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pintxos

Home   Txoko para Todos: A Food Blog for All   pintxos   Page 1 of 2
El Matrimonio - montadito pintxo of boqueron and anchoa - white anchovy and dark - Donostia Foods

El Matrimonio: A (Delicious) Love Story

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Our adaptation of a classic montadito, the blissful pairing of white anchovy (boqueron) and dark (anchoa). Our tale begins, as many do, with bread. In this instance, toasted. Then we see freshly grated tomato pulp with garlic and black pepper come into the picture, the always welcome pan tumaca-type topping. Roasted green peppers now join the assemblage, after a brief cooldown period.

Then... the glory.

A plump, juicy, tangy, delicious boqueron marinated in wine vinegar and olive oil is laid across the top, quickly joined by its perfect complement, the salt-cured anchoa. Finally, fresh parsley completes the ceremony. The best of both styles of Cantabrian anchovy, together forever* in one pintxo.

El Matrimonio Pintxo

Total Time: 10-15 minutes.

Ingredients

  • Donostia Foods White Anchovies in Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • green bell pepper
  • fresh tomato
  • Donostia Foods Cantabrian Anchovy Fillets
  • garlic
  • olive oil
  • black pepper
  • fresh bread (a very nice garlic loaf is used here)

Directions

1. Warm a little olive oil in a pan over medium heat. Throw in slices of the green bell pepper. Keep an eye on this until you've reached your desired level of roasted pepper.

2. While your doing the above, or after if you'd prefer to focus on each step singularly, cut a fresh tomato in two and grate the pulp into a bowl. Add some minced garlic and black pepper.

3. Toast your tiny toasts. 

4. Once the green peppers are out of the pan and cooled for a few minutes, layer on top the tomato mix, green pepper, white anchovy, dark anchovy, and fresh parsley.

5. You just made something delicious. Well done, you.

*Until you eat them.

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For additional recipes and serving suggestions for Spanish conservas, please see our aptly named Recipes & Serving Suggestions page.

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The Gilda Pintxo - Donostia Foods

The Gilda Pintxo in San Sebastian

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Several months ago, we returned to Donostia-San Sebastián to wander from pintxo bar to pintxo bar in a light autumn mist. The Gilda, the preeminent pintxo itself, was of course featured prominently. The photo above, taken at La Cepa, a bar in the heart of Old Town, is a classic example. The bar, the pintxo, and the food celebrate "todo la vida". Celebrate all of life at home with the necessities below.

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Cantabrian Anchovies
Manzanilla Olives
Guindilla Peppers

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photo by North Fork Oysters

Friday Night Bites - Oysters and Pintxos at Little Creek

photo by North Fork Oysters

Pintxo fans in and around Greenport, NY rejoice: Spain is coming to you tonight (May 26), via North Fork Oysters.

Celebrate the end of this week's walk, drive, train or jitney ride with our version of the famed pintxo bars of our neighbors across the sea. We will sweep away the stools and make plenty of room for people to find a bite or two, or three, or.... no tickets, no reservations, no menu. Point, snack, slurp, sip. We will just count up the skewers at the end! Starting at 7pm on Friday we'll spread the counter with a dizzying array of skewered small bites, pour crisp cold wines and beers and wash away the week together! Of course our shuckers will be opening the finest our bays have to offer!

Click here for further information.

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Sardine in Olive Oil with Basque Cheese Pintxo

Sardine in Olive Oil with Basque Cheese Pintxo

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Gilda Pintxo - Donostia Foods

The 'Gilda' Pintxo

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For a simple, classic example of a pintxo from Donostia-San Sebastián, just skewer a guindilla pepper, a Cantabrian anchovy fillet, and a manzanilla olive on a toothpick. Allegedly invented at Bar Casa Vallés in San Sebastián and named for Rita Hayworth's character Gilda in the eponymous film that opened the same year. A classic with a hint of spiciness that stands the test of time.

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The "Gilda" Pintxo

Total Time: Basically no time.

Ingredients

  • Donostia Foods Guindilla Pepper(s)
  • Donostia Foods Cantabrian Anchovies
  • Donostia Foods Manzanilla Olives (pitted)

Directions

1. Just skewer the three ingredients on a toothpick and you have your pintxo. Later, after your guests have proclaimed how delicious it is and lavished you with praise, casually mention the Rita Hayworth trivia then take a knowing sip of wine. Bask in the awe.

