Thermomix ®

In Love with Garcia de la Cruz from Soup to Nuts, and Why!

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(Gerry Furth-Sides) I was so happy to attend the Garcia de la Cruz Tribute to Spain products. Why? Garcia de la Cruz turned me into a virgin olive oil lover. Before this I only used grapeseed oil.

The gift-to-go was the chance for guests and anyone in the United States to win a a gift basket with $2,000 worth of products. Go to the García de la Cruz Instagram profile, @Garcia de la Cruz to learn about the giveaway.

Here are our favorites, including the newest, Lynette McDonald’s yellow beet gazpacho. We can’t wait to try it with Garcia de La Cruz chili flavored oil.

Our favorite Garcia de la Cruz inspired menu is a tribute to Spain: a chestnut soup, Tortilla La Espańola with potato and onion, flavored with wild black garlic.  A cheeseboard filled with specialty items from Spain will be offered so guests can choose from savory Salamanca dry-cured Iberico de cebo pork salchichón;  Idiazabal do (Craw Sheep milk smoked basque, aged 60 days); Spanish green and black olives; quince paste  and a roasted garlic tomato to spread onto barra (like a French baguette), and tomatohazelnuts from Galacia. To choose from on the sweeter side:  a dense fig almond cake; almendra garrapiñada (sugar coated almonds), black dried raisins and fresh grapes.

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On our favorite Garcia de la Cruz menu that is a tribute to Spain from chestnut soup to flan

One first course addition we would definitely add is the Golden Beet Gazpacho inspired by the one we ate at the “A TASTE OF SPAIN & 150 Year Anniversary event this week.

Lynette MacDonald, culinary development manager of Thermomix USA’s paid tribute to the royal oil with a refreshing and remarkably tasty Gazpacho made with our favorite Melissa’s Produce packaged golden beets. We look forward to trying this recipe with the same ingredients://lepetiteats.com/golden-beet-gazpacho/

The beets are already peeled, steamed and cubed. Yellow bell pepper, garlic, shallots, water, salt and pepper. Spanish sherry vinegar and Spanish extra virgin olive oil from García de la Cruz. Chef Lynette, grated Manchego cheese grated as a tasty garnish.

Lynette MacDonald, culinary development manager of Thermomix USA prepared a remarkable refreshing yellow beet gazpacho, inspired byGarcia de la Cruz olive oil and prepared with the cutting edge machine.
The secret to the rich, light gazpacho was Garcia de la Cruz Olive oil our favorite Melissa’s Produce packaged golden beets.

Fine olive oils should only be used for dipping finishing touches to dishes, and only when they are cool. This is because the flavor of the oil changes when heated.  This is especially true with refined García de la Cruz, the early harvest olive oil in its exquisite bottle.  Even its regal citrus green color reflects the fullness of the fruit at the time of its harvest, giving a hint of the elaborate aromas and flavor to follow.

No goblet is too grand for the Garcia de la Cruz extra virgin olive oil, which we have on our Spanish-themed Thanksgiving table alongside fresh bread.

We also love using a little bit of it to give an added oomph to these homespun classics we make regularly.  Just open the bottle and add a layer of the oil to make the flavors come alive and vibrant.

A layer of García de la Cruz olive oil over the roasted tomatoes, homemade mayonnaise and pesto gives it an instant, added vibrancy

We used a recipe for Roasted Tomato from (www.wimpy vegetarian.com) All you need to make these roasted tomatoes in a bottle are tomatoes, salt, pepper, olive oil,  salt, a drizzle of balsamic vinegar and garlic. This is more to a cook’s taste than exact amounts. Because the tomatoes are being roasted, it is better to use firm, older one.

Simply slice tomatoes and drizzle them evenly with the rest of the ingredients.  Roast at 350 degrees until they look crisp around the edges.  Cool and bottle.

Homemade Mayonaise

  • 1 large egg at room temperature
  • 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
  • 1 tablespoon red or white wine vinegar
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt to taste
  • 1 cup grapeseed oil
  • generous drizzle of García de la Cruz extra virgin olive oil
  • lemon juice, optional

Place the raw egg in a food processor and pulse for 20 seconds. Add the mustard, vinegar, and salt, and process another 20 seconds.

