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Hard Cooked Eggs Stuffed with Tapenade
Makes 8 servings Ingredients: 1 extra large egg per person water for cooking the eggs 2 teaspoons sea salt 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard 1/2 cup Aïoli (recipe follows) Tapenade (recipe follows) Preparation: Have the eggs at room temperature. Put eggs in a saucepan just large enough to hold all the eggs in one layer, with enough cold water to cover. Salt the water and set over medium low heat. Bring the water to a boil slowly. Allow the eggs to simmer, with the water bubbling, but not violently, for 5 minutes. When the eggs have finished cooking, bring the pot to the sink and turn the cold water on, running rapidly into the hot water. Allow cold water to replace the hot in the pan. Then drain, dry and peel the eggs. Allow the eggs to cool completely before slicing them in half lengthwise. Put the yolks in a small mixing bowl and mash with the mustard and Aïoli. Taste and correct seasoning if necessary. Line the egg-white boats with the yolk mixture, then mound a spoonful of the Tapenade atop each egg. Tapenade (Olive, Anchovy and Caper Condiment) To make about 1 cup Ingredients: 1/2 pound large plump ripe olives (they should be slightly wrinkled, cured in oil rather than brine) 1/2 of a 2 ounce tin anchovies preserved in olive oil 1 large clove garlic, peeled and slightly crushed 1 1/2 tablespoons capers preserved in vinegar, well drained 1 1/2 teaspoons Cognac 1 1/2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil freshly ground pepper to taste Preparation: Pit the olives, either with an olive pitter, or by crushing the olive meat (but not the pit) with the flat side of a large knife or cleaver and extract the seed. Put the olive meat into a food processor. Add the tin of anchovies with oil and the garlic, capers, Cognac, olive oil and a few good turns of the pepper mill. Blend the ingredients together all at once. Keep this preparation brief so that the purée retains a coarse texture. To store the Tapenade for future use, pack it in small jars (preferably glass). Cover jars tightly and refrigerate. (I have known it to keep as long as 2 months). Note: Tapenade is a very versatile condiment. In addition to using as a stuffing for hard cooked eggs, you can: spread it on toasted slices of French bread and serve it with apéritifs; serve it as an hors d'oeuvre with raw vegetables and hard boiled eggs; use it as the basis for a sandwich. Spread it on a long thin loaf of French bread, split in half and toasted, then layer the sandwich with slices of tomato, hard boiled eggs, sweet new onions and a few anchovy fillets (or chunks of well drained, canned tuna). Aïoli This is the real star of the show. All the other dishes are prepared to accompany IT! You can eliminate almost any other item from your menu and still have an authentic party, but without this one, it is not an “Aïoli!” Makes 8 servings Ingredients: 14 large garlic cloves, peeled 1/4 teaspoon of sea salt 2 egg yolks (at room temperature) freshly ground white pepper to taste juice of 1 lemon 1 cup extra-virgin olive oil 1 cup vegetable oil Preparation: Peel the garlic and split the cloves lengthwise to make sure there are no sprouts inside. Turn on a food processor fitted with the metal blade. Drop the garlic cloves through the feed tube and chop as fine as possible. Stop the machine and push the chopped garlic from the sides of the bowl to the bottom. Add the salt and process briefly to make a paste of the two. Add egg yolks, pepper, about 2 tablespoons of lemon juice and 3 tablespoons olive oil to the work bowl and process until thick and pale. Now, with the motor running constantly, dribble the rest of the olive oil and all of the vegetable oil through the open feed tube in a slow, steady stream. When all the oil has been absorbed, you should have a thick, stiff mayonnaise. Taste and adjust seasonings (salt, lemon juice). Note: You may prefer to make this by hand in a mortar with a pestle. That will take much longer, but is the traditional way. Please do not use an electric blender. It makes the aioli too fluffy. |
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