Manjar Blanco sobre Capones(Blancmanger on capons)by Martino da Como recipe no. 41 from the "Libro de Arte Culinaria" ca. 1450-60 Note: Instructions in normal letters are pretty clear in the original. My interpretations are in italics. Ingredients, for 12 bowlsfor the base:
In the case of whole bird(s) the sauce will be poured on top. In the second case, the pieces are served with the sauce in individual bowls. for the sauce:
Grind the breast with the almonds. Soak the bread crumbs in broth and
add to the mix. Add the agraz (or vinegar), ginger, sugar and some
more broth. (See my last interpretation of how to make
this sauce.)
Optional –"retama" ("broom") sauceTake part of the white sauce and add one egg yolk, saffron and some agraz (or vinegar) so that it ends-up yellow and more sour than the white one. PresentationWith white sauce only
Parti-coloured Manjar – white and "broom" sauces
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Notes1.- Martino says that the ground almonds can be left to soak for 24 hours to make them whiter and that some water (or rose water) must be added to them after grinding so that they do not “make oil”. See my experiences with almonds below. Back2.- This recipe just says to “take a capon breast and grind it with the almonds”, but the next one (Manjar blanco a la catalana) specifies that that the breast must be half-cooked, taken apart into hairlike bits and cooked for 4 hours. Back 3.- Rosewater can vary in concentration. Since I don’t know what kind he was using I prefer to just add it to the taste.. Back Weights: pounds and ounces apparently coincide with modern Amercian/Brittish ones |
My experiencesIn the beginning of June 99 I tried making a small manjar blanco with:
I followed the recipe closely, except that the sauce would not go through the strainer I have (I wonder how big the holes were supposed to be). I served the breasts with the bits of apple around and covered the whole thing with white sauce on one side and yellow sauce on the other. The result
March 19th, 2000
New method for the sauce!A few months ago, I dared try again after convincing myself that the sauce should indeed go through the cloth. I made a tiny manjar (for 1 person) using the proportions above, with 1 chicken breast (350 gramos, 3/4 pound), 100 gr. (3.5 ounces) of almonds, 2 tablespoons of white sugar, etc.I treated the sauce as if it were an almond milk, processing it until it had a milky consistency. I then strained it through a cloth colander and cooked it for a little while, until it thickened pleasantly. I roasted the chicken breast in the oven, after having rubbed it with some lard and covered it with some aluminum foil so that it would not get too dry (since it had no skin). This time it was really nice, since it seems that one flavour complements
the other quite well; and the texture was pleasant, more like a conventional
sauce. The dish did not feel particularly sweet to the palate, either.
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