What is Gazpacho? (EP 16)
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About this listen
Gazpacho looks like the simplest thing in the world. Blended vegetables, tomatoes, olive oil, vinegar. But did you know it spent centuries with no tomato, no red color, and no place in any serious cookbook? This episode gets into all of it.
In this episode learn what gazpacho actually is and how it varies across Spain, from the classic andaluz to gazpacho manchego, which is a completely different dish that Sancho Panza was eating in Don Quixote and bears almost no resemblance to what we know today. We go deep into the history, including how the dish spent centuries being considered too humble to write down, how the tomato entered the picture later than most people think, and how one of the earliest recognizable written recipes for tomato gazpacho turned up not in Spain but in a Virginia cookbook in 1824. We talk about the 1880s Madrid trend cycle that accidentally saved the recipe from obscurity, the Real Academia Española's definition that still fuels arguments today, and how to actually make a good one, including why the olive oil is structural, not decorative, and why bad tomatoes are the one thing you cannot work around.
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