Categories
Local

Salt

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

SALT

“I have two lovers in life that I have never slept with. The city of Paris and potatoes.”

– Francis Mallmann

Argentinian food is unique in a very specific way. If you live in Argentina and you go to a Chinese restaurant, or a Mexican restaurant, or a Japanese restaurant, the food will still find a way to taste distinctly Argentinian. So what does Argentinian food taste like?, you ask.

I’ll tell you. Or, at least, I’ll try.

Perfectly salty. And not much else. One thing is for certain: it is virtually impossible to replicate in the States.

Argentinians don’t use many condiments except for ketchup on McDonald’s french fries and chimichurri on special occasions (ketchup doesn’t go on regular french fries… the condiment for regular french fries is a scrambled egg, and no, I am not kidding). Nothing is spicy, even if you order it spicy. You can’t get a side of black beans and rice anywhere. It’s not Latin America – it might as well be Europe. People cook more with lard than with butter, the meat is spectacular, the wine is heavy, and the primary culinary ornamentation is salt.

I should back up a bit…

I heard once that people are whole little worlds – little kaleidoscopes; equal parts fiction and experience.

So many faces and facets to the prisms that people become at 20… at 30… at 40… at 50. Writer, musician, chef, thinker, theologian, gamer, surfer, professional, lover, sister, misanthrope, creative, thalassophyle, a fundamentally sentimental human… all in one small body, all from one diligent mind, distilled riotously within the human heart from vapors of the human experience.

When I was about 17, I would sleep until noon – sometimes longer. I was in college studying linguistics, staying up late playing the keyboard (with headphones), dancing tango, and drinking Argentinian wine. I spent considerable time in Argentina in a large house architected by a very special mind that had wood floors and pink Italian marble bathrooms. What woke me every morning was the lilting sound of a violin, played haphazardly over morning coffee, wafting up the spiral staircase to my bedroom along with the smell of espresso and fresh criollitos.

The sound was my brother-in-law – Argentinian musician-turned-heart-surgeon – practicing Por Una Cabeza with my sister accompanying him on the piano as she accompanied him in life. La Cumparsita and El Choclo would follow, but not before I dragged myself out of bed, poured myself a cup of coffee, and picked up the violin that I played under duress in those years. As my brother-in-law explained, there could only be so many pianists in an orchestra, and there were already two in my extended family when I arrived on the scene, a seasoned teenager waiting to fling herself full tilt into the Argentinian world of boliches and tango music.

We would play all morning as a family. Triplet boys, age 8; a pianist, a violinist, and a cellist. My sister, a pianist. My brother-in-law, a violinist. And me, whatever I needed to be that day. Criollitos, medialunas, and coffee until 11 when we would all part ways for our respective days.

I had the rarified privilege of experiencing many facets of Argentinian life in my first twenty years – from the symphony to the bus system. I was looking for myself in foreign places and, in the process, building an unmatched repertoire of personal experience. Not much compares to those chaotic moments spent with a violin in my hand or a piano beneath my fingers, and the experience of connection, flavor, and culture that filled that house along with the music.

Argentinian asado – assorted meat grilled diligently for hours over open flame – is unmatched both in flavor and in experience. My brother-in-law Nestor makes the best parrillada I have ever tasted. He cooks it slowly and salts it heavily, and serves it with plenty of empanadas. I began this New Year – 2023 – at Nestor’s house grilling meat, playing the world’s most elegant piano (a 1959 Steinway baby grand), and drinking Achaval Ferrer’s Quimera, inundated in gratitude for every moment of my childhood and every ounce of experience he shared with my very young and impressionable mind.

The taste of empanadas, parrillada, and red wine came to flavor my adolescence, calibrating my tastes – both for food and experience – for something deeper.

The something deeper was comprised of sound, flavor, place, and an inescapable depth of being. The curation of these components into a prismatic interpretation of how to spend an evening is what I am after in 2023 with both Merigold and OneandahalfSlices. For me, it all started with people. People immersed in sound, flavor, culture, and place drives connection. It is a formidable thing, a strong thing, a simple thing. This experiential living is not the type of thing that can be perfectly curated. It is organic, not contrived; fresh, not canned; and served a little sloppy, not manicured and tweezed onto a plate.

