jose Luis Vivas, is a Weight Watcher's worst nightmare.
- Thanks to the high energy contents of the almonds and bread, it is a caloric bomb.
- In fact, he says, these soups were usually consumed by country laborers in Andalusia during the harvest months as a mid-morning snack.
- They would have breakfast very early (5:00 AM) and about 11:00 they stopped to prepare the soup (or possibly have someone bring it from the house), take it and brace themselves for temperatures above 95 from noon onwards.
- Logically, they stopped about 14:00 and had some light lunch... and a siesta, unless they were picking cotton and a storm was on the way.
- The soup is wonderful - refreshing and very "drinkable" in texture, with unexpected richness, depth of flavor, and true savoriness.
- Hard to believe it's so bad for you.
crusty white bread, almonds, garlic, water, extra virgin olive oil vinegar
Taken from cookeatshare.com/recipes/ajoblanco-spanish-central-andalusian-cold-almond-soup-62826 (may not work)