¡Tapas!
Tapas nowadays are highly varied, savory small dishes to
nibble with alcoholic beverages, particularly wine. Spanish in origin, they
remain most common in that country. But they’re also found here and in Latin
America.
Tapas in Spain date from as early as the 13th century, and
started as a slice of bread or dry ham the bartender placed on your filled
wineglass, maybe to keep the fruit flies out. “Tapa” simply means “lid.” But
bars or restaurants offering huge selections of small accompaniments for wine
date only from the 20th century.
Almost invariably, tapas in Spain include small plates of
Marcona almonds, olives, thin-sliced dry ham, and sliced wedges of tangy cheese
such as Manchego. More elaborate classics are garlic prawns (“Gambas al
Ajillo”), spice-roasted potatoes (“Patatas Bravas”),“Tortilla Española”
(Spanish potato fritata) and little meatballs (“Albóndigas”). Tiny skewered
pork tenderloin kebabs seasoned with smoked paprika, lemon juice and olive oil
(“Pinchos Marunos”) come from the Basque region, duck braised with cherries
from the south. Sardine and anchovy dishes appear along the Mediterranean
coast. Beyond the standards it’s the chef’s imagination plus regional and
seasonal ingredients that determine the dishes. In recent decades fashionable
centers like Madrid and Barcelona have produced wildly creative tapas.
“Tostada de Chocolate y Chorizo” is simply dark chocolate
melted onto a slice of Melba toast along with fried crumbled chorizo sausage. I
use readily available chorizo from Mexican markets rather than try to find
Spanish chorizo. The meatless version of the dish is just “Tostada de
Chocolate,” chocolate melted onto Melba toast and drizzled with extra virgin
olive oil and dusted with sea salt. Dark, slightly sweetened chocolate, up to
as high as 70% cocoa, is about right to my taste.
The recipe is a method
rather than precise measurements. The quantities depend on the number nibbling
-- from a stealthy, self-indulgent party of two to an entire crowd.
Baguette (skinny type preferred) sliced 1/4-inch thick, 2-3
slices per person
Bar of Ghirardelli, Lindt or other fancy dark chocolate, up
to 70% cocoa
Optional: up to 1/2 pound cooked chorizo sausage (casing
removed and the meat fried and crumbled, use any leftover on a taco!)
Extra virgin olive oil (if not using chorizo)
Sea salt (if not using chorizo)
Heat toaster oven or regular oven to 300 degrees. Lay out
bread slices on the rack or a baking sheet and toast them in oven to pale
golden. Let cool.
Lay out toasted bread slices on cookie sheet. Place an
approximately 1-inch square of chocolate on each slice. If using chorizo
sausage, put a small spoonful of cooked chorizo on the chocolate. Put into oven
and let it heat just until the chocolate melts.
Remove from oven. Press chocolate (and chorizo, if used)
lightly with a spoon out toward the edges of the toast. If not using chorizo,
drizzle chocolate lightly with olive oil and sprinkle lightly with sea salt.
Platter and serve warm.
¡Buen Provecho!

