A few more random notes, before I get to the long-winded picture-laden post, but forgive me, there will be no meal-porn. We didn't take the cam to dinner. We do have some truly fantastic market-porn, though. Their markets (we visited the Boqueria, Sta Caterina and a third market just off the city center) are amazing.
The other thing about lack of meal-porn, is that we didn't go anywhere high end at all. Why? (a) I'm cheap, (b) my company (which was paying my way most of the days) is even cheaper, (c) I almost went high-end on our last night, until I saw on
the board we don't mention that
El Glop serves calçots in the fall (don't know where they get them, don't care).
I'd seen Tony Bourdain eat calçots on his show, those char-grilled oversized scallions, dipped in romesco sauce, and had to have 'em. El Glop is the only place I'd seen them while I was out there. They are sweet in ways that a scallion is never, and the cold tart-rich romesco is the perfect foil for them. The bring a cloth bib, since you're supposed to drop the whole 12-18" long onion into the sauce and then your mouth. Don't miss 'em.
So what does Barcelona do really well?
a) Iberic/Iberian Ham, and charcuterie (
xarcuterie in Catalan -- "x" is pronounced as we do "sh"). Dry, salty, fatty foods rule here. I had chorizo, loin, salumi, they're all great. Watch out for "York" though -- that's boiled ham. A "bikini" is a sandwich of boiled-type ham and cheese, you don't want that either. But if a chain like "Pan & Company" or "Bocatta" opened in the US, they'd put Subway, etc. out of business, assuming people can get used to really skinny layers of meat that have ten times the flavor of those piles of worthless turkey breast or salami.
b) Chocolate (
xocolate in Catalan). Skip that milky Swiss stuff, that hazelnut-laden Belgian junk, give me the deep dark Spanish pure heaven. They know how to use it, and it's everywhere: almost every cafe has a glass tub with a constantly-spinning beater in it, keeping it well-mixed and frothy. Depending on the place you go, it may be just a few notches above Swiss-Miss, or it can be like a liquid bittersweet bar. Served with churros (
xurros, you should get it by now), it's a great breakfast or a snack to tide you over until those late-night opening times
c) Roasted/grilled stuff: a typical Catalan restaurant is going to be heavy on fish
a la plancha, and grilled meats of a number of kinds.
Butifarra is the typical pork sausage, which to me resembled bratwurst.
d) Little fried things: croquets of ham, cod (some very nummy ones at
Botiga one night), or calamari rings or whole "little squid" (I forgot the usual name, but they are also listed as "cepia" -- cuttlefish)
e) Did I mention calçots?
f) Wine -- lots of low-priced bottles available in most restaurants I was in, and it's all pretty good. Riojas and Penedes mostly were what we had.
What's not to love so much?
a) Olives. They were pretty much uniformly bland. Black ones were not much different from classical canned olives (except for still having pits), and pitted green ones were lacking in salt, or much flavor at all. It wasn't an isolated incident: the standard green bland olives were everywhere
b) Pa amb tomaquet. After seeing Antonius' gorgeous pix of his own version, I was expecting something really really good. It mostly came out as damp toast. Some of it wasn't even particularly warm. Perhaps more seasonal tomatoes would help, but I was expecting more garlic too. Plus, it's the bread every resto serves with meals, but they charge you 1-2 Euros for it.
c) On the subject of charging you for it, how about a pitcher of cold water instead of making me buy a teeny bottle (and soft drinks are even worse -- 6Euros for a Pepsi, one place)? I realize it's a big bump to your bottom line, but I've been out walking all day, I need some water and frankly the tap water's pretty good in Spain. The wine is sometimes cheaper than the water!
One question I have: With Catalan cuisine being basically a nice piece of grilled meat without sauce (a tournedos with three cheeses turned out to be three tournedos, each with a different slice of cheese on them), how did ElBulli evolve such complex combinations of sauces and garnishes? Reactionary?
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang