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A French recipe with a Cycladic twist.
© Giorgos Drakopoulos - Photo Assistant: Manolis Kapa
Food Styling: Tina Webb - Food Styling Assistant: Alexandra Tasounidou
Chef: Antonia Zarpa
Preparation & Cooking time: 140'
Serves: 8
Ratatouille is a French briam or stewed vegetable dish but Antonia Zarpa from the Thalassaki taverna on the island of Tinos has added a Cycladic island taste to it, using vegetables and seasonal fruit which she “builds” into the pan to resemble what she calls “handmade edible dry stones.”
The result has an impressive appearance and a unique taste. It goes brilliantly with meat, fish and burgers.
Clean and cut the vegetables and the fruit into very thin round slices (ideally 3mm thick). To do this, use a sharp knife or, ideally, a utensil called the mandolin (found in kitchen utensil shops). Place the vegetables in one bowl and the fruit in another. Add 150ml of olive oil, salt and pepper to the vegetable bowl. Add 50ml of olive oil, salt, pepper and lemon juice (so as not to darken the fruit) to the fruit bowl.
Pre-heat the oven to 160°C. Oil the pan and carefully lay the fruit and vegetables upright and rigidly across the entire pan – making sure that each fruit is next to a vegetable (see photo). Sprinkle the herbs and the nuts while setting up these edible dominos. Repeat. Make 3–4 strips of vegetables. Cover the pan with aluminum foil and cook for about an hour.
Take the cover off and continue to cook for another 20 minutes so that the ingredients get a color and excess liquid evaporates. Some liquid will remain in the pan. Also, certain vegetables (e.g., celeriac, carrots) may take longer to cook but that doesn’t matter. The only thing to look out for is when the potatoes are done.
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