There are some foods that you enjoy more when you are older. As in grown up. Anchovies are one of those things. This is a video from Elizabeth Minchilli's website on anchovies, and it made me hungry.
Love me some anchovies. Always have, though. I'm weird like that.
Yvonne and Garrett are not so sure.
My anchovy experience...
As a child...hairy, dark, smelly, salty, mushy looking things in it's "one of a kind can," had a taste of it on a pizza totally awful to me, still make a funny face just thinking about it.
But then...
As an adult...my one visit to Europe had me in Spain more than 25 years ago...the anchovies I ate there were totally different and totally delicious from what I recall...but have never had the opportunity to eat them again...
Those in the video look yummy...not sure about the job of "anchovy processor," though. I wonder how well paid those "talented" women are?
SPP
Anchovies are like many things I love now but would not eat in my youth, just like oysters.
Similar to mackerel, anchovies out of a can are good but not the same. I hated both until a friend introduced me to fresh ones.
Hmm. That's also how I felt about beer.... hated it until I had some Trappist stuff and then suddenly the world opened up for me.
elysian
Tom Tolhurst
I love anchovies. I cook with them occasionally but they're always better in Spain while eating tapas on vacation
It's one of the first things I'll eat while ordering tapas this March in Girona
. Go figure -Mike G
Anchovies are critical for a good Puttanesca sauce. And kalamata olives.
Be aware that anchovies stale quite quickly once the packet is opened, the oil is little help as oil allows oxygen to permeate quite rapidly*. If your anchovies are brown, they're stale: fresh anchovies are pink.
I find it worth buying smaller packages, despite the higher per unit cost, as I can use the salty little devils before they are noticeably stale.
*In general oxygen permeation is inversely proportional to polarity, so non-polar materials like oils are quite permeable.
Mark Kelly
I don't think I have seen a non-brown oil packed anchovie. Even the fancy high priced ones i've seen/purchased in shops are brown. Are fresh oil packed available on-line?
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
I never liked anchovies until we ate them in Italy on the coast.
We ordered them every night while there.
Fresh from the sea is simply a different product than from a can.
They are ridiculously delicious.
The freshness and local sourcing of a lot of European foods is so different from the factory food we get in the USA
that makes all the difference I think.
Only in bagna cauda.
A couple of the oxidized brown ones are quite yummy in a vinaigrette...
And simply dissolving several and a smashed garlic clove in a few tablespoons good butter is an amazing simple and fast pasta treatment...
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
Guy Washburn
Photography > www.guywashburn.com
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.”
– Mary Oliver
OK, I'll take a pic of the anchovy shelf next time I'm there.
Mark Kelly
We have a neighborhood Italian grocery store that's been around since 1929 and they carry a ton of specialty foods from the old country. I'll have to check for a jar of pink anchovies and give them a try.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
By far, the best anchovies I've ever tasted used to be imported by Kermit Lynch.
Brand was PIC. No salt, not oil packed. Came in a jar with a wire bail top with a rubber gasket.
They has such flavor !
If anyone knows where to finds gems like those, let us know.
I've never found anything like them since.
Mark Walberg
Building bike frames for fun since 1973.
PIC was from Saint Hilaire d'Ozilhan near Avignon.
Mark Walberg
Building bike frames for fun since 1973.
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