Scrape down the bowl sides in the food processor.  Slowly add ¼ of the oil in drops to emulsify. Once emulsification begins, gently stream in the rest of the oil.  Scrape and process an extra 10 seconds.  Taste and adjust with seasonings and lemon juice for taste. 

Pesto

  • Cup of fresh basil leaves
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • 3 tablespoons pine nuts
  • kosher salt and ground pepper to taste
  • 1/3 cup olive or grapeseed oil

Combine basic, garlic, pine nuts and Parmasan in the food processor bowl. Season with a slow stream of oil until emulsified.  Season to taste.

The García de la Cruz inspired tart with a drizzle of the extra virgin olive oil on top. Spanish chorizo lends heat to the potatoes, , shallots, garlic and parsley

García de la Cruz Tart

Spanish Sweet paprika gave the country’s chorizo its characteristic and now world-famous color.

For the García de la cruz tart filling

  • 2 tablespoons olive oil, divided
  • 1 large red onion, thinly sliced
  • 2 leafy sprigs sage (about 10 medium leaves)
  • 8 ounces basque cheese
  • 1 garlic clove, crushed
  • 1 tablespoon parsley leaves, chopped
  • black pepper to season
  • 5 small potatoes
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon hazelnuts, chopped

Heat one tablespoon of olive oil in a large skillet until hot but not smoking. Add onion and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally until softened and golden brown, about 7 minutes. Remove from the heat. Strip the leaves from one of the sage sprigs, chop the leaves, and stir into the onions. Set aside.

Combine the basque cheese cheese, ricotta cheese, garlic, and parsley in a medium bowl. Season with black pepper.

Slice the potatoes thinly. Place another tablespoon of olive oil and salt into a bowl and stir in the potato slices, making sure they are all coated with oil.

Roll out the chilled dough to 1/4-inch thick and trim any uneven edges until you get a circle about 14 inches across.  Place the dough circle on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Spread the cooled onions evenly over the dough, leaving a 3-inch outer border. Spoon the cheese mix over the onions and fold up the edges of the dough, tucking and pleating as you go a bit rustic.

Arrange the oiled potato slices  close to each over the visible cheese mix, overlapping slightly (the crostata will expand), and brush some of the previously reserved egg white, thinned with a splash of cold water, evenly over the crust.

Bake the crostata 40–45 minutes until the crust is golden brown and the potatoes are cooked through. Remove from the oven and cool slightly on the baking sheet before serving. Chop the leaves from the second sprig of sage and sprinkle over the finished crostata. This is quite rich, so I like to serve it with just a simple green salad.

Our Wild Basque Tart with wild mushroom, black wild garlic, pearl onion, Cabrales, orange preserve, chestnut, hazelnut

Ingredients

  • 5 tablespoons plain flour
  • 3.5 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • a pinch of salt
  • 10 small pearl onions
  • 1 large Melissas’s wild black garlic clove
  • 4 cups mixed Melissas’s wild mushrooms
  • 2 ½ Melissa’s steamed, peeled chestnuts
  • 3 tablespoons orange preserves with peel, sweetened with grape juice
  • 1/4 cup Cabrales (Asturian strong blue cheese)
  • 2 sprigs fresh thyme

Method
Finely slice onions and mushrooms, mush garlic and chestnuts into a soft, flat paste.

Heat 2 tablespoons grapeseed oil in a large frying pan over a high heat. Add onions, stirring constantly until caramelized. Add garlic, mushrooms, thyme and chestnuts, cooking until mushrooms are golden brown. Season to taste and cool.

For the shell: We used the JOY OF COOKING (p. 692) ruff pastry, mixed with ground Mrs. Cubbison). Blind bake at 350 degrees. Cool for five minutes.

Add the mushroom mix to the pastry shell and bake 20 minutes 350F

For the perfect finishing touch, drizzle with García de la cruz extra virgin olive oil and sprinkle with thyme. 

Comida Feliz!

Enter the celebratory contest and see for yourself!

Master Chefs Cook Ethnic Classics in Futuristic “Thermomix”

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(Gerry Furth-Sides) All it took for the Thermomix ® to win me over was watching it transform hard cheese into snowflake like flurries. I I had almost broken other sturdy food processors.  It even weighed them before going into the machine.  And this is only one of so many uses.   Thermomix ® ties together computers, phones, and its own on-machine interface with tons of tested recipes.

