Saor Recipe
Yield: 1 ServingsRecipe by luhu.jp
Ingredients:
Stephen Ceideburg,
1/3 cup: Raisins,
1/4 cup: White wine,
6 tbsp: Olive oil,
2 large: Onions, thinly sliced
1/3 cup: Pine nuts or almonds,
1 cup: Balsamic vinegar,
Directions:
This marinating sauce for cooked fish or meats comes from Marco
Fiorini at Palo dAsti in San Francisco. The recipe origi- nated in
the area around Venice on the Adriatic coast where Fiorini trained.
Let the raisins soak for an hour or the wine.
Heat the oil in a pan. Add onions and lightly but do not brown them.
Add the nuts and raisins, then the vinegar; let simmer for 3 or 4
minutes. Cool.
Keeps 5 days to 1 week, refrigerated.
Makes 1 1/2 cups.
Uses: Pour over fried fish, such as fresh anchovies or baby red
mullet. Refrigerate fish several days, then sit down to a dish of
them served with fresh, chewy bread and a glass, of cold white wine.
Saor is also good spooned over grilled chicken breasts and
refrigerated 2 or 3 days before serving, keep in the refrigerator and
use as a cold condiment for poached fish, marinated chicken or
vegetables.
PER TABLESPOON: 70 calories, 1 g protein, 3 g carbohydrate, 5 g fat
(1 g saturated), 0 mg cholesterol, 1 mg sodium, 0
From an article by Georgeanne Brennan in The San Francisco Chronicle,
9/4/91.
Posted by Stephen Ceideburg
Source from luhu.jp
Fiorini at Palo dAsti in San Francisco. The recipe origi- nated in
the area around Venice on the Adriatic coast where Fiorini trained.
Let the raisins soak for an hour or the wine.
Heat the oil in a pan. Add onions and lightly but do not brown them.
Add the nuts and raisins, then the vinegar; let simmer for 3 or 4
minutes. Cool.
Keeps 5 days to 1 week, refrigerated.
Makes 1 1/2 cups.
Uses: Pour over fried fish, such as fresh anchovies or baby red
mullet. Refrigerate fish several days, then sit down to a dish of
them served with fresh, chewy bread and a glass, of cold white wine.
Saor is also good spooned over grilled chicken breasts and
refrigerated 2 or 3 days before serving, keep in the refrigerator and
use as a cold condiment for poached fish, marinated chicken or
vegetables.
PER TABLESPOON: 70 calories, 1 g protein, 3 g carbohydrate, 5 g fat
(1 g saturated), 0 mg cholesterol, 1 mg sodium, 0
From an article by Georgeanne Brennan in The San Francisco Chronicle,
9/4/91.
Posted by Stephen Ceideburg
Source from luhu.jp