Manchego cuisine (Manchegan cuisine or Castilian-Manchego cuisine) refers to the typical dishes and ingredients in the cuisine of the Castilla–La Mancha region of Spain. These include pisto (a vegetable stew with tomato sauce), gazpacho manchego, Manchego cheese, the white wine of La Mancha, and the red wine from Valdepeñas (DO).
The dishes and specialties of the region are generally sober and sensible, reflecting a modest, rural origin. They contain a limited number of ingredients that tend to be those most easily accessible by the locals. Dishes tend to be high in calories, ideal for the diets of laborers, farmers, and shepherds. The cuisine of this area was popularized by Miguel de Cervantes in his early-17th-century novel Don Quixote, in which a number of traditional dishes are mentioned.[1]
Staples
In La Mancha, traditional dishes include gachas de almorta,[1] a paste made with grass pea(Lathirus sativus) flour, and tortas de gazpacho, a flat bread that is the base for the "gazpachos", an elaborate dish appearing in El Quixote under the name of "galianos".
Fruits and vegetables
Local ingredients
One of the local vegetables is the bladder campion (Silene vulgaris) plant, known colloquially as collejas. These plants are traditionally gathered in the mountains of La Mancha (as well as others parts of Europe, Africa, and Asia[2]) and used for a variety of dishes.[3]
Like most Spanish cuisine, many local dishes contain garlic, including tiznao [es] (salt cod with spring onions) and atascaburras [ast][4] (salt cod with mashed potatoes, also called ajoarriero [es][5]). Additionally, the ñora, a cultivated version of the Capsicum annuum pepper from Valencia,[6] is often used in local dishes such as manitas de cerdo (pig's feet) and migas.[7]
There are not many purely vegetarian dishes in the region. Some traditional vegetable-based dishes are pisto manchego (a local equivalent of ratatouille[10]), pipirrana [es] (a salad of onion, tomato, and cucumber), asadillo de la Mancha [es] (roasted red peppers), and gazpacho viudo (widower gazpacho, or gazpacho made with bladder campion leaves).
La Mancha is a landlocked area with historically few bodies of freshwater to allow for the generalization of fish in its cuisine. The traditional fish is therefore bacalao (salt cod), which was historically imported from coastal areas and does not spoil. This can be found in some dishes, notably chickpeas with cod, eaten during Lent.
Queso manchego, or "cheese from La Mancha", is one of the most famous Spanish cheeses; more than 30% of Spain's cheese products are of this variety.[11] It is a cured cheese made from the milk of local manchega sheep(Ovis aries ligeriensis), also called ovejas manchegas) which abound in the pastures year-round.[12]
The mass of the cheese is fairly hard and dense, with an ivory-white color.[11] It has a characteristically tart taste when it is new due to the natural flavor of the sheep's milk, though as the cheese ages it slowly develops a savory quality,[11] which Carlos Yescas of the Oldways Cheese Coalition describes as "a delicate balance of buttery, tart, sweet, and nutty."[13] The cheese is also high in calcium, Vitamins A, D, and E, and natural protein.[14]
There are several varieties of queso manchego, differentiated by both curing time and individual tradition (some are submerged in olive oil while curing).[15]
^Plaza Sánchez, Julián (2005). La Mancha, de Cervantes al siglo XXI: una perspectiva etnológica. Diputación Provincial de Ciudad Real. p. 167. ISBN978-8477892212.