Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

Ingredients

  • Produce

    • 2 Plump garlic cloves
    • 1 Russet potato (about 1/2 pound, medium
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 Black pepper, freshly ground
  • Oils & Vinegars

    • 1 cup Olive oil, Extra Virgin
  • Dairy

    • 1/2 cup Half-and-half -or- light cream
  • Liquids

    • 1/2 cup Poaching water from cooking the baccala
  • Other

    • 1 pound boneless baccalà (salt cod, soaked to remove salt
    • A heavy-duty electric mixer with the paddle attachment or a food processor

Found on

epicurious.com

epicurious.com

385 0
Title:

Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

Descrition:

This is one of our family's cherished holiday dishes, a creamy, garlicky appetizer spread, full of flavor, that we enjoy on everything—good crusty bread, grilled bread, carckers, crostini, bread sticks, carrot sticks, celery sticks, even spaghetti, gnocchi, risotto. It is good as an hors d'oeuvre, an appetizer, or a main course, and great for parties. It brings lots of complex flavor to anything that it is spread on. Baccalà mantecato is important to our family, though, for more than its addictive savor. It is a link to Istria, my native region, where the imminent arrival of Christmas at our house (and everyone else's was scented by the unmistakable vapors of dried codfish, cooking for hours and hours. These were not fish from our local waters, but a delicacy from Northern Europe, a fish that was brought in to be bartered and exchanged for olive oil and good Mediterranean wine, carefully selected and dearly bought. But despite the expense, or the time and labor in its preparation, baccalà mantecato was the mark of a good cook in Istria, and many would stop in at a particular house not just for the hoilday greetings but also for a taste of the baccalà. In our household, my father was the chief cook of baccalà mantecato—it was his one culinary triumph—and that makes it all the more special to me. Though he has been gone for many years, his masterful touch with this dish remains with me and inspires me; every time I make it now, I remember him, with every bite.

Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

  • Produce

    • 2 Plump garlic cloves
    • 1 Russet potato (about 1/2 pound, medium
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 Black pepper, freshly ground
  • Oils & Vinegars

    • 1 cup Olive oil, Extra Virgin
  • Dairy

    • 1/2 cup Half-and-half -or- light cream
  • Liquids

    • 1/2 cup Poaching water from cooking the baccala
  • Other

    • 1 pound boneless baccalà (salt cod, soaked to remove salt
    • A heavy-duty electric mixer with the paddle attachment or a food processor

The first person this recipe

epicurious.com

epicurious.com

385 0

Found on epicurious.com

Epicurious

Baccalà Mantecato: A Savory Spread of Whipped Salt Cod

This is one of our family's cherished holiday dishes, a creamy, garlicky appetizer spread, full of flavor, that we enjoy on everything—good crusty bread, grilled bread, carckers, crostini, bread sticks, carrot sticks, celery sticks, even spaghetti, gnocchi, risotto. It is good as an hors d'oeuvre, an appetizer, or a main course, and great for parties. It brings lots of complex flavor to anything that it is spread on. Baccalà mantecato is important to our family, though, for more than its addictive savor. It is a link to Istria, my native region, where the imminent arrival of Christmas at our house (and everyone else's was scented by the unmistakable vapors of dried codfish, cooking for hours and hours. These were not fish from our local waters, but a delicacy from Northern Europe, a fish that was brought in to be bartered and exchanged for olive oil and good Mediterranean wine, carefully selected and dearly bought. But despite the expense, or the time and labor in its preparation, baccalà mantecato was the mark of a good cook in Istria, and many would stop in at a particular house not just for the hoilday greetings but also for a taste of the baccalà. In our household, my father was the chief cook of baccalà mantecato—it was his one culinary triumph—and that makes it all the more special to me. Though he has been gone for many years, his masterful touch with this dish remains with me and inspires me; every time I make it now, I remember him, with every bite.