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Рецепт Herbed Lamb Meatballs with Rich Tomato Sauce
by Monte Mathews

Seamus Mullen’s name would give you no

clue as to this particular chef’s specialty.

Chef Mullen is the chef/owner of two wildly popular and critically

acclaimed restaurants specializing in modern Spanish cuisine. The first, Tertulia in Greenwich Village (359

6th Avenue, NYC 10012 Tel: 646-559-9909) has the stars to prove

it. The second one, El Comado, is

located in the Gotham West Market, a food court unlike any other in the

city. For one thing, it’s at 600 11th Avenue, a neighborhood so far west in Hell’s Kitchen, the owners of the

apartment building above it conceived the place as a way to draw tenants. Otherwise

these poor souls would have to walk blocks before they found anything to eat. Instead, they can go downstairs to 8 highly

original food destinations.

Andrew and I were intrigued enough

to head there in the dead of winter when it first opened. There’s a beer bar, a largely vegetarian

place called Little Chef, which sits

opposite a carnivore’s dream called Cannibal.

There’s the mandatory coffee outlet, in this case one called Blue Bottle

Coffee. There’s a pricy food and cookshop called the Brooklyn Kitchen. And there is a Ramen Noodle place called

“Slurp Shop” which gets rave reviews and, the times we’ve been there, packed

seats. And then there is Seamus Mullen’s

El Comado. The name means ‘grocery

store’ in Spanish. Here it means 'superb tapas bar'. We find

El Comado so irresistible that Andrew and I have yet to even sample the Ramen

Noodles or the sandwiches made at the Court Street Grocer’s Sandwich Shop or

the all-day diner called Genuine Roadside.

Instead, we belly up to the bar overlooking a stretch of Eleventh Avenue

and eat food that might as well put us in Barcelona. That city was one stop on Chef Mullen’s path

to creating great contemporary Spanish dishes. Not bad for a kid who grew up on

an organic farm in Vermont.

Chef Mullen’s passion for Spain

began early in life. At Kalamazoo College, he majored in Spanish language and

literature then took off to study in Spain at Universidad Autonoma de

Extremadura in the ancient city of Caceres.

Somewhere along the line, Chef Mullen became fascinated by cooking and since

his graduation in 1996, he’s been hard at it.

He’s been in New York since 2005 and we’re lucky to have him. He’s also the author of a fascinating

book called “Hero Food: How Cooking

with Delicious Things Can Make Us Feel Better” (Andrews McMeel 2012). In it, he

details his struggles with rheumatoid arthritis and how he turned his diet

around and minimized his symptoms. And

he did this with minimal sacrifice. He said his greatest challenge was to field

recipes that were ‘fundamentally delicious while being surreptitiously

nutritious.’

Food and Wine, where I found Chef

Mullin’s recipe for Herbed Lamb Meatballs, doesn’t publish nutritional

information so I have to guess at the

‘surreptitiously nutritious’ aspects of this extraordinarily flavorful

offering. What doesn’t go into it is

likely as key as what does: Olive Oil.

It is also one of those dishes with a frighteningly long list of

ingredients. But when you break them

down, its basically one of those ‘empty the spice rack’ recipes that look far

more complex on paper than they are to make.

The meatballs themselves are loaded with basil, parsley, oregano and

thyme and raw almonds that have been soaked in milk. (I left out the mint in

mine but not in the recipe that follows).

The tomato sauce is simplicity itself and bubbles along while

you prepare the meatballs. I served the

whole dish on a bed of wilted spinach. I halved the quantity in Chef Mullen’s

recipe. But here is the original recipe,

which would easily serve 6-8 hearty eaters. It was phenomenal. Here is the recipe:

Recipe for Seamus Mullen’s Herbed Lamb Meatballs with Rich Tomato Sauce

and Ricotta

Total Time 1hour and 30

minutes. Serves 6-8

for 30 seconds.

2. Add the tomatoes and simmer over moderately low heat, stirring,

until the tomatoes are saucy, 1 hour. Stir in the anchovies and season with

salt and black pepper.

While the sauce is cooking, make the meatballs:

1. In a bowl, cover the almonds with the milk and let stand until most of

the milk has been absorbed, 30 minutes.

2. Add all of the remaining ingredients

except the whole basil leaves, olive oil and ricotta and mix well. Form into 1

1/2-inch meatballs and transfer to a rimmed baking sheet.

3. In a skillet, heat the oil until shimmering. Working in batches, cook

the meatballs over moderately high heat, turning, until nearly cooked through,

7 minutes per batch.

Add the meatballs to the sauce and simmer until cooked through, 8

minutes.

4. Spoon into bowls, top with ricotta and garnish with basil.

(The meatballs can be refrigerated in the sauce overnight.)