Tapenade


Tapenade is a Provençal name for a spread, condiment and culinary ingredient consisting of puréed or finely chopped olives, capers, and sometimes anchovies. The name comes from the Provençal word for capers, tapenas. It is a popular food in the south of France, where it is generally eaten as an hors d'œuvre spread on bread, with fish, in salads, and sometimes used to stuff poultry for the main course.

History of similar dishes

Olive-based dishes can be found in ancient times. For example, Olivarum conditurae in Columella's De re rustica and epityrum from Cato the Elder were Greek dips adopted by the Romans that included olives but also many ingredients like celery, leeks, rue, mint, wine and vinegar.
Tapenade is based mainly on capers and olives.
According to the culinary works of Provençal chefs Jean-Baptiste Reboul and Charles Julliard, the tapenade was created in 1880 by chef Meynier of the restaurant La Maison Dorée in Marseille. He pounded together an equal amount of capers and black olives to garnish hard-boiled egg halves, then incorporated anchovy fillets and marinated tuna. Spices, pepper, olive oil, and two glasses of cognac were then whisked in.

Preparation

The base ingredients of tapenade are olives and capers. The olives and capers are chopped finely, crushed, or blended. Then olive oil is added gradually until the mixture becomes a paste.
In various regions, tapenade is often flavored differently, with other ingredients such as garlic, herbs, anchovies, lemon juice, or brandy.

Serving

Tapenade may be served as an appetizer atop crusty bread or crudités; incorporated in salad and fish dishes; and used as a condiment.