It’s an agent-based model.

(stick with me…)

Agent-Based Model. A stochastic computer simulation comprised of autonomous agents used to study the presence, emergence, and evolution of complex social phenomena.

The beauty (artistry / elegance) in an agent-based model is that neither behavior nor interaction is prescribed. A successful simulation provides the environment for interaction to emerge organically without explicit logic or rules to specify outcomes.  

When you are designing an ABM (something I did routinely during the three years of earning my PhD) you are designing an environment, not coding an outcome. You’re building a world or a scene… in a place, with flavors and sounds and things you feel. It’s sensory, it’s visceral, and it is much more fun in the real world than in the world of computation. 

In 2023, Merigold and OneandahalfSlices together are going to make more empanadas. We’re going to measure less and live a little bit more. We’re going to be fundamentally more creative than corporate. We’re going to travel, be curious, and think deeply about the world and the people in it. Invite-only but every possible perspective welcome. I, for one, am looking forward to the year – the flavors, the music, the salt, the ocean waves crashing, and the company.

So what does Argentinian food taste like? I’m not sure how to describe it other than to say, to me, it tastes like experience. It tastes like my childhood, like my family, like music, and like deep connection to the world.

It is the dish OneandhalfSlices would most like to serve to its patrons and followers this year.

#yellow2023

#openflamecooking

#measurelesslivemore

#morecreativethancorporate

Categories
Omni

Jamon con Melon

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Jamón con Melón

- aka Melon Carpaccio -

one and a half slices ham and melon cantaloupe recipe summer

This is the simplest of appetizers. Elegant and perfectly balanced. Sweet and Salty. aka Melon Carpaccio.

#summervibes

what you need

1 small, sweet, fresh cantaloupe melon

1 package good, Italian prosciutto

how to make it

Thinly slice melon. Layer on a plate with slices of prosciutto. Serve immediately. 

Cocktails to Serve it With
one and a half slices green kitchen stories soup recipe collaboration

Green Pea Mint Soup

It’s cold. And it’s the time of year when everyone in Northern Virginia wishes they did not live in Northern Virginia. March drags on forever, and just when you think you’ve made it to spring, Easter is chilly and there is sleet on Mother’s Day. This is the all-star springtime soup. This green pea minty soup basically has a salad on top and the crema can get really creative. So break out the wasabi, the green vibes, and the blender. Best part is this thing takes all of 20 minutes to make. It is bright and vibrant; perfect for Easter, perfect for Spring. You’re welcome.

Go To Post »
one and a half slices paper plane cocktail recipe

Paper Plane

This cocktail has quickly become a favorite this summer after we ODed on Aperol Spritz’s early on thanks to my beautiful nephew and niece-in-law. The paper plane would be all too sweet if it weren’t for the bitterness added by, well, the bitters. As it stands, it’s a fresh, zesty, lemony, foamy, beautiful cocktail that will rival your summertime cosmo or G&T any day of the week. It is definitely here to stay. 

Go To Post »
one and a half slices greek greek salata salad recipe

Maroulosalata

Most people think of Greek salad as tomatoes, cucumbers, feta cheese, and plenty of olive oil. Marousalata, however, is a salad frequently served in Greek homes. It is a simple salad. An every day salad. An everybody salad. And here to stay in my kitchen. 

Go To Post »
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr
Categories
Veggie

Humita

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Humita

one and a half slices corn baked humita recipe

It’s summertime. Which means it is time for Humita. Humita is a quintessential summertime dish that is dear to my heart for many reasons:

  1. In the summer, my Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) provider, Potomac Vegetable Farms, has corn in ample supply! Thanks, PVF! (I have professed OneandahalfSlices’ commitment to local, sustainable agriculture and farming in another post)
  2. It is a highly versatile Argentinian dish that comes in many, many forms. For those that know me well, you know that I consider Argentina part of my cultural heritage despite the fact that I’ve got no official Argentinian blood in my veins. Humita appears throughout the Argentinian culinary atmosphere as a soup, steamed in the husk, baked (shown here), and as an Empanada filler (one of my favorites!).  
  3. Corn is that beautiful, golden color – the color of sunshine, the color of pure joy, and the color of the recently-reimagined Merigold Analytics, my full-time employment as of this Fall!
  4. The corn emoji (🌽) has a secret meaning for my sister and I… 😊
one and a half slices oneandahalfslices argentina

what you need

8 ears of fresh, yellow corn, cut off the cob

2 tablespoons butter

1 sweet red pepper, finely diced 

1 bunch of parsley, finely chopped

1 yellow onion, finely diced

1 cup of whole milk

3 eggs

1 small block of soft white cheese, like gouda, cut into small squares

Salt, pepper, paprika, and cayenne to taste

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350 and lightly butter a cast iron skillet or baking pan. 

