Category: Cantina

Hasta Luego Cantina!

Hola amigos!!!!  It’s done!!!  It’s taken me SIX years but have finally finished cooking my way through Cantina by Paul Wilson.  Not every recipe mind you, just the ones I wanted to cook.  Sixty-one recipes.  Which is more than enough I feel to pass judgement on this as a book.  But first, let’s celebrate with some cake!

 

This was my birthday cake this year, a cake spent in the middle of lockdown when we were allowed no visitors.  So a very solitary birthday.  But we’re not here to talk about that.  We’re here to talk about Cantina as exemplified by this recipe. Because everything that is wrong with this book is in this recipe.  As is everything that is right.  So let’s get to it.

A Rose is A Rose is A Rose

A rose may be a rose.  And a rose by any other name may smell as sweet.  (Ooh la la – look at me, with the Gertrude Stein and the Shakespeare refs in the one post!!!)  But, apart from me showing off my fancy book learning, seriously, Cantina bandies about terms that have one meaning to mean something different.

(I have already waxed lyrical about how annoying this book on this point ere.  So if you want to see my earlier rant click here.)

This is quite clearly a cake.

Except in Cantina where it is called a Lemon Aspen and lime Slice with Mescal Roasted Pineapple. Maybe I’m being really pedantic here but I’ve been cooking out of this book for 6 years. Believe me, I need to vent!

But everybody’s like Cristal, Maybach, diamonds on your timepiece…

You may have noticed my slice..erm cake is missing the Mescal Roasted Pineapple. The cheapest mezcal I could find was $55 a bottle.  Most were in the range of $90-100.  Of which I would use 80ml of a 750 ml bottle.  I’m sure that over time I would be able to find other uses for the remaining 89% of that bottle.

This seems likely given the general state of the world

 

Seriously dropping that much money to use less than a tenth of the bottle for is frivolous at the best of times.  Let alone during  a global pandemic / economic crisis etc.  Fair enough the book was published in 2014 so way before covid but the cost equation still stands.  It’s a lot of money to drop on one recipe.  And you know it’s not like you can use the remainder on the recipe for Chorizo with Apricot and Mezcal Aioli (again, not an aioli).  Because when you read that recipe it contains no goddamn mezcal at all.  None.  Nyet. Cero.

I was so incensed at this the first time round I tweeted the publisher.

They responded that it was a typo.

Eerrrrrrmmmmmm … no. 

Speaking from embarrassing experience, a typo is when you work for an accounting firm and you hand your boss a report that leaves the o out of the word accounting.

Twice.

 

Cantina 5

Why’d you have to make things so complicated?

This slice is made up  of a  lemon cake, a lemon syrup, a mousse, a lime curd glaze and the mezcal roasted pineapple.  Five components.  Thirty-two ingredients if you make your own lime curd (I did not) and the pineapple (which as per above, I also did not make).

Included in these thirty two ingredients is 100g of lemon aspen.  Do you know what lemon aspen is?  Nope, me either.  According to Cantina’s glossary, it is

“A small, pale yellow fruit, with a lemon flavour and aroma and spongy flesh…it is available from bush food specialists and gourmet greengrocers”.

Let’s just put aside the fact that it was neither available from gourmet greengrocers or bush food specialists when I was looking for it.

Because you know what else is a small pale yellow fruit with a lemon flavour and aroma?

A  lemon.

Readily available all over the damn place.

I also made the soft shell crab tacos with guacamole, shaved fennel and sweetcorn salad  for my birthday dinner.  Softshell crabs weren’t available for love or money so I made these with lobster tails. Because you know, it was my birthday and dammit if I wasn’t going to get fancy!!!

Cantina 6

 

It’s delightful, it’s delicious, it’s de-lovely

You know the absolute worst thing about Cantina?  It’s cheffy, it’s pretentious, it’s fiddly, pretty much everything was a pain in the arse to cook.  But when they worked, which was most of the time?  They were so damn tasty that they almost made all the effort worthwhile.  So, whilst I part of me really wants to consign this book to the second-hand shop pronto, I am going to hang onto it for a little while longer!

Both the cake/slice and the tacos were mouthwateringly delicious, even if they were also a lot of work to prepare!

