6 (unripe) green tomatoes
1 onion
2 garlic cloves
4 fresh green jalapeño or serrano chilies,
seeded and finely chopped
½ bunch cilantro leaves, coarsely chopped
2 avocados
½ bunch parsley, coarsely chopped
juice of 2 limes
2 tbsp olive oil
salt and freshly ground black pepper
1Cut the tomatoes in half. Scoop out the center core of seeds and place in a
sieve over a bowl. Chop the flesh into a fine dice and set aside. Cut the onion
in half, and grate the flesh so that you are left with a pulp. Set this aside also.
2Cut the garlic in half and remove any green shoot from the center (this part
of the garlic is bitter and can cause digestive problems). Chop the garlic
finely. Using a large pestle and mortar, pound the garlic with the green chilies and
a pinch of salt to make a smooth paste. Add half of the cilantro leaves and all of
the onion to the paste. Still using the pestle and mortar, continue to pound until
you have a coarse green paste.
3Using a wooden spoon, push the tomato cores and their seeds through the
sieve into the pestle and mortar, extracting all the juice. Discard the seeds
and pour any juice that has collected in the bowl into the paste.
4Halve, peel, and pit the avocado. Cut the flesh into ½in (1cm) dice. Add the
avocado and green tomato to the paste. Pound a few times so part of it is
crushed and the remaining part remains as dice. Mix in the parsley and remaining
cilantro. Mix in the lime juice and olive oil. Season well with salt and pepper.
Check the seasoning. The avocado makes it sweet, the lime juice and green
tomato add the sour element, and the green chilies and black pepper supply
heat. The salsa should have a real tang and zip to it. Adjust the green chili
content to suit your taste, if necessary.
5Serve in a bowl or in a sandwich, or spread on steak, grilled lamb, grilled
chorizo, or sausages. It is great with just about anything.
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