Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 August 2020

The back catalogue – a Lebanese salad


The following recipe is a take on a Lebanese mezze dish, it's a perfect vegetarian addition to a mezze.

Halloumi and pomegranate salad

Serves 6 as an appetiser

50g walnuts, toasted and chopped
250g Halloumi – sliced
salt, black pepper and a heaped teaspoon
of sumac – optional - see below
2 tbsp olive oil
cherry tomatoes, halved

Warm the oil in a frying pan. Mix the salt, pepper and sumac in a container with a lid and shake well to combine. Coat the sliced halloumi and fry for 1-2 minutes each side – set aside and keep warm, add the tomatoes. Serve in small bowls, sprinkle with walnuts and drizzle with dressing.


Pomegranate Dressing

2 tbsp pomegranate molasses
juice of two limes
2 tbsp sweet chilli sauce
Generous pinch of nigella seeds
1-2 tsps sumac

Mix all the ingredients together. Drizzle over the halloumi and tomatoes.

In case you've not come across sumac, it's a spice used in the Middle East made from ground berries which give a sweet and sour fruit flavour. It's used as a substitute for lemons in stews but also as a “sprinkle” over meats and salads. There's a spice blend called Za'atar and sumac is one of the key ingredients.

It's a question of personal taste - if you're a fan of “zingy” flavours - whether you coat the halloumi with sumac, as well as including it in the dressing.

Serve with warmed mini pitta breads!

Mini pancakes anyone?



The back catalogue – something different


Most of us only eat dates when hidden in a sticky toffee pudding – in other words when they don't resemble dates.

This next recipe is another cicchetti choice – it's “outside the box” - there's no avoiding the dates but it's worth the risk - the combination of sweet, salty and savoury works like a charm and is a perfect addition to your fusion mezze menu.

Dates wrapped in Parma ham

for 20 canapés

1 tsp of vegetable oil for greasing
20 dried dates – stones removed
20 small cubes of Parmesan or other hard cheese
10 slice of Parma ham, halved


Pre-heat the oven to 170fan/190c/Gas 5. Lightly grease a baking tray, large enough to fit all the dates. Remove the stone from the dates and replace it with a little cube of cheese.

Wrap each date in half a slice of Parma ham and fix each one closed with a wooden cocktail stick. Lay the dates on the lightly greased baking tray.

Bake for about 10 minutes or until the ham begins to crisp.

Serve hot.

Prep ahead, cover and fridge until you're ready to bake.

The fact that this morsel contains dates lends itself very much to Middle Eastern cuisine too and so, despite Italian in origin, it's the epitome of fusion and perfect for your mezze spread.

Up next … a Lebanese salad

Saturday, 8 August 2020

The back catalogue – Middle Eastern main

for the mezze

My favourite piece of kitchen kit is my slow cooker, it's a modern equivalent of the Middle Eastern cooking pot the tagine - the main difference being it uses liquid to cook the meat slowly – the results are the same, tender, melt in the mouth but with a bonus of a spiced gravy.

The word “stew” does not conjure up appetising thoughts. My back catalogue idea for a Middle Eastern main is many years old. The original recipe came from “Nigella Bites” called Aromatic Lamb-Shank Stew. The recipe serves whole shanks and includes lentils and also suggests serving with couscous.

What follows is my version which was tailored to suit my family and what they love and, more to the point, don't love!

4 tbsp rapeseed or vegetable oil
6 lamb shanks
2 onions, finely chopped
4 tsps garlic paste
sprinkle of salt
1 tbsp turmeric
1 tsp ground ginger
¼ tsp dried chilli flakes
2 tsps cinnamon
¼ tsp freshly grated nutmeg
black pepper
3 tbsps honey
1 tbsp soy sauce
3 tbsp Marsala

Using the oil, brown the shanks and place in your slow cooker. Fry the onion and garlic paste until soft, sprinkling with salt. Stir in the turmeric, ginger, chilli, cinnamon and nutmeg and season with pepper. Add the honey, soy and Marsala. Tip the mixture over the shanks and cover with boiling water. Leave for as long as you like. 4 to 6 hours. Remove the shanks and strip off the meat – add the meat back to the gravy in the slow cooker.

