Latest
oil in American pantry is Argan oil from Morocco
in
the New-York Times, 03.01.2001
Author: Florence Fabricant
THE
newest oil in the American pantry, one that is intriguing chefs enough
that they are developing dishes to showcase it, is argan, from Morocco.
This import might even eclipse white truffle oil in the drizzle
department.
Argan
oil has a vibrantly toasty, nutlike flavor with fruity overtones and a
pleasing soupcon of bitterness. Its assertive flavor makes it a lovely
finishing touch for cheeses, soups, grain dishes and braised meats. It
also works well as a salad dressing. A traditional Moroccan ingredient,
argan oil is available in fancy food shops in New York, Paris and London.
But getting it out of Berber backyards and into bottles has not been easy.
The argan tree, whose fruit attracts nimble black goats to its branches,
looks a little like an olive tree but is unrelated. It grows almost
exclusively in Morocco, in an area of about two million acres near the
Atlantic.
The
fruit is traditionally harvested by entire Berber families, then spread to
dry in the sun. The women remove the pulp and crack the hard oval nuts to
reveal the ivory kernels, about the size of cantaloupe seeds. Those are
lightly toasted over charcoal in flat iron or terra cotta pans, and ground
to a thick paste in stone mills. The paste is then kneaded by hand until
the oil oozes out and is collected.
In
Morocco, argan oil is used mainly as a finishing touch for tagines and
sometimes for couscous. It is combined with lemon juice -- never vinegar
-- to make a salad dressing, and mixed with honey and yogurt for
breakfast.
American
chefs are taking argan oil well beyond Berber dishes. At Local, Franklin
Becker prepares vinaigrettes, using the toasted oil and the cold-pressed
variety with red wine and Champagne vinegars, honey and beet juice. The
dressings are used for a wheat berry and baby beet salad with Bleu de
Bresse cheese and candied walnuts. Gerry Hayden, the executive chef at
Aureole, drizzles it over a soup of pureed Jerusalem artichokes seasoned
with preserved lemon, and he plans to use it with venison.
Mr.
Hayden said of the oil: 'It's very unusual, with a combination of
nuttiness and a ripe flavor like olives. I also like it warmed and spooned
over a goat cheese, like crottin de Chavignol that I'll serve with dates.'
Article is from Florence Fabricant.
We have published here some extracts.
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