Not too long after the first model was produced in 1971,the  Thermomix ® became a global phenomenon just about everywhere but the United States.   Some people guess that this is because it’s a tricky-to-explain object, like a computer.  

But it is more likely because Thermomix ® uses direct sales, (think Tupperware parties).  Experts persuasively prepare about four dishes in an hour and a half live and on-line demos, or home parties.

Engaging Lynette McDonald is one of those experts.  The passionate, accomplished chef is Corporate Education and Culinary Development Manager for Thermomix USA®, and the recipe development team.  You can watch this artist at work, weaving in her world travels into dishes online on her show,  “Cook-I-Doo.” Lynette’s accomplishments include graduating from and teaching at the Le Cordon Bleu in London, England.  She has also cooked for Indin royalty and written a popularIndian cookbook.  She has also owned a restaurant and a catering business to celebrities – a sure sign she knows how to please all palates.

But it seems more likely that it is the advertising competition for store and online purchased products.  Proof of this is that when legendary chef Thomas Keller, known for his exacting nature, bought five as soon as he saw them in operation.  

The biggest Thermomix ® sales are in Italy, where almost every home has one.   Lynette MacDonald told us why: I believe Italy embraced the THERMOMIX because it cooks Italian food perfectly, from risotto to Osso Buco, soups to jams and custards. 

Lynette also told us that in Australia “the Thermomix people who had never cooked before or had a limited repertoire  started following our Recipe platform Cook-I-Doo and impressing themselves and everyone around them.  Word of mouth because so strong among machine owners that Thermomix ® became almost like a cult in Australia.  

“In Italy, the number one item on a bridal registry is a Thermomix ®Italians affectionately call it “Bimbi” (baby) because the little machine makes baby food so fantastically).   Lynette  believes sales in Italy sales are so high because of the Italian passion for good food, and Thermomix ® capability to make quick, easy meals for family and for sharing.   For instance, the Thermomix ® can prep and weigh ingredients for a risotto, and then cook it stirring it perfectly within 12 to 15 minutes (including peeling the garlic).  We saw this!

The Thermomix ® is a blender that cooks. To make a soup out of even the most , say, pumpkin soup, the machine does all the measuring, chopping, blending, adding and even cooking.  It even cooks the pumpkin until it is tender, then purées it.   A touch of the hand on the touchscreen and dial controls heat, time, and blade speed.  

And every part of the machine except the base goes in the dishwasher

And space:  a  large amount of food fits into the two compact levels of steaming baskets. Layers of food fit into different shelves and baskets, and cooks at the same time. 

Besides making soups and sauces from start to finish, the Thermomix can measure ingredients, knead bread and pastry dough; steam rice and grains, sauté vegetables, caramelize onions without stirring a thing, make yogurt, nut milks, smoothies, stock and stock bases, and whipped cream.  And more.  

The evolution from a simple blender to a high-tech home accessory began in 1961 when  a VKM5 universal food-processor came on the market.  Even the initial machine combined seven functions: stirring, kneading, chopping, grating, mixing, milling and juicing.  

The company, Vorwerk, had started making carpets.    But its capability to move with the times was there from the first ground-breaking idea of a mixer that could also heat liquids.

The generations -old company brand has always successfully trained its customers how to use its machine.  It uses customer created recipes and feedback to continually  improve the machine. 

And the machine is the only one to operate on three platforms to integrate store research, recipes, home pantry inventory and market shopping.  This can cover an entire week’s worth of meals, or for a party. The machine holds over 60,000 home-tested recipes, with a range of options for most of them.  The initial annual fee of $39 has been waived. 

With this it is easy to understand the  they replace 20 other pieces of equipment in the kitchen.  Master Baker Alex Peña feels, “this is a perfect machine to consolidate the number of machines in the kitchen.   Food Writer, Barbara Hansen, was impressed.  “We watched him make bread dough.  He weighed out the flour directly , weighing out the flour by pouring it directly from the King Arthur bag into the mixing bowl, then, one by one, added the yeast, salt, and water. The machine kneaded the dough for two minutes. Everything else—proofing, baking, et cetera—happened on the countertop and in the oven.