Elana's Simple Guacamole
This is, if I may say so, an Italian guacamole.
I’m sure even that phrasing is irreverent in most kitchens in Mexico. If you offered me Mexican style pasta I would refuse politely before writing you a whole spiel on why Mexican and Pasta do not belong in the same sentence.
But, this is a guacamole I started whipping up while living in Rome years ago, without a clue how to make guacamole, and I have to say it’s one of the best I’ve had. I basically do to avocado what Italians do to most vegetables: add garlic, salt and fresh lemon.
I know, I know. Avocado is a fruit.
The Sales Pitch for this guac:
The Italian approach seeks to highlight the main ingredient and not mask it with too many other ingredients, as guacamoles in this country often do. (That goes for 99% of American cooking in general.)
There is very little chopping.
No onions to make you cry.
This guacamole has a kick.
It is lighter tasting and feeling than most of its competitors.
There are no bells peppers, which I can’t stand.
INGREDIENTS
You will need: a garlic masher.
For a small bowl: (2-4 people). double or triple to your liking
2 very ripe avocados
juice of 1 lemon
¼ - ½ teaspoon of salt
2-3 garlic cloves, peeled
DIRECTIONS
Slice avocados in half and open up. Remove the pit.
Squeeze “meat” into a bowl.
Add lemon juice and salt.
Use garlic masher to pulp garlic and add it to bowl.
Use a fork to mash it all together.
Taste. Add salt, lemon or garlic as desired.