On the stovetop, melt the butter in a large saucepan. Add the corn, onion, red pepper, and parsley, and sauté over medium-high heat until fragrant, ~4-5 minutes.

Transfer the corn mixture into a cast iron skillet. In a separate container, beat the eggs together with the milk, adding salt, pepper, and paprika to taste. Pour the egg mixture over the corn mixture and sprinkle the gouda squares over top (if they are larger, you may wish to push them down a bit into the corn). 

Top with a dash of cayenne pepper and bake for ~45-55 minutes until the top is golden.  

More Argentinian Food
argentinian empanada recipe authentic argentine oneandahalfslices

Empanadas

There are many varieties but a recipe for specifically Argentinian empanadas is difficult to find – especially in English and out of the metric system. Often served as an appetizer, empanadas are hearty little handpies that can suffice as a meal alone and their flexible filling options (savory or sweet) make them perfect for just about any occasion. Argentina will always be a special place for me. So here is the elusive no-one-writes-this-shit-down family recipe.

Go To Post »
one and a half slices

Salt

“I have two lovers in life that I have never slept with. The city of Paris and potatoes.” – Francis Mallmann. The taste of empanadas, parrillada, and red wine came to flavor my adolescence, calibrating my tastes – both for food and experience – for something deeper.

Go To Post »
one and a half slices birthday present cutting board empanada

What are you cooking today?

If you have never tried to make the OneandahalfSlices Argentinian Empanadas, now might just be the time! This weekend we whipped up a batch along with a simple shredded carrot, hard boiled egg, and golden raisin salad. We stayed hydrated with Yerba Mate and a variety of Fernet Branca-based cocktails.

Go To Post »
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr
Categories
Veggie

Chimichurri

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Argentinian Chimichurri

one and a half slices chimmichurri authentic argentinian uruguayan

If you’ve eaten at our house, chances are you’ve had authentic, Argentinian chimichurri. It’s Argentina’s only real condiment. And it goes on everything , from salad to Ovoka Farm wagyu. Go spicy. Go limey. Want it for breakfast? I got you: Crab Avo Toast.

argentina

what you need

2 cups of super finely chopped parsley

3-5 garlic super finely chopped garlic cloves

2 tablespoons super finely chopped red onion

1 super finely chopped red chili, seeds and all

Juice from one lime (or half a lime if you live in Florida)

1 tablespoon red wine vinegar

3/4 cup (plus a little more for good measure) good olive oil

Salt and pepper to taste

how to make it

Dice the parsley super finely and remove the stems. Using a chopper, finely dice the garlic, the onion, and the chili. Add it to the parsley and mix with salt and pepper. 

Add the lime juice, the red wine vinegar, and the olive oil, stir, and store in the fridge overnight or a few hours prior to eating. 

Enjoy!

More Authentic Argentinian
one and a half slices corn baked humita recipe

Humita

It’s summertime. Which means it is time for Humita. Humita is a highly versatile Argentinian dish that comes in many, many forms. Humita appears throughout the Argentinian culinary atmosphere as a soup, steamed in the

Go To Post »
one and a half slices ham and melon cantaloupe recipe summer

Jamon con Melon

This is the simplest of appetizers. Elegant and perfectly balanced. Sweet and Salty. aka Melon Carpaccio. #summervibes

Go To Post »
one and a half slices

Salt

“I have two lovers in life that I have never slept with. The city of Paris and potatoes.” – Francis Mallmann. The taste of empanadas, parrillada, and red wine came to flavor my adolescence, calibrating

Go To Post »
argentinian empanada recipe authentic argentine oneandahalfslices

Empanadas

There are many varieties but a recipe for specifically Argentinian empanadas is difficult to find – especially in English and out of the metric system. Often served as an appetizer, empanadas are hearty little handpies

Go To Post »
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr
Categories
Local

What are you cooking today?

