| If
you have never been to Spain you must know that the dining schedule
is quite different from most American's eating habits. Breakfast
is around 9:30; lunch at about 2:30-3 followed by a lengthy siesta,
and finally dinner no earlier than 9p.m.
Seville's typical dishes
mostly are relatively simple to prepare, but extraordinarily tasty.
Those are some of the best known: Gazpacho, the famous cold "soup",
a vegetable-cream made of tomato, cucumber, paprika, garlic, olive-oil,
vinegar and bread; Pescaito frito, fish turned around in flour
and fried in olive-oil; Huevos a la Flamenca, a fried egg in a
sauce of tomato and Chorizo (a spicy typically Spanish sausage);
Cocido Andaluz, a "hot-pot" made of chick-peas and different
vegetables; Rabo de Toro, a ragout of bull's tail.
The
numberless bars of this city use to offer so-called Tapas, "mini-dishes"for
the small hunger. Each local has its own "house-specialities",
but some recipes you will find almost everywhere: Huevas, fish-eggs
either with mayonnaise or Sauce Vinaigrette, Pinchos Morunos,
very spicy spits of meat, Pavías de Pescado, marinaded
fish fried in olive-oil, Caracoles, snails in a tasty sauce, Jamon,
cured ham, and of course the fantastic olives of the region. The
great local wines, Jerez (sherry), Manzanilla and Montilla are
a perfect match to all those dishes.
The traditional sweets are
mostly of Moorish influences and are prepared often with honey,
but also with wine. Very well known are Torrijas and Llemas de
San Leandro.
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