Showing posts with label yogurt-tahini sauce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yogurt-tahini sauce. Show all posts

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Falafels and Tandoori Rabbit



Falafels are the vegetarian equivalent to meatballs, crispy little fried morsels of spiced ground chickpeas. They are quite good all on their own with a yogurt sauce for dipping, or ketchup in the case of my children when they were very young. I made them the other night to serve with Tandoori rabbit -and I made both the rabbit and the falafels the extra-super-easy way. Falafels are not that difficult to make from scratch, as Nicole at Arctic Garden Studio shows (click here), but I must admit that I used a mix that's sold in the bulk section of both my local grocery store and food co-op.



Mix 2 c. falafel mix and 1 1/4 c. water. Let sit 15 minutes. Form balls and deep fry. Ta-da: falafels!



Tandoori rabbit (or chicken) is just as easy. Mix 2 T. to 1/2 c. Patak's Tandoori Paste with 1/3 -1/2 c. yogurt. Coat rabbit or chicken pieces with mix in a gallon Ziploc bag and leave to marinate several hours to overnight. Bake, uncovered at 350-375 degrees for 30-40 minutes.



Serve the rabbit with rice, mango chutney -I absolutely love making this chutney, so much so, that I generated quite a surplus and I had to force myself to NOT make any for awhile- and a vegetable (nappy carrots from the grocery story was what I had on hand). Serve the falafels with a yogurt sauce -I made the yogurt-tahini sauce from an earlier post of mine, The Middle East on a Flatbread (click here) -and pita breads.

Yogurt Tahini Sauce

Mix:
1 c. yogurt
2 T. tahini
1 T. lemon juice
1/2 t. salt




Monday, March 21, 2011

Egyptian Kufta

"The world's most ephemeral art form -even worse than magazine writing. What kind of life would let dinner pass in a tenth the time of its preparation? This kind. The kind we're built for." -Richard Powers, generosity



With the title, My Egyptian Grandmother's Kitchen -Traditional Dishes Sweet and Savory -how could I not be immediately and completely enchanted by this cookbook? It is the traditional home cooking an Egyptian woman learned by watching her grandmother cook, and she dedicates this book to her three daughters "so that it may be an aid in the preparation of all the foods I made that you loved so much." My son bought this for me for a gift last year, and it is absolutely fascinating. While at college, he got to know an Egyptian student he met in one of his classes there, and he told me he'd never met anyone so incredibly proud of their country as this young man was. On Saturday, the Egyptian people held their first free elections after ousting Mubarak last month. Like all politics, the choices they were given to vote on are far from ideal, but it was a free vote and is one more thing for Egyptians to be proud of. Yesterday, I was thinking about this historic vote in Egypt, which led me to looking through this cookbook (with me, it always comes back to food), which led me to making these Egyptian kuftas for my weekly meatball recipe.



I first made this Yogurt-Tahini Sauce to serve with the meatballs. Very tasty and super easy -the most difficult part was that I was opening a new can of tahini, which has to be stirred forever to re-emulsify the oil which separates out as the tahini sits on the shelf. I found my wand blender to work really good for this -in the past I simply arranged to have a long phone conversation while stirring it with a spoon.

Yogurt-Tahini Sauce
Adapted from Flatbreads and Flavors

Mix:
1/3 - 1/2 c. plain yogurt
3 T. tahini
1/4 - 1/3 c. lemon juice
1/2 t. salt
1/8 t. cayenne
Makes 1 cup and stores in the fridge for one week.



Pita bread is now commonly found in most grocery stores these days, but I made homemade pita breads with half whole wheat and half white flour, using the recipe in Flatbreads and Flavors for this meal. I followed their directions for cooking pitas on a griddle on top of the stove, rather than baking them in the oven, as I usually do. They were good enough, but I think they would have been better if I'd rolled them out a little bit thinner.



Egyptian Kufta
Adapted from My Egyptian Grandmother's Kitchen by Magda Mehdawy

Blend in food processor:
1-2 garlic cloves, pressed
1/2 onion, grated
1/2 c. cooked white rice
1/2 T. each minced parsley and mint, dried -or use double the amount of fresh herbs
1/4 - 1/2 t. each salt and black pepper
1/8 - 1/4 t. each ground cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, and cumin, or 1/2 - 1 t. Buharat or 'mixed spice'
1/2 - 3/4 lb. ground beef ("Note: ground camel meat can be used instead of beef.")