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For additional recipes and serving suggestions for Spanish conservas, please see our aptly named Recipes & Serving Suggestions page.

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Pintxos & Tapas Serving Suggestions on Pinterest

Pintxos & Tapas Serving Suggestions on Pinterest

Looking for a go-to source for pintxos and tapas serving suggestions? Of course you are. Look no further than our Pinterest board, Pictures of Tapas & Pintxos: Appetizers from and Inspired by Spain. All of our serving suggestions, and all that we've found on Pinterest, with more recipes added all the time.

For this collection of pintxos from Donostia-San Sebastián and around the world, both the traditional offerings you'll find at the bars in the Parte Vieja (Old Town) and small plates featuring ingredients from across the globe, just click below:

 

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Easy 30 Minute Spanish Appetizers for a Pintxo Party

Easy 30 Minute Spanish Appetizers for a Pintxo Party

It’s an idyllic Saturday night and you’re inspired to gather friends and family for an impromptu party. Sharing laughs over good food and drink is always enjoyable. Long prep time and toiling in the kitchen is not. If the notion of too much time laboring over food preparation is preventing you from putting out word that the party is at your place, fear not. The ever present obstacles of time and labor can be overcome with pintxos.

Pintxos (peen-tchos) are the small plates you’ll find lining the bars throughout the Parte Vieja (Old Town) in Donostia-San Sebastian, the renowned culinary city in northern Spain. In Basque Country the term includes all tapas, while elsewhere in Spain pintxo more specifically means a tapa that is skewered on a toothpick. Montaditos, just to add a bit more confusion, are served atop a small slice of bread instead of skewered; think miniature, open-faced sandwiches.

Conservas, foods preserved in tins or jars, are the ingredients that make up many of these small plates and an age-old tradition in Spain. Using only top-quality ingredients, Spaniards have created delicacies unlike anything Americans have come to expect from typical canned foods found on grocery store shelves. Spanish canned seafood in particular is becoming more well-known for its exemplary quality, thanks to the likes of Anthony Bourdain and other chefs who have an affinity for Bonito del Norte tuna, Cantabrian anchovies, or octopus in olive oil. Other specialties like white asparagus, guindilla peppers, and piquillos are appearing on more menus across America as the notion of serving conservas, even straight from the tin, is becoming more popular.

Beyond the delectable quality of the ingredients, the appeal of conservas, to professional and home chefs alike, is the gourmet dishes that can be made with minimal preparation. You don’t need to spend hours in the kitchen to serve your guests authentic Spanish small-bites of the highest order. You don’t need to venture across the Atlantic to wander the cobbled streets of San Sebastian to enjoy the good food and conviviality that comes along with it (though such a trip is highly recommended). All you do need are a few jars and tins of conservas, some fresh bread, a few staples, and some friends.

Below are seven pintxos that together can be prepared in less than half an hour. With these simple delicacies you can make the most of any party and enjoy the flavors of Basque Country from the comforts of home.

The Gilda Pintxo - Donostia Foods
The Gilda is the classic pintxo of San Sebastian, named for Rita Hayworth’s character in the eponymous film. Simply a Cantabrian anchovy fillet, guindilla pepper, and manzanilla olive skewered on a toothpick.

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Mussels in Escabeche and Fresh Ricotta - Donostia Foods
Mussels in escabeche piled atop fresh ricotta cheese on slices of bread.

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Octopus in Olive Oil with Marinated Artichokes - Donostia Foods
Octopus in olive oil, marinated grilled artichokes, and piment d’Espelette.

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Sardines with Roasted Cherry Tomatoes and Chives - Donostia Foods
Sardines in olive oil, roasted cherry tomato, chives, and a drizzle of olive oil.

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Bonito del Norte Tuna with Olives and Piquillo Peppers - Donostia Foods
Bonito del Norte tuna, piquillo pepper, mayonnaise or aioli, and an olive.

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Cantabrian anchovies with Manchego Cheese and Apricot Jam - Donostia Foods
Cantabrian anchovy, manchego cheese, and apricot jam.