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local
one and a half slices what recipe are you cooking?
one and a half slices birthday present cutting board empanada

If you have never tried to make the OneandahalfSlices Argentinian Empanadas, now might just be the time! This weekend we whipped up a batch along with a simple shredded carrot, hard boiled egg, and golden raisin salad. We stayed hydrated with Yerba Mate and a variety of Fernet Branca-based cocktails (coming soon!). If you’re still stressing about Valentine’s Day dinner, you could give these empanadas a try along with some homemade Tiramisu. After all, Argentina and Italy share many, many things. 

🥕 What are you cooking today? 🍇

Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr
Categories
Omni

Empanadas

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Argentinian Empanadas

Empanadas are a staple in cultura latina. There are many varieties but a recipe for specifically Argentinian empanadas is difficult to find – especially in English and out of the metric system. Often served as an appetizer, empanadas are hearty little handpies that can suffice as a meal alone and their flexible filling options (savory or sweet) make them perfect for just about any occasion. Make them in bulk and stick them in the freezer for quick weeknight meals, snacks, or lazy Sundays. So here is the elusive no-one-writes-this-shit-down family recipe.  

argentina

what you need

1-1 1/2 pounds “vacio” (skirt steak, flank steak, fajita meat)

2 Spanish or yellow onions

1 red bell pepper

~1/2 cup green onions

3 eggs, hard boiled and peeled

2 packages (24 total) frozen empanada “masas” (dough rounds)

3 tablespoons butter or shortening

1 packet of “Condimento para Empanadas” (25g/~1oz)

Extra cumin and paprika to taste

1 egg, beaten, for egg wash

Salt to taste

(optional) 1/2 cup green olives, minced

(optional variation) 1/2 cup raisins + 1 tablespoon sugar

Notes on non-traditional ingredients: If you don’t have a good latin grocery nearby, not to worry. There are workarounds.

For the dough rounds, no, I do not make my own, opting instead for the La Salteña Hojaldrada empanada dough. Most Targets carry it. You can use just about any frozen empanada dough, though my preference is that it be some form of “hojaldre” or “puff pastry.” It makes the empanadas flakier whereas many Central American empanadas are made with more traditional textured and sweeter dough.

If you can’t find the pre-mixed Alicante brand Condimento para Empanadas spices, you can easily make it yourself! The mix contains: sweet Hungarian paprika (“pimenton”), nutmeg, cumin, oregano, black pepper, and crushed chili peppers. Double up on the sweet paprika. Note that traditional empanadas are not spicy so you always want to use sweet pepper varietals, not spicy ones (though you could go ahead and make them spicy if that’s your thing…).

how to make it

Pre-heat oven to 400 and set dough rounds out well in advance to come to room temperature. If the dough is still frozen, it will not fold well, but be careful not to let it get too warm as it will tear and be sticky.

Prepare the meat. Assuming the cut of meat you have purchased is thin, you should be able to roll it tightly two or three times over in a cylindrical shape. Slice thin rolls off the end of the cylinder with a sharp knife, going back over the meat to thinly dice any long strings or chunks. You are aiming for 1/8″ chunks of meat. This may seem a little annoying when ground beef is readily available, but much of the empanada’s flavor comes from the type of meat used.

Prepare the vegetables. Hard boil, cool, and dice two eggs and set aside in a small bowl. Finely dice the bell peppers, onion, and green onion. 

Cook. Brown all meat in large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the onion and bell peppers, and cook over medium heat until onions become translucent. Add the spice packet, salt, butter or shortening, and olives (if using), mixing well. Cook another ~10 minutes. Turn off the stove but leave the mixture on the heat, mixing in the green onions as the final step. The mixture should be well combined with just a little excess juice from the butter+spices. Taste to adjust spice content, noting that the spices and salt will intensify over time, especially if freezing.

Roll. Now open up your dough rounds and get ready. You’re also going to want to have a small bowl of room temperature water on hand. Take a dough round off the top and hold it flat in your left hand. With your right hand, spoon ~2 tablespoons of the meat mixture into the middle of the dough, careful not to overfill. Place 2-3 small pieces of egg on top.

