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1 cup manzanilla olives (large green olives also known as Spanish olives) 2 bay leaves; 3 sprigs fresh thyme, broken up with your fingers; 2 sprigs fresh rosemary, broken up with your fingers; 1 cup Spanish extra-virgin olive oil, preferably an arbequina variety; 2 tbsp marcona almonds; coarse sea salt to taste
2 jar (16 ounces each) Pace® Picante Sauce; 1 bottle (about 8 ounces) clam juice; 1 / 4 cup dry white wine or water; 1 package (about 3 1/2 ounces) chorizo sausage, sliced; 2 1 / 2 lb cod or haddock or snapper fillets, cut into large pieces
Heat the picante sauce, clam juice and wine in a 6-quart saucepot over high heat to a boil. Add the chorizo, cod and clams. Cover the sauce pot.
Once the quinoa is cooked, immediately chill. Once the quinoa is cool add it to a large bowl with all of the ingredient and mix thoroughly. Chill before serving.
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a Spanish meat made from unweaned lambs (roast lechazo-lambs-). Very typical of Valladolid. Lechazo de Castilla y León. Lomo embuchado: everywhere meat a cured meat made from a pork tenderloin. In its essentials, it is the same as Cecina, the Spanish air dried cured smoked Beef tenderloin Longaniza: everywhere sausage
Spanish fricco is a traditional dish in Meschede, [6] a town in the Hochsauerland district, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The town of Bad Sooden-Allendorf in the Werra-Meißner-Kreis in Hesse , Germany also claims Spanish fricco as a traditional dish [ 2 ] and its people serve it annually for Thanksgiving and Heimatfest .
Patatas bravas (Spanish: [paˈtatas ˈβɾaβas], also called patatas a la brava or papas bravas, all meaning "spicy potatoes") is a dish native to Spain. [1] It typically consists of white potatoes that have been cut into two-centimeter-wide (3 ⁄ 4-inch) cubes, then fried in oil and served warm with a spicy "brava" sauce.