Most people are cocooning themselves in their homes or going out to order beef stew and hot toddies (whatever those actually are. I always forget). Those people make a good deal of sense. I, however, do not. I came home today, all poofy with my giant down jacket, huge scarf, and red hat (complete with pom-pom, naturally), tossed down my bags, had a cup of tea and made… guacamole for dinner. Yes, I make no sense.
Guacamole is the embodiment of summer, fresh produce, and cold beer. It is the very antithesis of the poofy down jacket. So what was I doing with guacamole in the middle of winter? I feel no need to explain myself beyond the fact that I make no sense and was thinking about guacamole all day. I love it and can (and do, on occasion) eat it with a spoon. It is creamy, citrusy, spicy, fresh, and totally addictive. I was going to have guacamole, ice or no ice.
I tried to make up for the obvious deficiencies of the season the best I could. I turned the thermostat up high, checked to make sure that my avocados and tomatoes (courtesy of Boston Organics) were ripe and ready, and the cold beer was (and is) a no-brainer. While I think that eating tomatoes in the middle of winter is completely pointless, I had no choice – they came to me. The tomatoes, not surprisingly, tuned out to be purely decorative. They added nice little flecks of red and a bit of texture but no discernable taste. Asking for flavor from a tomato in February is futile.
I like to make guacamole because it is easy and fast, but most of all, I like making it because I get to use my favorite trick, courtesy of the Jacques Pepin. Once I figure out my fascination with him, I will let you know. I like the taste of garlic in guacamole (and many many other things) but I am not a big fan of biting down on big, smelly garlic pieces. Jacques Pepin to the rescue. He mashes the garlic with salt into a paste which then distributes evenly through the dish, flavoring throughout instead of offering crunchy, painful garlic bites. It’s brilliant!
Denial of winter guacamole
One ripe avocado
Juice of one lime
1 garlic clove, mashed into a paste with a pinch of salt
½ of a tomato, seeded and finely chopped
big handful of roughly chopped fresh cilantro (how’s that for a precise measurement…)
pinch of cayenne
salt and black pepper
Mix all, open a beer, and pretend it’s not winter.
Boston has been far colder than today and I am sure it will be again soon. I really wouldn’t mind, if only my car was not, in fact, encased in a giant block of ice that I will have to chip away at tomorrow. Ick.
Guac is delicious. Your recipe sounds and looks pretty good. I might say that it looks almost as good as Taco Bell ;-)
ReplyDeleteUgh, the cold sounds terrible! I think we're about done with it - it's 76 right now!
ReplyDeleteGuacamole is awesome, whoever invented it was a genius. And you can eat it whenever you want!
Aaah, the good old salt mashed garlic trick. It's the saviour of homemade garlic bread!
ReplyDeleteBen - almost as good as Taco Bell... I am honored, truly :)
ReplyDeleteJC - Wow, 76... that's trippy. Well, it's not winter, but it's trippy. I do eat guacamole at the oddest times. I think I finished the leftovers from this batch for breakfast.
AtP - I much prefer savior with a "u". Has more impact that way. I will switch. Putting salt and mashed garlic on bread is brilliant. Those are my three favorite things combined! Brilliant!! Will try soon.
I'm sorry, did I just read "Cars are frozen on the streets????" That is the oddest thing I have ever heard. Are you kidding? Like, actually, frozen TO the street?
ReplyDeleteMaybe I need coffee...it is early...
You read correctly, I am afraid. Cars were indeed frozen TO the street. There were people chipping away at their tires/iceblocks to get the cars out of their ice coccoons. It was awful. Awful. I needed 4 other people to get my car out.
ReplyDelete