|
Instructions:
Fry the garlic until golden
in the olive oil, along with
the chili and the pimentos (about
a quarter of a litre of oil
will probably be about right).
When the garlic is golden remove
from the heat and take-out all
solid matter. Put the Garlic
and chilies to one side, you
have finished with the pimentos
so sprinkle them with a little
sea salt and eat as a snack
while you wait for the oil to
cool down.


When the oil is cool enough
for you to dip your finger in
without pain place the desalted
bacalao (cod) with its skin
face upwards. Be sure that it
does not start to fry.

This is where the funs starts
(a.k.a the hard bit). The objective
is to keep the oil hot, but
not frying, so you need to put
a napkin, or cloth on your work
top, next to the cooker. Make
sure that the heat on the cooker
is low. Place the pan on the
napkin, and taking it with one
hand at twelve o�clock and the
other at six, move it around
in a circular motion, as if
tracing the edge of a circle,
not spinning it!!
see
the Plateruena "Durango"
method in video please click
here (9mbs)
This should result in a wave
of olive oil running round the
pan, and lapping over the top
of the bacalao. You can also
push the pan forwards and backwards,
and change rotation from clockwise
to anti clock wise.
The aim being to get the oil
slopping over the bacalao �
don�t wear your best clothes
and do wear an apron, as you
are quite likely to get a bit
aggressive with the pan during
the three quarters of an hour
or so that it takes to get the
end result.
Alternate with putting the
pan on the heat and rotating
it, and then back on to the
cloth. The moment it starts
bubbling, take it off the heat
urgently, otherwise it will
spoil. It is a fine line, too
cold is ineffective and too
hot a disaster.
As time passes you will notice
that globs of �stuff� are appearing
in the oil, this is the gelatine
from the fish, most is in the
skin which is why you are trying
to bath the skin in the oil.
The movement will allow the
gelatine and the oil to emulsify,
it takes ages� and if you have
too much oil to bacalao it takes
even longer.

Don�t give up, sooner or later
you will notice that the �globs�
are starting to turn into a
homogenized sauce, at this point
return the garlic to the pan.
You do not need the garlic to
make the pil pil sauce, but
it seems a shame to leave it
sitting there. Save eight pieces
for a garnish when served.
You can leave the bacalao to
rest (off the heat) for 10 mins
or more, and it does quite a
bit of the work by itself.
To
see the continuing method for
authentic basque bacalao al
pil pil from Plateruena "Durango"
please click here (6mbs)
Keep rotating on and off the
heat until such time as you
have what some people describe
as a light mayonnaise consistency
sauce, most if not all of the
garlic, (if having been thinly
enough sliced and goldened properly),
should have dissolved, this
is part of the magic of the
dish. Taste the sauce, if you
have soaked the bacalao for
a little too long it may require
you to add a little sea salt,
the dish is intended to be salty
� not stupidly so � but too
little salt makes for a pretty
tasteless serving.
If you have problems getting
the pil pil sauce to thicken,
give it a little more heat,
you may be being just a bit
too cautious.
If the sauce starts to turn
into meringue texture, you�ve
basically over cooked the bacalao
al pil pil..
It is a crime to serve bacalao
al pil pil anything other than
piping hot, so at the end of
the process put it on the heat
and keep agitating it until
hot all the way through.
To
see the end of the method for
the perfect Plateruena "Durango"
bacalao al pil pil please click
here for the video (2.24mbs)
Serve with a couple of slices
of golden garlic delicately
placed on the top of the bacalao.
Have a bottle of Tabasco sauce
available, and plenty of crusty
bread.
Don�t swamp each plate of bacalao
al pil pil with the sauce, people
will ask for more if they like
it. That's the receta.
Found
at www.wildgreensandhoney.com
courtesy of the durango platemakers. |