I love them, so when Jose Pizarro, ex of Brindisa and master of Spanish cooking, held a comparative tasting at top tapas restaurant Iberica I was there faster than you can say tinned fish fillets.
The Spanish revere the anchovy and preserve them by the time honoured and rather slow method of women hand gutting and topping and tailing the fish. These are then placed in barrels layered with salt to cure for up to three months. After that they are filleted and packed in tins with oil.
The oldest method is using a lamparo – a light hanging from the prow of a boat floating inside a purse seine net. The fish mistake the lamp for the moon and come up to the surface. Traditional but insufficient to meet demand, hence the over fishing problem that led, at one sad point, to the Catalonian tinners having to buy their anchovies from France.
Some had a salty blast that persisted rather annoyingly, others delivered a smooth hit of salt that morphed into flavour. Anchovies are in fact pure umami, which is why they are used in Worcestershire Sauce and also in Thai cooking.
The tins the best anchovies come in are as attractive as the fish inside, miniature works of art often with designs that have remained unchanged for decades. It all speaks of quality and so does the price. 47 gram tins can cost from around £4.00 to up to and over £7.00, compared to standard anchovy tins in the supermarket at around £1 30.
You get what you pay for though, the cheaper grey and mushy ones are okay for making a broccoli, pasta and chilli dish, but are not okay for eating from the tin. Sat on their plate they looked thin, undernourished and tasted over salted.
When it came down to deciding on the best, Jose wouldn’t be drawn until we had all made our choice. Gratifyingly we all agreed with him that two brands stood out, including my favourite Don Bacarte from Cantabria with fish caught in the Bay of Biscay and processed traditionally.
Most of the brands we tried are hard, if not impossible, to buy in the shops, but it’s worth checking the Internet, especially if you speak a bit of Spanish. You may be able to buy direct from Spain.
The little fish has a lot going for it, so spend the extra and get much more.
Find out more about Jose at www.josepizarro.com
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