Garbanzos Fritos con Langostina
Last year I took what felt like a slightly selfish trip to New Orleans. My excuse was book research, so I decided beforehand not to post or take too many pictures. It felt like if I stopped to post or take a picture every time I saw something beautifully strange or strangely familiar in New Orleans, I’d do little else. Strange because it’s a city so completely itself that it makes you come all the way there to experience it and familiar because I’d always heard stories from my family about New Orleans when it was a short jump from Havana. There were so many parallels that it wasn’t surprising that so many of my relatives settled there when they left Cuba in the 1960s.
Beyond the architecture and street names, music and food, it was in the approach to all of these things where I could see connections everywhere. That’s what first drew me to this recipe in Zella Palmer Cuadra’s New Orleans con Sabor Latino: The History and Passion of Latino Cooking for garbanzos fritos con langostina – a cross fade of a Spanish garbanzos that’s a staple of Cuban home cooking with the addition of Louisiana crawfish. It was contributed by Alexey Marti, a Cuban percussionist now living in New Orleans. Currently with his own band Urban Minds, he’s also played with Los Hombres Calientes who have a more or less permanent spot on my kitchen playlist so it already had a soundtrack. The one substitution I did have to make was langostines for crawfish tails. They were in season when I visited New Orleans but nowhere to be found in New York right now – so that’s one more reason to go back.
Garbanzos Fritos con Langostina/Fried Chickpeas with Crawfish
Slightly adapted from New Orleans con Sabor Latino: The History and Passion of Latino Cooking by Zella Palmer Cuadra.
2 cups dried garbanzos (chickpeas)
1 ham hock
2 dried bay leaves
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
5 slices good bacon, diced
¼ cup Spanish chorizo (semi-cured), sliced
4 large garlic cloves, minced
1 teaspoon each salt and ground black pepper
1 teaspoon each thyme and oregano
1 teaspoon ground cumin
3 ounces crawfish tails, thawed (langoustines can also be substituted)
1 lime
¼ cup fresh cilantro, chopped
Place 2 cups of dry garbanzo beans in a large bowl. Cover with water to the top and add a teaspoon of salt. Refrigerate overnight.
In a large stock pot, pour the refrigerated garbanzos and ham hock. Add water from the faucet to half of the pot, put in 2 bay leaves, and boil garbanzos for approximately 2 hours. Add water if necessary when it evaporates. Once the garbanzos become soft, drain in a colander but reserve ⅓ cup of the liquid. Heat the oil in a skillet, sauté bacon, and chorizo at low-medium heat. Add minced garlic but do not burn garlic. Add seasonings – salt, ground black pepper, thyme, and oregano, and cumin. Add the chickpeas. Cover and simmer at a low heat for 10 minutes. Cover and simmer at a low heat for 10 minutes. Add crawfish tails and simmer for another 5 minutes. Serve with cut limes and garnish with chopped cilantro.
Reblogged this on VIVIMETALIUN.
Did you leave out langoustines on purpose or did you forget. Or do you just eat them raw on the side
Definitely not raw. I put them in with the chickpeas.
Did you leave out langoustines on purpose or did you forget ?
That recipe looks fantastic! Will definitely have to give it a try!
Effing love the look of this… reminds me a little of cassoulet. I want some!
This looks incredible. I’ve found the same thing to be true of New Orleans. You really can’t recreate their dishes far from the Gulf. New York has so much of everything, but after each visit to New Orleans, I come back to NY a little lost, looking for that fresh seafood or that smoky flavor. Well done!
Thanks for reviewing my cookbook! Glad you enjoyed your stay in Nola. If ever you can’t get Louisiana seafood in your city buy it from Cajun Grocer online.
Reblogged this on houseofzella and commented:
Check out Hungry Sofia’s review of my cookbook!
Want to try this one too.
I was not expecting the crawfish tails. It has been eons since I have had them. When I was living in NW Oregon, they were commonly found. I think the whole recipe sounds like a winner. Taking trips is never selfish. It’s flat out wonderful. Good for you for going.
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I re-created this recipe this week by splitting it into two dishes:
Garbanzos + ham bone soup in the slow cooker, topped with shredded hearty greens
Caramelized onions, garlic, langoustines (frozen from Trader Joe’s!!) & chorizo (“imported” from Miami) on toasted bread
Oh man. What flavors!! Thanks so much for sharing!!