Chorizo, morcilla and potato salad with soft-boiled egg
My cousin came for dinner a while ago and brought some spoils from Borough markets. Amongst them was a large morcilla sausage (Spanish black pudding) from Brindisa. My invite had been misleading; I'd said I would be “throwing together bits and pieces”, but failed to tell her that these bits and pieces would comprise approximately 6 courses, albeit small ones. Therefore, I very gratefully received the goods, but did not find use for all of them on the night.
Over the last few weeks I have seen the morcilla sitting there and thought that I really ought to do something with it, but knowing it was of a very good quality I wanted to wait until I was ready to do it justice and with this salad I believe I did.
This recipe is inspired by variations on a theme which I have tried in a number of different restaurants. All of them have had egg with either chorizo or morcilla, but the best have had all three. The other ingredients are less important, but I found that this combination worked really well.
The measurements should just be used as a guide; you can add more or less of any of the ingredients based on your preferences or what you have available. Salads are by nature a casual affair, so I would positively encourage experimentation.
This recipe serves 4 as a main course.
Ingredients
Method
Meanwhile, set your oven grill to high (approx 180C), take out the grill plate and line with aluminium foil. Slice the chorizo and morcilla sausages into pieces, approximately 1.5cm thick and arrange on the grill plate. When the grill is hot, put the sausages on a low shelf underneath (the oil tends to splatter which can smoke or catch fire if placed too close). Cook for approximately 3 mins on each side; the chorizo should be quite crisp.
When everything else is ready, pour the remaining dressing over the salad and toss. Distribute the potato and salad evenly across the 4 plates, piling it in the centre. Arrange the sausages and eggs on top of and around the salad. Garnish with the olives, herbs (if you are using them) and the left over onions. Serve immediately.
I found this recipe surprisingly hard to write. The recipe itself is quite straightforward, but getting the timing right if you want the potatoes, sausages and eggs to still be warm can be tricky, and explaining it even more so. Should I say to put the potatoes on to boil and later start a new paragraph explaining what next to do with them? Or is that too long winded? Given that the sausages and eggs take about the same time to cook, which do I suggest starting first? Do I give multiple options for cooking the sausages, or just stick with my preferred method? Is describing how to plate up the dish too prescriptive? Probably, but you don’t have to listen to everything I say!
With regards to the sausages, there are of course a number of other ways you can cook them. Depending on the size of the sausages, you may prefer to cook them whole and slice them afterwards. However, a large morcilla sausage is designed to be sliced before cooking. That doesn’t stop you cooking the chorizo whole, but you won’t get the same crispy quality. The reason I opted for grilling rather than frying the sausages is that the morcilla I was using had a high rice content so it was very soft; I found that it stuck to the base of the pan when I fried it, making it hard to remove from the pan without it falling to pieces.
I hope you find this recipe user-friendly, I tried my best. If not, I would be very grateful for any comments on how I could make it more so.
Reader Comments (1)
I do so love that you seem to ask yourself as many questions and totally over analyze how to write your recipes as I do about ice cream flavours...or anything I am about to eat really...
it makes me feel normal!!
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