Quickly dip your finger in water and trace the inside edge of the dough round. With your right hand, pull the bottom half of the dough up over the top half to form a half moon as shown in the video. Then pinch both sides of the half moon together all the way around. You should now be holding a half moon shape in your left hand with the straight edge on the bottom near your wrist.

Starting at the bottom right, take the corner of the pinched dough and fold it up using your right pointer finger and thumb, pinching to seal. Repeat this all around the crest of the half moon. You can form tighter or looser folds depending on the aesthetic you want. The last fold will produce a little tail of dough, which you should tuck under to the backside of the half moon, pinching well to seal in the filling. 

If the dough is tearing or becoming sticky, place it in the fridge for half an hour or the freezer for 10 minutes to cool back down. 

Bake. When all the empanadas are folded, lay them out on a baking sheet on tinfoil and brush the tops with a beaten egg wash (not necessary but it makes them extra shiny and browned). Bake on 400 for 20 minutes or until golden and serve hot. 

If you want to make your empanadas in bulk as I do (3-4 dozen at a time), you will want to store them in an airtight container in the freezer separated by parchment paper. If not separated, the dough will stick together and chip when broken apart, leaving holes in your empanadas.

Variations! Empanadas come in many shapes and sizes, with some Central American empanadas containing ingredients such as potatoes and peas. The recipe above is for traditional Argentinian empanadas, often called “salada” (salty), “picante” (spicy), or “salteñas” (originally from Salta). They are the traditional counterpart to the “dulces” (sweet) which are made without egg or olive, and with raisins and sugar (I know it sounds odd, but they are REALLY good). I frequently separate out some of the mixture after adding the spices, and add in the raisins and sugar to make both types at once.

Other variations include: “jamón y queso” (ham and a soft, white cheese), “humita” or “choclo” (corn, red pepper, green onion, and soft white cheese), “roquefort” (blue cheese), and “árabes” (arab empanadas are triangular in shape, made with more common dough than puff pastry, and contain ground beef, red bell pepper, and a lot of paprika; they are eaten by biting off the top triangular corner and squeezing the juice of a lemon wedge down into the empanada).

Then, of course, this recipe can be used to make Pumpkin Pasties! The pumpkin-filled sweet pasties are best served with a side of freshly whipped cream.

I spent a good portion of my adolescent and young adult life in Argentina – specifically, Córdoba. Situated in the middle of the country considerably north of the capital, Buenos Aires, and slightly east of the Andes mountains. Those mountains not only divide Argentina and Chile, but they also host the tallest mountain in the Americas “Aconcagua” and serve as the breeding grounds for both Argentina and Chile’s most coveted wines.

As a child, I attended school and spent the weekends riding horses with my parents in the Argentinian countryside. At some point, my father taught me to play cards and pool (we had a Gin Rummy game that lasted over a decade). I picked up the language, developed a love of red wine and red meat, and internalized a lot of the musical history. From these experiences, though, came two very important things: patriotism and curiosity. The first, an unwavering appreciation for the United States – with all the freedom, variety, and opportunity it provides for its citizens. The second, an uncontained hunger – call it a lust – for the “otherness;” to me, the “extranjero.” 

These early years set the tone for 30+ countries in travels throughout my late teens and twenties. It is the reason this food blog is filled with curries, dahls, böreği, tagines, and couscous, alongside the more familiar lasagna, chocolate chip cookies, and chili. But it is also part of the reason why this blog is predominantly local.

Argentina will always be a special place for me. Half of my childhood occurred there – half of my growing up and half of my cooking experimentations (let’s talk about the time I made four dozen chocolate chip cookies with furniture polish in lieu of cooking spray because I couldn’t read the label… or the time I made an entire lasagna with ground coconut instead of parmesan cheese). Argentina gave me a lot of knowledge, a lot of exploration, a lot of friendship, and a lot of drive – but it also gave me an undying love of travel along with the undying love of my own soil. Thank you to my nephew who, at the wise age of 20, visited this past summer and taught me to cook the taste of my childhood – the elusive no-one-writes-this-shit-down family recipe.

Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr