Gifted to me by the owner of a local Spanish restaurant

OK, so previously we did a tomato-based gazpacho in the blender. That's the Californio/Mexican version. Turns out there's also a Spanish gazpacho that's white. Instead of all the healthy veggies, this one uses a mix of garlic and almonds. A word of warning - getting this one right is a bit trickier than the red gazpacho. So your first pass might be a bit off.

Tools:

● Blender
● spatula
● bread knife
● cutting board,
● measuring cups,
● something safe to microwave in/with
● A microwave oven would be handy.
● A bowl to put it all in.

Yields1 Serving
 6 Garlic Cloves (Whole)
 ¾ cup Almonds (Slivered or Sliced, Blanched, Optional)
 ½ cup White Balsamic Vinegar or Sherry
 ½ cup Green or White Grapes
 ¼ cup Olive Oil
 3 cups Water or Chicken Broth
 2 Slices Bread (sourdough is best, wheat will do, white is right out - you’re looking for texture)
 Salt and Pepper (To Taste)
 Optional: Small Handful Grapes, Red or Green for Ganish
 1 cup Croutons
1

Put the garlic (note 3) and almonds (note 2) into the blender, and reduce to a fine paste. You will need to stop and scrape the blender several times - the almond chunks tend to percolate upward, and the garlic/almond paste tends to go to the bottom, below the blender blades.

2

Once the garlic/almonds have been reduced to a paste, add the white grapes and the vinegar. Blend again until smooth.

3

Now, with the blender running, pour the oil in slowly, then the water (or chicken stock).

4

Once that's all in, leave the blender running for a bit while you deal with the bread. Take the bread and trim off all the crusts. Next, break up the bread, into a cup or glass, and add water until the bread is completely covered, and let sit for a minute. The objective here is to soak the bread.

5

Once that's done, drain off the water, then squeeze the bread just like a sponge until you've gotten as much water as possible out - you want, basically, a ball of doughy bread.

6

Drop the bread into the blender, and keep it on until the bread is entirely mixed in. Turn off the blender and decant into a bowl. At this point, you're done cooking.

7

If you want to eat in a hurry, let the soup sit for about 5 minutes (for the bread to do it's thing and thicken things up). Dumping some ice cubes in the soup to help things along is also recommended.

8

If you aren't in a hurry, put the bowl in your refrigerator until later, when you're ready to eat. That will also cool things off and let the bread do it's magic.

Notes:
9

Note 1: Bread - you want bread with texture to it, something that's chewy. Sourdough, or an Italian batard, will work best - they're white, but still chewy. Wheat bread also works, but carries some color with it.

10

Note 2: Almonds - I've found that it's cheaper and easier to buy blanched/slivered almonds, than to buy them raw and blanch them yourself. YMMV, but check around your grocery store, specifically in the bulk produce section. As an illustration, Whole Foods had blanched slivered almonds for $5.50/lb, and raw almonds for $6.50/lb. Go figure. If you really want to blanch the almonds (aka remove their skins), the easiest way I've found is to dump them, raw, into a cup of as-hot-as-you-can-make-it water (tap waterworks, as does water from a tea pot) for about 5 minutes. Dump the water, then you should be able to rub the skins off with your hands, or a paper towel. Yes, this is time consuming, and just as much fun as peeling raw garlic. Buy blanched, it's simpler.

11

Note 3: Garlic - You can adjust the "bite" of the soup by cooking/roasting some or all of the garlic. If you cook all of the garlic, it'll be very mild. If you cook none of the garlic, it'll be VERY garlicy. We go with a 50/50 mix - half cooked, half not. To cook it, I find that it's simplest to just throw the garlic into the microwave oven for 45 seconds.

Ingredients

 6 Garlic Cloves (Whole)
 ¾ cup Almonds (Slivered or Sliced, Blanched, Optional)
 ½ cup White Balsamic Vinegar or Sherry
 ½ cup Green or White Grapes
 ¼ cup Olive Oil
 3 cups Water or Chicken Broth
 2 Slices Bread (sourdough is best, wheat will do, white is right out - you’re looking for texture)
 Salt and Pepper (To Taste)
 Optional: Small Handful Grapes, Red or Green for Ganish
 1 cup Croutons

Directions

1

Put the garlic (note 3) and almonds (note 2) into the blender, and reduce to a fine paste. You will need to stop and scrape the blender several times - the almond chunks tend to percolate upward, and the garlic/almond paste tends to go to the bottom, below the blender blades.

2

Once the garlic/almonds have been reduced to a paste, add the white grapes and the vinegar. Blend again until smooth.

3

Now, with the blender running, pour the oil in slowly, then the water (or chicken stock).

4

Once that's all in, leave the blender running for a bit while you deal with the bread. Take the bread and trim off all the crusts. Next, break up the bread, into a cup or glass, and add water until the bread is completely covered, and let sit for a minute. The objective here is to soak the bread.

5

Once that's done, drain off the water, then squeeze the bread just like a sponge until you've gotten as much water as possible out - you want, basically, a ball of doughy bread.

6

Drop the bread into the blender, and keep it on until the bread is entirely mixed in. Turn off the blender and decant into a bowl. At this point, you're done cooking.

7

If you want to eat in a hurry, let the soup sit for about 5 minutes (for the bread to do it's thing and thicken things up). Dumping some ice cubes in the soup to help things along is also recommended.

8

If you aren't in a hurry, put the bowl in your refrigerator until later, when you're ready to eat. That will also cool things off and let the bread do it's magic.

Notes:
9

Note 1: Bread - you want bread with texture to it, something that's chewy. Sourdough, or an Italian batard, will work best - they're white, but still chewy. Wheat bread also works, but carries some color with it.

10

Note 2: Almonds - I've found that it's cheaper and easier to buy blanched/slivered almonds, than to buy them raw and blanch them yourself. YMMV, but check around your grocery store, specifically in the bulk produce section. As an illustration, Whole Foods had blanched slivered almonds for $5.50/lb, and raw almonds for $6.50/lb. Go figure. If you really want to blanch the almonds (aka remove their skins), the easiest way I've found is to dump them, raw, into a cup of as-hot-as-you-can-make-it water (tap waterworks, as does water from a tea pot) for about 5 minutes. Dump the water, then you should be able to rub the skins off with your hands, or a paper towel. Yes, this is time consuming, and just as much fun as peeling raw garlic. Buy blanched, it's simpler.

11

Note 3: Garlic - You can adjust the "bite" of the soup by cooking/roasting some or all of the garlic. If you cook all of the garlic, it'll be very mild. If you cook none of the garlic, it'll be VERY garlicy. We go with a 50/50 mix - half cooked, half not. To cook it, I find that it's simplest to just throw the garlic into the microwave oven for 45 seconds.

Notes

White Gazpacho, aka Ajo blanco – FK Parel
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