Andalusian cuisine


Andalusian cuisine is the cuisine of Andalusia, Spain. Notable dishes include gazpacho, fried fish, the jamones of Jabugo, Valle de los Pedroches and Trevélez, and the wines of Jerez, particularly sherry.

Fried foods

Frying in Andalucian cuisine is dominated by the use of olive oil that is produced in the provinces of Jaén, Córdoba, Seville, and Granada. Málaga, Almería, Cádiz and Huelva produce olive oil too, but in smaller amounts.
The foods are dredged in flour a la Andaluza. They are then fried in a large quantity of hot olive oil.

Fish and shellfish

With five coastal provinces, the consumption of fish and shellfish is rather high: white shrimp from the Bay of Cádiz; prawns; murex; anchovies; baby squid; cuttlefish; "bocas de la Isla", a dish found in San Fernando that uses a local crab that can regenerate its claw; flounder; etc.
Andalucian cuisine includes also some unusual seafood, like ortiguillas, sea anemones in batter.

Desserts

was first introduced to Andalusia by the Moors around the 10th-century and cultivated in Granada.
Andalucian desserts are heavily influenced by Arabic medieval Andalucian cuisine. Notable dishes include pestiños, alfajores, amarguillos from Medina Sidonia, the polvorones, lard bread, wine doughnuts, torrijas and calentitos.

Wines and liquors

The wines of Jerez are famous the world over, praised even by William Shakespeare. Other standouts are the manzanilla of Sanlúcar de Barrameda, the white wines of Cádiz, paxarete, wines of Condado in Huelva, wines of Montilla-Moriles in Córdoba, wines of Málaga, and la tintilla of Rota. The liquors of the region are also popular, included the anís made in Rute, and in Cazalla de la Sierra, and the rums from the Tropical Coast of Granada.

Typical dishes

Typical Andalucian dishes include pescaito frito, gazpacho, Cordoban salmorejo, pringá, oxtail, jamón ibérico, prepared olives, alboronía, poleá, anise, and various kinds of wine, including sherries which are undoubtedly the most exported and most widely available of all Spanish wines, as well as Málaga wine. The wine from Montilla, while similar to sherry, is not technically a sherry, but gives its name to amontillado, meaning "in the style of Montilla".
Some other Andalucian dishes include: