I am freshly fluffed and feeling fine.
We made an excursion to the open market in Nice today. The smells were exquisite: artisan cheeses, provencal sausages, crisp white wines, multitudinous flowers conjuring the famous perfumes of Grasse just up the hill….and Socca.
Socca is a simple staple of Southern French fare. It is ubiquitous in all the open markets in this area. And, I always get a wedge. I assume this is because nothing about it is bad for the figure of a small dog.
I watched carefully today as an old man concocted the batter. Pezzo di torta, as we like to say: piece of cake.
Following is my translation. I estimate it would serve 4 humans…or 1 dog:
The man put 1 1/2 cup chick pea (garbanzo) flour in a medium-sized blue bowl. He added 1/3 cup of a lovely pale green olive oil and 2 cups of water and then stirred the whole slurry with a whisk. He bent down to let me see the mix: a soft, smooth, lump-free batter that smelled like a rich bean cake.
He then poured a tablespoon of olive oil in a large, round pan, about 13-14 inches wide, like something one would use for Paella (ah, that trip to Spain last summer!). The Socca was only about 1/2 thick, or so.
He popped the whole thing into a very hot oven (I estimate, by the tinges on my whiskers when he opened the door, that the temp was 500 degrees). He let this bake for what seemed to be 20 or 25 minutes. Anyway, when it was set in the middle and browned at the edges, he took it out, drizzled it with more olive oil (about a tablespoon, I think, and sprinkled coarse salt and fresh pepper on top.
It was then cut into wedges and each was served on a piece of parchment paper: warm, salty heaven. I guess you could add herbs, or spices to the batter. There are probably endless possibilities.
Personally, I think it would be a great light summer meal, with a tossed green salad and a glass or two of Provencal Rose wine.
Alas, no one asked me.
I eat it alone, treasure on the street… a la cobblestones. Still, heaven.
Chow.