The standout recipe for me from Cantina was the Heirloom tomato escabeche.  It was so good!!!!!

I have a challenge with myself that I will reduce either through binning or donating 1000 things in the next 12 months.  Twenty days in I am up to 190 so it is going well.  But there’s a long way to go I may need to put Cantina on the donation pile later in the year!  

Cantina3

Next up on my Tasty Reads book cook though  Silvia Colloca’s Made in Italy.  I only have about ten recipes left to cook from it so I should easily be done by the end of the year.  And based on everything I have already cooked it is pretty down to earth which is exactly what I needed after the high-end madness that was Cantina!

So tell me, do you have a cookbook you find infuriating?  What was frustrating about it? Did you keep it or give it away?

And have a great week!

 

Mexican Manhattan

In the past, I have not been entirely complimentary about Cantina, by Paul Wilson.  This cocktail may change all that because it is DE-LIC-OUS!!!  The Mexican Manhattan may just be my new favourite cocktail!  I’m not sure if I am sad or glad that I am currently in the middle of Feb Fast.  If I wasn’t off the booze, I imagine I would by now have had many more than the one I have had.  My tastebuds are weeping, my liver is cheering.  I think it’s probably a draw!

Mexixan Manhattan2

The Mexican Manhattan cocktail combines the vanilla and spice flavours of anejo tequila with the sweet / tartness of Cherry Heering and the bittersweet of Sweet Vermouth to produce a cocktail that is complex and delicious. I think this is a cocktail to savour over an hour or so in order to really enjoy the flavour and aroma!

Mexican Manhattan3

The traditional garnish for a Manhattan and this Mexican Manhattan is a maraschino cherry.  I thought I had a jar of these in the fridge however when I checked?  Nada. Luckily, I had some candied kumquats in the fridge so I subbed these in.  I really enjoyed the citrussy element this brought to the cocktail.  If you are making it, however, feel free to use the more traditional cherry.

 

Cantina Update

My aim this year is to cook through the recipes I have left in Cantina, which at last count was 30.

I have made this cocktail and a slightly dumbed-down version of the Street Style Tostadas with Seared Tuna and Wood -Grilled Vegetables with a Finger lime crema. ( My veggies were grilled on the grill and my limes were of the non-finger variety.) This was however totally delicious!

Tuna Tostada

I have the following left to cook:

Eggs and Breakfast

  • Pistachio and Spiked Chocolate Hotcakes with Raspberry Crema.  I will probably make this as a dessert as I am not a huge fan of a sweet breakfast.

Masa Delicacies and Street Food

  • Street Corn with Goat’s Crema and Black Olives
  • Street Corn with Truffled Crema and Truffle Cheese
  • Mr Wilson’s Fish Tacos with Slaw and Two Sauces
  • Soft-Shell Crab Tacos with Guacamole, Shaved Fennel and Sweetcorn Salad

Soups

  • Ranchero Style Beef Broth.  This one has been on and off the list at least a dozen times.  I have decided not to make the accompanying Bone Marrow and Chimichurri Toast because whilst it sounds delicious, I feel it would make the dish too complicated.

Fish and Seafood

  • Dory Pescado Asado.  This is probably next on my list to cook.
  • Prawn Cazuela Veracruz
  • Soft-Shell Crabs al Pastor

Meat, Moles and Barbecue

  • Blood Orange and Avocado Salsa – you might be wondering why this is in the meat section.  It was meant to accompany a chicken dish which I did not like the sound of.  The salsa?  Sounds awesome!
  • Lamb Belly Ribs with Pomegranate and Flor De Jamaica
  • Low and Slow Beef Short Ribs with Cerveza Caramelised Onions
  • Glazed Mexican Spiced Lamb Chops with Ancient Grains and Pickles
  • Goat Barbecoa with Green Mole and Green Rice

