Garnishing Papas a la Huancaina
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How to Make Papas a la Huancaina
Preparing the Potato for Papas a la Huancaina
Preparing the Peppers for Papas a la Huancaina
Pureeing the Ingredients for Papas a la Huancaina
Garnishing Papas a la Huancaina
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Victor Albisu may have been born in northern Virginia, but he seems “born” with Latin food in his blood. Victor’s mother is Peruvian, his father is Cuban; one grandfather was a baker; and two aunts owned their own restaurants in Miami – Latin food was central to his upbringing. In fact, he doesn’t have a single childhood memory that doesn’t involve some delectable Latin cooking or other. Then he went to le Cordon Bleu. But that’s getting ahead of the story. Victor spent every summer through his teens with family in Miami, pressing his first sandwiches at age five, mastering steaks a la plancha by seven, and paying close attention as his grandfather killed, gutted, and roasted whole pigs and caught, cleaned, and fried whole fish; while his grandmother made the rice and beans, empanadas and croquettes. Back at home, his mother, a great cook in her own right and owner of a Latin grocery store, reinforced his culinary bent. In high school, Victor apprenticed with the Argentine and Uruguayan butchers at his mother’s shop. “Beef in Argentina is like wine in France,” he explains, “the style of butchering is distinctive, and the trade is highly respected.” Working six days a week, often until 9 o’clock at night, he learned not only about cutting meat, but making chorizo (sausages) and matambres (stuffed meats) and just about everything else about the Argentine meat culture. Victor’s family had always promoted a lively interest in international politics, and when he went off to George Mason University, he planned to make that his career. In five years, he completed two degrees, but after graduation it took just a few years working with international contractors for USAID to learn that the theoretical side of international affairs interested him much more than the practical. So at age 24, he sold everything, moved to Paris, and enrolled at Le Cordon Bleu. He received his basic, intermediate and superior diplomas in cuisine, pastry, and wine, performing his internship at Arpège, a 3-star Michelin restaurant. “There I was living in the thick of Les Halles, keeping restaurant hours and woken at six every morning by a fishmonger yelling about scallops – I loved every minute of it.” Back in the states, Victor was hired as Executive Sous Chef under David Craig at The Tabard Inn, moving with him to La Bergerie in Alexandria, Virginia. From there, he went on to work at Washington’s 701, Ardeo, and Bardeo. He then became Chef de Cuisine at Ceiba restaurant and is currently pursuing his own ventures.
Garnishing Papas a la Huancaina
Hi, I am Victor Albisu. We are making Papa a la Huancaina. To finish the dish, we are going to take half a small julienne red onion, a little bit of chopped cilantro, very little bit, salt, key lime juice, a little extra virgin olive oil, and we are going to mix it.
Garnishing Papas a la Huancaina
Ingredients
1 potatoYellow peppers
Caso blanco cheese
Onions
Garlic
Saltine crackers
Evaporated milk
Hard boiled egg
Key Lime Juice
Oil
Instructions
1. Cook a potato in boiling water for about 8 minutes. Let it cool and then remove the skin gently.
2. Cut the peppers and saute them in oilve oil. Slice the red onions and add them and the garlic to the peppers.
3. Transfer the chili, onion and garlic mix to the blender. Add saltine crackers and caso blanco cheese to the blender. Add a hard boiled egg and evaporated milk, key lime juice and oil. Blend it well.
4. Plate the potato and then ladle the sauce over the potato. garnish with black olives and a hard boiled egg.
Transcripts
Hi, I am Victor Albisu. We are making Papa a la Huancaina. To finish the dish, we are going to take half a small julienne red onion, a little bit of chopped cilantro, very little bit, salt, key lime juice, a little extra virgin olive oil, and we are going to mix it. This is how we do it at home. So, we are not using spoons today. Basically, in my house thats called a Salta les avoir. We have our sauce that we made from previous segment. This is going to go -- I like it very generously ladled over top of the potato. My grandmother always complains that I like the sauce more than the actual dish, because I eat the sauce on everything with crackers or whatever else. Very traditional way is with Peruvian black olives. So, we are going to seat them around the plate. It's a very rustic dish, so dont worry about them falling over. We are going to put this right over the top. To finish the dish, Im going to quarter this egg, hard cooked, thats going to garnish the dish. You'll also see some Papa a la Huancaina with the white cheese just over top of it, the same cheese that goes in the sauce. There is the dish, very traditional, Papa a la Huancaina.
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