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White Asparagus with Piquillo Peppers and Goat Cheese - Donostia Foods
White asparagus, piquillo pepper, goat cheese, and mayonnaise or aioli.

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Boquerones - White Anchovies in Vinegar

Boquerones - White Anchovies in Vinegar

Boquerones - White Anchovies in Vinegar - Donostia Foods

Boquerones (white anchovies in vinegar) and bonito tuna salad pintxo in Donostia-San Sebastian. We'll have a limited supply of boquerones available in the States sometime next year so you can experience just how delicious they are yourself.

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Bonito del Norte Tuna Melt

Bonito del Norte Tuna Melt

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Bonito del Norte tuna melt sandwiches, pintxo-style. Or, sliders. Or, baby bocadillos (kind of, the bread isn't sliced in the proper length-wise fashion to be deemed a bocadillo). Regardless of what you call these small bites, they turned out fairly well as most things do when they include melted cheese. Bonito tuna, piquillo peppers, Basque sheep's milk cheese, pan-fried guindilla peppers.

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For additional recipes and serving suggestions for Spanish conservas, please see our aptly named Recipes & Serving Suggestions page.

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Pintxos Pronto #5: Bonito del Norte Tuna with Piquillo Peppers, Aioli, and Manzanilla Olives

Pintxos Pronto #5: Bonito del Norte Tuna with Piquillo Peppers, Aioli, and Manzanilla Olives

Pintxos and eggnog? Why not. This is the fifth in our series of pintxos to be posted this holiday season. Some simple combinations of ingredients you can put together in a very little amount of your time, so you can spend most of it partaking in the revelry of the season. 

Ingredients 

- Bonito del Norte Tuna in Olive Oil
- Piquillo Peppers D.O. Lodosa
- Manzanilla Olives (Pitted)
- aioli
- bread

Directions

As with a previous pintxo, all the work here is aioli whisking-related. Once that's accomplished, it's just more of opening jars and putting one ingredient on top of another, with delicious, crowd-pleasing results. You should be able to get about a dozen pintxos from a jar of the Bonito, which is of course dependent on how much tuna you feel like awarding your guests. A naughty or nice joke could go here, something about the correlation between goodness over the course of the previous year and the resulting division and distribution of exquisite Bonito del Norte tuna amongst Christmas party guests. That joke will be withheld.

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Pintxos Pronto #4: Cantabrian Anchovies with Manchego Cheese and Aprioct Jam

Pintxos Pronto #4: Cantabrian Anchovies with Manchego Cheese and Aprioct Jam

Pintxos and eggnog? Why not. This is the fourth in our series of pintxos to be posted this holiday season. Some simple combinations of ingredients you can put together in a very little amount of your time, so you can spend most of it partaking in the revelry of the season. 

Ingredients 

- Cantabrian Anchovy Fillets
- manchego cheese
- apricot jam
- bread

Directions

Here, the most work you'll have to do is probably slicing the cheese, but that's not difficult at all, particularly if you have one of those little cheese boards with the slicer built in. Job done. If you want to get wild, perhaps try lightly toasting the bread and melting the cheese. It's not what we did, but the theory that melted cheese makes things better has withstood the test of time. Each jar of anchovies will give you about 18 fillets.

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Pintxos Pronto #3: Octopus in Olive Oil with Aioli and Chives

Pintxos Pronto #3: Octopus in Olive Oil with Aioli and Chives

Pintxos and eggnog? Why not. This is the third in our series of pintxos to be posted this holiday season. Some simple combinations of ingredients you can put together in a very little amount of your time, so you can spend most of it partaking in the revelry of the season. 

Ingredients

- Octopus in Olive Oil
- aioli
- chives
- bread

Directions

This pintxo takes a bit of whisking. For the aioli we used (directions for which can be found by clicking the link found at the beginning of this sentence), we kept it simple with just egg yolk, olive oil, garlic, and fresh lemon juice. As you whisk the aioli into being, perhaps you'll be inspired to add piment d'Espelette (or any number of other spices we do not sell). You should try it. At worst, if you're imagination runs amok, it will only add a few more minutes of whisking to return you to the right path.

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