Ancient Grains and Vegetables

  • Kale Caesar
  • Charred Broccoli with Salsa Mexicana

Desserts

  • Coconut Panna Cotta with Napa Style Strawberry and Mango Salad – I was going to make it this weekend but I realised that Napa Style means it has wine in it.  It would be a bit too tempting to have to open a bottle of Pinot Noir, which is my favourite red when I am trying to not drink!
  • Coffee and Tequila Creme Caramel.  This may come off the list.  It requires a spendy coffee flavoured tequila which I can’t justify buying in this, my year of frugality!
  • Pistachio Chocolate Souffle with Dulce De Leche Ice Cream
  • Salted Caramel Ice Cream Churros Tacos

Drinks

  • Rosella Royale.  This contains something called Pulque.  I have no idea what it is or if I can find it.  It may come off the list.
  • Tijuana Sunset
  • Frozen Lychee Margarita

So that means I only have 23 recipes left to cook!  Which seems do-able in 10 and a half months but  I know how complicated some of these recipes are…I’ll check back in again next month.

 

Mexixan Manhattan5

If you would like to join me in cooking any of these, the book is Cantina by Paul Wilson.

 

Have a great week!

Coronation Chicken “Brexit” Rolls

For me, closing out a recipe book is almost as satisfying as marking up the pages of a new one!  The very last recipe I had to cook out of A Moveable Feast by Katy Holder was Coronation Chicken Baguettes with Apple Slaw.  It took ages to make because leftover roast chicken seems to disappear from my fridge before I ever find the time to mix it with mayo, curry powder and chutney to make up some Coronation Chicken.


Coronation Chicken

I did not have baguettes. I had these gorgeous Bretzel Rolls which are, I assume a cross between a Pretzel roll and a Brioche.   These made me laugh because I made them on the day after the British election.  Whilst  I knew that technically they were Bretzel rolls, in my head, they were only ever Brexit rolls!

For those of you not familiar with the bright orange concoction that is Coronation Chicken, it is the best of British combined with a little bit o’ spice from the days of the Raj.  Martin Lampen quite cruelly describes it as follows:

“A combination of chicken breasts, curry powder and mayonnaise, Coronation Chicken was created by flower-decorator and author Constance Spry ( the Nigella Lawson of powdered egg, nylon chaffing, sexual repression, back street abortions and locking women in the attic for thyroid problems and ‘hysterics’) in 1953 to celebrate the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II….Cheap chicken in a sickly yellow curry gunk with six sultanas.  God save the Queen”

Coronation Chicken3

It is actually quite delicious –  a little bit spicy, a little bit sweet.  And the slaw on the side suggested by Katy Holder is a great accompaniment to cut through some of the richness.

Coronation Chicken6

 

You could also make these with turkey if you still have any leftover from Christmas!  The homemade is also a whole lot nicer than the “sickly yellow curry gunk” that comes in those plastic tubs in British supermarkets. So why not make your own.  With, a Brexit roll if you can get one!

Coronation Chicken4

For a vegetarian version, Yotam Ottolenghi suggests his curried egg and cauliflower salad.  It lacks the sweetness of a regular Coronation chicken – which could be resolved, if you wish, by adding a little dollop of mango chutney or those sultanas reviled by Martin Lampen.

Curried egg and Cauliflower Salad

So this will be my last post for 2019.  Apologies for being absent recently.  I had a mad 6 weeks at work before the break, then got sick, and since then have been busy trying to socialise the new addition to the family!

Holly1

Holly joined us about a week ago.  She has had a terrible life, first on a puppy farm who then sold her to medical research. So even though she is nearly 11 years old, she has never been a house dog.  She is very timid but is learning very quickly how to dog!  We already love her to bits.  She will need ongoing training but has already come a very long way in a short time.  And every second is worth it as she is an absolute joy!

Anyway, all that has meant that the blog has been on a back burner for a while but for 2020…

 

Now that I have cooked through A Moveable Feast, another aim for 2020 is to cook through Cantina.  I did not entirely enjoy this book when we tackled it in Tasty Reads back in 2015.  I found the recipes were too long and complicated and many of the ingredients were hard to come.  Alhough the results were generally delish.  I still have 30 recipes left to cook from it which equates to around 1.5 per week during 2020.

It might be a long year!

The upside is delicious Mexican food 30 times in the year which can’t be a bad thing!!!

 

Thanks for reading and being a part of this in 2019. Wishing you all a wonderful 2020!!!!