Do you ever have recipes that you seem to favor over others, and
that you make again and again? That’s how it used to be with gazpacho and me. I
have always been an avid grower of tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers, and there
is nothing better when you’re overloaded with this kind of produce than a bowl
of gazpacho. Over the last number of years, for whatever reason, I stopped
making it. It wasn’t until I was paging through the lovely (and free) My
French Country Home online magazine that I
was introduced to it again, Andalusian style. I have always considered gazpacho
to be a spoonful of summer, and with this recipe I have once again been proved
right.
Andalusian Gazpacho
6 ripe red tomatoes
2 small red peppers
1 cucumber
2 scallions
1 garlic clove
Generous ½ c. olive oil, extra 4 T. for serving
2 T. red wine vinegar
1 small glass water
2 drops Tabasco
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
8 slices toasted bread, rubbed with fresh garlic
Peel and seed tomatoes and peppers, saving one of the tomatoes and half of a bell pepper to decorate.
Peel the cucumber saving a 2½” portion for later.
Remove the roots from the scallions and set aside; peel the garlic.
Place all of the ingredients into the work bowl of a food processor. Pulse to combine. Continue to pulse until desired texture is reached. Chill for one hour.
In the meantime, dice the tomato, pepper half, remaining scallion, and cucumber chunk. After gazpacho has sufficiently chilled, ladle it into soup bowls, top it with the chopped vegetables, and serve with the garlic bread.
Serves 4-6
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1 comment:
This looks so good though I have never made it. Hmm…
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