Recipe Corner with Albert

Recipe Corner with Albert

These garlic potatoes from San Sebastian, known as patatas al ajillo a la donostiarra, are one of Spain’s best potato dishes. We’re talking a ton of great flavors, basic everyday ingredients, and all done in a little over 30 minutes. Serve them as a tapas appetizer, as a side dish, or even for breakfast.

TIPS & TRICKS to Make this Recipe: I fried the potatoes in extra virgin olive oil, as that is what is typically used. Of course, you can use any type of oil you like. But I tell you, by frying the potatoes in extra virgin olive oil, like they do in San Sebastian, it gives the potatoes a beautiful lift of flavors.

Watch Albert prepare this recipe on Youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95Z5FRwjVJI

GARLIC POTATOES from San Sebastian | Patatas al Ajillo a la Donostiarra

Ingredients

  • 1 cup extra virgin olive oil 240 ml
  • 4 medium potatoes (peeled) 2 1/4 lbs (1 Kilogram)
  • 8 cloves garlic (roughly chopped)
  • 1/4 tsp crushed red pepper 0.625 grams
  • 2 tbsp chopped parsley 5 grams
  • 1/2 tsp sweet smoked Spanish paprika 1.25 grams
  • chopped chives for garnish
  • sea salt & black pepper

Instructions

  1. Heat a large fry pan with a low-medium heat and add in the olive oil
  2. In the meantime, cut the potatoes into bite-sized pieces that are 3/4 inch (2 cm) thick
  3. Add the cut potatoes into the hot fry pan, mix together, then mix every 3 to 4 minutes so all the potatoes evenly cook
  4. After 25 to 30 minutes and the potatoes are just cooked through (you can always pierce them with a toothpick to ensure they are done), remove the pan from the heat and drain the potatoes into a colander with a heatproof bowl underneath
  5. Heat the same pan with a low-medium heat, and add in 3 tbsp (45 ml) of the reserved olive oil from the potatoes, then immediately add in the chopped garlic and crushed red pepper, and mix continuously
  6. After 1 minute and the garlic is nice and fragrant, turn off the heat, add the potatoes back into the pan, along with the chopped parsley, and season generously with salt and a kiss of pepper, gently mix together until well mixed
  7. Transfer the potatoes into a large serving dish, top off with a dash of paprika and some chopped chives, enjoy!

Romans Made Olive Oil in Tunisia

Romans Made Olive Oil in Tunisia

Archaeologists excavating at Henchir el-Begar in central Tunisia have uncovered one of the largest olive-oil production complexes of the Roman world, revealing monumental beam presses and industrial-scale infrastructure from antiquity. Olive Oil Times

The description of the press is very similar to the method we used on our stone ground mill over 20 years ago. This lends credence to the old adage, “The more things change the more they stay the same.” Each of the 20 presses at the site could press 1 ton of olives per day which produced more oil than the local populace could use so they apparently exported a lot of the olive oil.

Our Barouni is originally an olive from Tunisia. We are one of the only producers to produce this variety in the US. We think it produces an excellent robust oil.

Click on the link above to read more about this fascinating ancient site.