The lamb is ready to serve when you are, fridge until required. You can cook ahead and freeze if that's more convenient, it gets better!

My mob isn't wild about couscous, however, they do love roast potatoes, so I serve this “stew” with the biggest pan of roasties I can. There's loads of spicy gravy and roast potatoes somehow fit. New potatoes would work just as well, just not as crunchy.

Seriously, I don't think I've ever seen food disappear quite so fast – absolutely nothing left – so, if you like the idea of a spicy roast “main” then this is for you, it's worth every second of prep and it's not complicated.

Then there's the thali ...




Saturday, 11 April 2020

Time on your hands … what to do …


with that jar of preserved lemons and black olives! This recipe is a Middle Eastern “hat tipping” to the wonderful tagine, cooked in stages for convenience. You could slow cook the dish altogether if that's better for you so – Plan A or Plan B!

Chicken and Preserved Lemon Tagine

Serves 4

2 tbsp of olive oil – or rapeseed
125g diced chorizo - 225g
1 medium onion, peeled and finely chopped
sweet baby peppers, de-seeded and finely sliced
30ml – 2tbsp preserved lemons – rinsed and
chopped
400g passata
60ml medium white wine
500ml chicken stock
black olives
2 cloves of roasted garlic or 2 cloves
peeled and finely chopped
15ml sweet paprika
salt and black pepper

4 medium chicken breasts

Plan A

Heat the olive oil in a large frying pan and gently fry the garlic paste, onion and paprika until soft – 10 minutes. Add the chorizo and fry until crispy. Add the wine and simmer until reduced – 5 minutes. Add the passata, stock and slow cooked chicken breasts and simmer gently, lid off, for about 20 minutes.

Add the olives and preserved lemons and season well – taste and adjust!

I'd slow cook the chicken breasts the day before required, using the 500ml of chicken stock in the recipe and then set them aside to cool, box and fridge. You can make the “sauce” when it suits you too. Complete your “tagine” adding the chicken breasts to the sauce and finish off as above, heating through gently on the stove.

Plan B

You could slow cook this recipe all together, completing the dish with the olives and preserved lemons either as you're re-heating or for the last 10 minutes of cooking time if serving straight from the slow cooker. If you're using this method then I'd slow cook for three hours. If you prefer your chorizo crispy I'd leave the chorizo until the last 20 minutes of slow cooking time then fry until crispy and add, with the oil, to your tagine, together with the preserved lemons and olives.

If you'd like a veggie version, use Quorn fillets.

What to serve with?

Keep it simple - new potatoes – boiled or steamed and or even roasted in their skins. Mange tout – sliced lengthways and stir fried.

Yum – now back to the cheap & cheerful!





Sunday, 29 July 2018

Just in case you hadn't noticed …


it's a tad warm out there! We're not used to it in the UK and one of the problems is that it's really difficult to know what to eat.

Everything is a massive effort and the last thing you want to do is turn on your oven. It's just about possible to use a pan on the hob.

We have friends coming to supper and I want to serve something nice and, as importantly, I don't want to spend time in a hot kitchen.

I like variations on a theme - fancy chefs call it fusion.

I think it will be a smidgeon of Spanish, add a dash of Italian and complete with a drop or two of the Middle East with the dressing.

So far I've decided on Stromboli which is basically a rolled up pizza that you slice, which will contain – apart from the standard ingredients like tomato paste and mozzarella – finely sliced chestnut mushrooms, baby spinach and black olives.

My smidgeon of Spanish will be diced chorizo, fried so that it releases its delicious oil. Set aside and when ready to serve, stir fry with finely sliced sweet peppers, blanched asparagus tips and halved baby tomatoes.

My pomegranate molasses dressing will be served with king prawns.

I'm not sure this is the end of my supper menu – just the story so far.

What can I serve to mop up the oil and dressings – piada – small Italian flatbreads. What I love about these is that they are small, manageable and perfect either to mop or to create a small wrap, best of all you don't finish up with food all over yourself as with the larger versions and wreck that beautiful new top you love so much!

More about piada coming next …