I’ll be the first to admit that this is cheat’s gazpacho made with tinned tomatoes not fresh, but when your own crop is nowhere near ripe and store bought are flavourless then I really am not going to apologize. If you’ve got tasty, ripe, fresh tomatoes go for it.
I’ve made this twice so far this
summer. First was Christmas Eve in
Taranaki when I’d been rostered on for dinner on Day One. Arriving at 3.30pm after a long drive from
Auckland, I set about making it (after first refreshing with a cup of tea and
slice of Christmas cake). I was under a bit of time pressure to chill the
gazpacho down (yes, serves me right for using a cooked tomato sauce instead of
fresh tomatoes!). In the end I poured small amounts to just cover the bottom of
several ice cream containers and placed them in any fridge or freezer I could
find and thankfully managed to get the soup to the desired chilled temperature.
Having learnt my lesson, the second time
was far easier as I made the entire soup dish at home, froze it and took it
down with us early morning for a weekend in Tairua. It was left to defrost during the day (out of
the fridge), and reached perfect chill temperature just in time for dinner. From there it was an easy assemble into
glasses (I like to take these with me as I can’t always guarantee I’m going to
find the right vessels at the holiday home). It also won a gold star from me as the easiest,
no-stress dish I’ve ever had to present at a shared meal.
The recipe is my adaptation and
combination of two Jamie Oliver recipes – his Spanish Gazpacho from Jamie Does and his simple but wonderful
tomato sauce from The Naked Chef, which
I use for just about everything –
pasta, pizza base, shakshouka et al.
For the gazpacho, I cook the sauce first
and then, once chilled, add the additional elements for the soup.
It’s the perfect little starter for an
outdoor evening meal or serve it at lunch with breads, cheese and antipasto
platters.
Gazpacho
Basic sauce
1 tbsp olive oil
1 large clove
garlic, crushed
½ - 1 red chilli,
chopped & seeds removed or 1
small dried chilli, crumbled
2 tsp dried
oregano
2 tins whole Italian cherry tomatoes (or Italian tomatoes)
½ tsp sugar
1 tbsp good
quality balsamic vinegar
a handful of
fresh basil or marjoram or Italian parsley (or combo of two)
salt &
freshly ground pepper
1 tbsp good
quality extra virgin olive oil
Additional elements to make the Gazpacho
¼ of a day-old
ciabatta loaf (250g)
1 tsp harissa (I
use Greg Malouf Red Harissa)
¾ Lebanese
cucumber, peeled, roughly chopped
1 red or yellow
pepper, deseeded & roughly chopped
splash olive oil
splash balsamic
vinegar
To serve
finely chopped
red pepper
fresh herbs
extra virgin
olive oil
good balsamic
vinegar
sea salt &
freshly ground pepper
For the tomato sauce
In a
thick-bottomed pan, gently fry the garlic with the olive oil, then add the
chilli, oregano and tomatoes. Mix
gently, being careful not to break the whole tomatoes (according to Jamie, this
will make the sauce slightly bitter).
Bring to the boil
and simmer gently for 1 hour. Stir in
the balsamic vinegar and sugar. If
you’re using as a sauce only, either chop or use a potato masher and crush the
tomatoes into the sauce. Add the herbs.
Season well to taste and stir in the extra virgin olive oil.
Use as a sauce or
leave to cool for the following Gazpacho recipe.
For the gazpacho
Slice the bread
and remove crusts. Place in a bowl with
100ml cold water for about 5-10 minutes.
Place cooled
tomato sauce mix in liquidizer or food processor and whiz. Squeeze the water from the bread and add the
bread, pepper, cucumber, harissa and a splash of cold water to the bowl and
whiz again. The colour will change to a
more pinky-orange because of the bread.
Add more water if required to get to the right “soup” consistency. Adjust seasoning to taste. Add more sugar if necessary. Either place in
a covered jug in the fridge to chill or freeze.
Serve at chilled
temperature in soup bowls or glass (I prefer glasses).
Drizzle the top
with good quality extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar (or sherry
vinegar, if you have it). Garnish with
finely chopped red pepper and finely chopped fresh herbs e.g. basil, thyme,
marjoram, Italian parsley.
I offer teaspoons,
but it can be either spooned or sipped from the glass.
I often think I should buy my tinned tomatoes in bulk from Moore Wilsons we use so many. Not of course when our own grown are flourishing but that's a long wait and short lived. Am definitely going to make this with the first large harvest this year.
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