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Spanish Tortilla

Thread Starter: Mari 1    Started: Thu 30 Aug 2007    Replies: 4

After I dried my tears of laughter at the unusual method of cooking a Spanish Tortilla - I got mad! One does not fry the onions and the potatoes separately in 1.5 cm of oil - one uses a pan full of oil - preferably olive oil - and one does not break down the onions and potatoes into a brown 'mush' as described in the recipe. Black pepper is not a requirement of this dish either unless you have a particular penchant for it but the Spanish would not use it for this dish. When the potatoes and onions are cooked together until soft, leave them to cook through, perhaps turning them a couple of times carefully, remove these with a slotted spoon or spatula and drain over the pan until the oil stops seeping, then place in the beaten eggs. When cooked and sliced one should be able to see the slices of potato in the Tortilla. The preparation time is probably 10 minutes and the cooking time should take more like 20 - 30 minutes in total. I can do it in 20 but I have a lot of experience. My Mother is from Madrid and my Grandmother - from Burgos - was a professional cook. The Tortilla is a well loved family favourite made by us all. An ingredient which isn't put in by everyone is a table spoon of water added to the beaten eggs just before adding the potatoes and onions - this leaves the centre soft and the outside crispy. I have yet to see a proper Spanish Tortilla recipe published in this country - it's amazing how something so easy can be messed up by so many! Angry Confused




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Wed 26 Sep 2007, 3.28PM

Mari 1

My sentiments exactly

Sat 8 Sep 2007, 2.07PM

Kamila

I haven't seen Jose Andres cooking Yorkshire puddings. At least I can't remember that. The tortilla Jose A. cooked was in a program where he cooked different types of potato dishes and he called them all tortillas. I don't think that the mashed potato one was reduced fat one. It is a while since I've seen that, it was on TVE1 where he used to have a regular spot. When I've heard him saying that he is going to cook Tortillas I was looking forward to seeing it but was disappointed because it was all very different. But Jose Andres lives in Chicago so he is adapting a lot of recipes to suit him and to be "different".
I agree with you that chefs adapt their recipes to suit them and often in a process the original recipe gets completely lost and it looks nothing like it should.

Fri 7 Sep 2007, 12.36PM

Mari 1

The recipe I am referring to is the Tortilla by Sam and Eddie Hart. The version you're referring to by Jose Andres was a reduced fat version (I saw it aswell). Jose Andres also showed how to make Yorkshire Puddings - did you see that? It was like no Yorkshire Pudding I have ever seen. If you make something and it's not the authentic recipe then it is not the dish that is described in the title! Italians roll around when they see the British version of a Spaghetti Bolognese and the spring roll is an anglo invention loosely based on Chinese cooking. If you want mashed potato in egg then fried then call it that - don't call it a Spanish Tortilla, because it isn't. How easy it would be just to get the authentic recipe to start with - it's not rocket science.

Thu 6 Sep 2007, 6.12PM

Kamila

Mari, I don't know which program are you reffering to but I have seen Spanish chef - Jose Andres on Spanish television cooking a tortilla. He cooked his potatoes, mashed them, mixed it with and egg and then made a tortilla. I know that the traditional tortilla is made the way you describe it but there are variations around.

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