These tangy, spicy little snacks are just the job for a quick lunch or as part of a tapas spread and they transport you from the depths of an English winter to summer in Spain. I make the red pepper sauce so often, here and in Catalunya, that it’s become known in the family as Salsa Linda.
It actually originates from Spanish Cooking at Home and on Holiday by Maite Manjon and Catherine O’Brien, a book that I rate so highly I have two copies, one in each country. It’s out of print but still available second-hand.
I’ve tweaked the recipe very slightly (of course I have) but the sauce, designed for fish, works with meats, too. We dollop it over everything from sausages to shish kebabs. I’ve used it here on a bruschetta with smoked anchovies. Regular anchovies from a jar work, too, and so do the little pickled anchovies of Spain, boquerones.
If the mere thought of anchovies makes you gag – these people do exist, I’m told – try crumbling over a sharp goat’s cheese instead.
The salsa is best made in advance: it will thicken in the fridge and the flavours will blend better. The recipe will make way more than you need unless you’re feeding a mob, but it will keep in the fridge for three or four days.
For the bruschetta, reckon on two smoked anchovies, two cherry tomatoes and one sun-dried tomato per slice. I served two slices per person. If you’d like to make smaller bites as a tapa, use a baguette instead of ciabatta. You don’t need to rub the bread with garlic, the sauce is garlicky enough.
Bruschetta with Peppers and Smoked Anchovies
Ingredients:
Sliced ciabatta
A quantity of smoked anchovies
A quantity of cherry tomatoes, halved
About a handful of sun-dried tomatoes, roughly chopped
Coriander to garnish
For the salsa:
About 360g (drained weight) jar of roasted red peppers
3 cloves of garlic, peeled
1 small chilli (optional but good)
1 tspn sweet smoked paprika (ditto)
2-3 skinned tomatoes
1/2 tspn salt
3-4 tbsp olive oil
2-3 tbsp red wine vinegar
Method:
Roughly chop the red peppers, garlic and chilli. Add to a food processor with the skinned tomatoes, salt and paprika and blend until smooth. Add the olive oil and wine vinegar and whizz again. Scrape into a bowl, cover and set aside in the fridge.
Cut as many slices of your ciabatta as you require and toast them. Spread quite thickly with the salsa and top first with the sun-dried and fresh tomatoes, then with the smoked anchovies. Garnish with coriander and eat straight away.
This is fantastic! Just looking at the bright colors made me smile despite the doom-and-gloom scenario outside~ These sunny bites will pave the road for a pair of steaks tonight, I think 🙂 Thanks for this one~
Thank you! And you are very welcome. It’s a very versatile sauce, this, and very tasty.
These are so pretty! The salsa sounds wonderful…and, as you say, very versatile. Thank you!
Thanks, Cindy. Yes, although we normally eat this sauce cold, it can be heated. I’ve added it to pork and beans and a tomato soup this week.
Yum! I like anchovies even in a slice of baked bread with a thin layer of butter and that’s it. Never tried with cherry tomatoes and spices… I must try!
Thanks, I hope you like it!
Well, the Salsa Linda has to be tried at the first opportunity! Everything I love but combined just a little differently!! Anchovies: having been born in the Baltics they are mother’s milk naturally . . .they also happen to be the pickled kind I eat most mornings . . . Hmm! Did not even know they existed smoked . . . use some in oil in Mediterranean recipes . . . . back to school with interesting homework . . .
Thank you! I really like the smoked version, well worth seeking out from a good deli or fishmonger. Hope you enjoy it if you try it. Lx
I’ll be making salsa Linda too, a great combo of flavours
Thanks, Sandra, it’s a good recipe, hope you enjoy it as much as we do.
We loved your quick salsa made with pantry items Linda, it was a wonderful embellishment for dinner when the fridge was almost empty. We ate it spooned over pulled pork piled into homemade flatbreads with salad greens and avocado. I added quite a bit of chilli, it really hit the spot, thanks so much
Thanks for the feedback, Sandra, I’m so glad you liked it. You meal sounds delicious! Lx
A lovely combination, peppers and anchovies. These would be great with a few glasses of wine.
Have you been peeking in the kitchen window again? 🙂 Thanks, Conor. Like the beard, btw. Suits you, Sir. Lx
Thanks. It’s just a last grasp at my disappearing youth by trying to look all hipster and cool. I suspect I have failed on both counts. Then again, I am too old to care.
Pshaw. You’re a fine figure of a man, so you are. 😀