In
much of southern Spain, you can buy long, thin peppers, which look like
an overgrown chilli. In fact they are ‘sweet’ and the locals
tend to cook them on a plancha, which is essentially a sheet
of well-seasoned steel, that's placed at one end of the barbecue.
Hot coals are swept under it and the metal gets extremely hot. When
the peppers are cooked like this, the skins char and the core and
seeds cook to a delectable softness and do in fact, taste positively
sweet. They’re unbelievably good with lots of coarse salt ground
over them. Occasionally, one of the peppers is spicy hot, which causes
much amusement, when the greedy diner has bitten a huge chunk off the
end. Lacking a large barbecue and plancha, I suggest cooking
them in a more mundane frying pan. They
are sublime as a starter, because you just have the peppers alone and
can really appreicate the flavours. The long, thing ones (sometimes
sold as Romano) are full of scalding hot juice - be careful! - which is totally delicious and can
be mopped up with bread.
Although
they’re common in both Spain and South America, these slender
peppers are not easy to find elsewhere. However, ordinary peppers
make a good second best, although the seeds don’t cook the same way
and aren't usually worth eating. You can also find miniature peppers which
taste equally appetising when cooked this way - seeds and all.
Roast
peppers have become very popular recently, and many people cook them
over the barbecue. Nothing, however, quite matches the searing heat
of a hot plancha or frying pan.
Serves 4 as a starter
12
Spanish peppers or 4 peppers
olive
oil
coarse
sea salt
Method:
- Wipe the peppers. If using ordinary perppers, quarter them and remove the seeds.
- Heat the oil to smoking hot in a heavy frying pan. Put in the (pieces of) pepper(s) and toss them in the oil. If you think you're going to overload the pan, cook them in batches.
- Using tongs, keep them moving so that most of the skin gets burnt and almost blackened. The inside should soften at the same time.
- Remove the cooked peppers and keep hot. Add more to the pan (with extra oil, if necessary) and repeat the process until such time as all the peppers are cooked.
- If you’ve nowhere to keep them hot, chuck them all back into the pan, after the last ones are cooked, so that they’re reheated.
- Serve with plenty of salt and some fresh bread to mop up the oil and juices.
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