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Heat the picante sauce, clam juice and wine in a 6-quart saucepot over high heat to a boil. Add the chorizo, cod and clams. Cover the sauce pot. Reduce the heat to low and cook for 10 minutes or until the cod flakes easily with a fork and the clams open. Discard any unopened clams. Serve the seafood mixture over the rice.
In a large enameled cast-iron casserole, heat the oil. Add the pancetta and cook over moderately low heat until crisp, 5 minutes. Add the onion, celery, fennel and garlic and cook, stirring, until ...
2 jar (16 ounces each) Pace® Picante Sauce; 1 bottle (about 8 ounces) clam juice; 1 / 4 cup dry white wine or water; 1 package (about 3 1/2 ounces) chorizo sausage, sliced; 2 1 / 2 lb cod or ...
Escabeche of tilapia, from the Philippines. Escabeche is the name for several dishes in Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, Filipino and Latin American cuisines, consisting of marinated fish, meat or vegetables, cooked or pickled in an acidic sauce (usually with vinegar), and flavored with paprika, citrus, and other spices.
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Moules à la crème: Another common recipe, thickened with flour and cream. [2] Moules parquées: A dish, probably originating in Brussels, of raw mussels on the half-shell, served with a lemon-mustard sauce. Moules à la bière: Mussels cooked in a sauce containing beer instead of white wine. [10]
Often the preparation of a concoction begins with another essential sauce, like the sofregit, and ends with the final adding of the picada some minutes before the cooking termination. Picada is used to blend and thicken juices, to provide an excellent finishing touch to a multitude of recipes: meats, fish, rice, soups, legumes, vegetables.
In a large, wide saucepan, combine the wine, water, thyme and garlic and bring to a boil. Add the mussels, cover and cook over moderately high heat, shaking the pot a few times, until the mussels ...