Monday, 26 April 2010

Asparagus Stew

We went for a meal a few months back at a restaurant on the way to Casares and for a starter I had this amazing stew. I mentally tried to work out the ingredients while I ate and then messed around at home until I figured out how it was made. I now pass this wisdom on to you. The ingredients, most of which are pictured below are as follows;



Asparagus either fresh in a bundle as pictured or frozen;
1 large onion chopped as small as you can;
4 large mushrooms, sliced;
2 rashers of bacon, chopped into little bits;
4 eggs (or one for each person dining with you);
2 cloves of garlic, crushed and chopped;
1 glass of white wine;
1 pint of chicken stock;
Water;
Fresh (or dried) basil;
Salt and pepper to taste;
Butter, just a knob;
A big handful of grated cheese - I use cheddar;
Olive oil; and
At least 1 gin and tonic with ice and a slice of lemon (not an ingredient but absolutely essential).

Here we go, quick and easy. Heat up the oil in the pan along with the knob of butter then add the onions and fry for about 6 or so minutes until sweet and translucent. Add a litle water to prevent them from drying out and burning. When done, chop up the asparagus and add to the onions along with the mushrooms, garlic, basil, salt and pepper then fry for about 2 minutes. Add the glass of white wine and a splash of water and you should have somnething that resembles this;



Now its time to add the chicken stock and the bacon. Bring to the boil and simmer for about 10 minutes or until the asparagus is soft (but not too soft - you want a bit of resistence to the tooth but not enough to crunch when you eat it). During this time, make sure there is sufficient liquid to keep the aparagus just (and I mean only just) covered. Now this is where things get a little weird. Crack open your eggs one by one and pore into the broth taking care to ensure that the yolks stay intact. As far as possible, try to keep the eggs separate from each other. See the below photo;



You are basically poaching the eggs within the stew. When the egg whites are cooked with the yolk still runny (please excuse the technical term), the stew is ready to serve. Spoon out the eggs, one per person onto a plate. Share out the stew between the diners (the above should make enough for 4 people) into soup bowls then place one egg on top of each bowl and sprinkle with grated cheese. Serve, eat, enjoy and remember where you saw it first.  



A comment or two to say thanks wouldn't hurt either.

Until the next one...

Steve

2 comments:

  1. Yummy yummy :) It's almost lunch time here but I have a feeling I will only have a simple sandwich for break and not one of these delicious meals :) Great blog! I love the layout and the pictures! Keep it up! Wendy.

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  2. Thanks for the comment Wendy. Great to hear from you again.
    Steve

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