Form 20-25 meatballs. Chill. Deep fry in oil, or brown them in 1-2 T. ghee. I then popped them into the oven alongside the egg dish, Shakshuka, I was also making for dinner. I don't know if an Egyptian home cook would serve these two dishes at the same meal, but I thought they were great together.

Shakshuka is eggs poached in a tomato sauce, either on the stove top or baked in the oven. It is one of those easy comfort dishes that seems to be claimed by multiply groups of various nationalities and ethnicity. I followed Magda's recipe and now understand its universal appeal. It is a quick, satisfying comfort food, the sort of thing to whip up for a quick meal, when the cupboards are almost bare, or when you don't want to make a big production out of cooking.

Shakshuka
Brown in 1-2 T. ghee:
1/2 diced onion
2 minced garlic cloves
Add:
1-2 minced hot chili peppers
14 oz. can diced tomatoes
1 T. minced dried parsley
salt and pepper
Bring to a simmer and cook a few minutes. Pour sauce into a baking dish, make a hollow, and add 3-4 eggs. Bake 15 minutes. Serve with pitas.



Since there were only three of us for dinner, I simply rounded out our meal by putting jars of pickled beets and dilly beans on the table, but if we'd been more, I would have included some couscous, an eggplant dish, and one or more of the simple Egyptian salads in this cookbook. I loved this egg dish -seasonally appropriate with our egg production in full swing and the equinox making it officially Spring. I like the subtle and unique spicing of the kuftas, and how all this came together to make a simple, yet exotic, home cooked meal made from what we had on hand.

Monday, January 3, 2011

"The Middle East on a Flatbread"



2011 -The Year of the Meatball! Are you ready? My daughter gave me The Meatball Cookbook Bible for my birthday in December, and I gave her a cupcake cookbook for Christmas. We are both expecting lots of good things to be cooked by the other in the coming year. She gets exasperated with me because I usually look at a recipe (or two or three) for inspiration, and then follow my own intuition. She feels you should at least follow it exactly the first time. Nevertheless, this first meatball recipe of the year is one her and I have made before, or rather I make the meatballs and she does the rest, and is adapted from a recipe for Lamb Kofte in Bon Appetit January 2010. It isn't difficult to make, despite the multiple components, and we were done in under an hour, start to finish. The most difficult part, depending on where you live, might be finding pomegranate molasses. There really isn't a substitute for its unique flavor and it is worth the effort.



Mix:
1 lb. ground lamb
peppermint from 4 tea bags (or 2 T. dried mint or 4 T. fresh)
2 T. finely minceded onion
2 finely minced garlic cloves
1 1/2 T. Hungarian paprika
1 1/2 t. cumin
1/2 t. salt
1/2 t. black pepper
1/4 t. cayenne
Form walnut-sized meatballs. These can be made ahead and refrigerated.



Halve and cut thinly crosswise, 1 large onion. Saute in 1 T. olive oil in caste iron skillet, until golden (8-10 minutes). Remove onions and place on baking sheet in 300 degree oven to keep warm. Add 1 T. olive oil and fry meatballs until done (7-8 minutes). Add meatballs to baking sheet in oven. Wrap 4-6 pita breads in foil and put in the oven, alongside the onions and meatballs, to warm.

To make the Syrian red pepper sauce, add to browned bits in pan:
1/2 c. jarred diced pimentos, drained
1/2 c. water
2-3 T. pomegranate molasses
Stir and cook for about 5 minutes, reducing it.

The next time we make this -and we will make this fantastic meal again! -I'm going to substitute the Red Pepper-Pomegranate Jam I recently made, inspired by this Syrian red pepper sauce, for the red peppers and molasses.



While all the frying is going on, mix the yogurt sauce:
1 c. plain yogurt
1-2 T. tahini
1 T. lemon juice
1/2 t. salt



To serve, halve warm pitas, tuck in some meatballs and onions (you might want to transfer them to a platter first, instead of my slobbish oven sheet presentation used here), and top with red pepper and yogurt sauces. Don't forget the napkins.