Thursday, June 30, 2011

KAFTA— a fourth of july lebanese barbeque idea...plus cookbook clubs on the rise


the san francisco chronicle had an article recently about the rising popularity of cookbook clubs. to read the article, click here!

in the past few years,  i've been invited several times to teach lebanese cooking classes by friends who have book clubs featuring cookbooks. totally enjoyable—everyone participates in prepping, following the recipe in alice's kitchen, and my demonstration. then we all sit down together to enjoy a great lebanese feast, which sometimes includes a barbeque.

this fourth of july, give this lebanese lamb specialty a try on your grill or under a broiler, as these photos demonstrate. it's called kafta and can be done on skewers or just hand rolled into this shape and broiled or barbequed. i've made these in little balls for appetizers and they disappear quickly!

the recipe from alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking is easy to make, using ground lamb specially ground at my local organic grocery store with very lean lamb. finely chopped onions, salt, pepper, cayenne pepper, cinnamon, and allspice provide flavors that bring out the very best in lamb. minced parsley adds a touch that my mother, alice, included when she made hamburgers for us growing up, that we vociferously complained of. now, adding parsley to hamburgers is de rigueur of course!

drizzling garlic and lemon sauce over the kafta just after cooking completes this fantastic dish that is complemented by any of the lebanese salads featured in alice's kitchen, including tabbouli, fattoush, or simple salata.

here's the lamb kafta before it's broiled; you can see that it shrinks in size. it's really important not to overcook it so it doesn't dry out. about 4 minutes on each side is perfect!




speaking of tabbouli, my first efforts at sprouting quinoa to use in gluten-free tabbouli were unsuccessful. i was led astray by the wikipedia entry on quinoa saying they sprout in a couple of hours. so instead of soaking overnight, as is my practice for sprouting any seeds, beans, or legumes, i just soaked them a couple of hours. and instead of sprouting, they fermented and kind of smelled like beer. so i composted them!

will let you know how the next effort goes. in the meantime, have a fabulous fourth of july weekend. and let me know if you try the kafta recipe and how you like it! bon appetite!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

lebanese tabbouli goes gluten free!


it is spring time, and i begin to crave tabbouli...the infamous lebanese salad traditionally made with a small amount of bulgar wheat (burghul in arabic), finely minced parsley, mint, green onions, and tomatoes. this is how my mother, grandmother and beyond made this classic lebanese salad. and this is how the recipe in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking is written.

this is great and delicious, except that starting this past march, it was recommended by my naturopathic doctor that i be GLUTEN FREE or "GF" as many packages are now marked for this rising international trend (my lebanese friend samar saw GF pastries at the paris airport!).

so if you know arabic food, lebanese food, and alice's kitchen, you know that bread and wheat are big parts of the cuisine. so what is a lebanese cookbook author to do, who loves to cook our food TRADITIONALLY? especially right now, when i'm craving tabbouli with the mint and parsley in my garden just in their prime. 



QUINOA (pronounced keen-wa) is the answer! i steamed up some quinoa, a non-gluten "grain", and let it cool. following the recipe in alice's kitchen on page 58, i merely used the cooked quinoa instead of bulgar. no need to soak it, just place a small amount (1/3 cup) in the bowl, season with salt and cayenne pepper. add fresh squeezed lemon juice, olive oil, and set aside to marinate while chopping tomatoes, onions, parsley, and spearmint.

at this time of year in portland since the tomato plants in my garden have barely been planted in the ground, i'm using organic canned chopped tomatoes (without the juice, which i sip and savor) instead of fresh tomatoes that are not yet in season locally. my foodie friend samar tells me that cooked tomatoes have more lycopene, so all the better! plus they've been picked and canned at the peak of the season, so they're sweet!

here's the lovely and fantastic result—lebanese tabbouli with quinoa—served in romaine lettuce "boats" that are picked up and eaten like a taco, and i'm ecstatic about it, since i LOVE tabbouli, and couldn't imagine it without bulgar.

just now in researching quinoa online, i learned on wikipedia that it is over 4000 years old. and that it can be sprouted within a few hours! so my next experiment with the next batch of tabbouli will be with sprouted quinoa instead of cooked! and i may find some red quinoa to try as well. stay tuned for the results. in the meantime, make a bowl of lebanese tabbouli with quinoa and delight in the flavor and healthful results. be sure to let your "gluten free" friends in on the secret.

i'm off to sprout some quinoa right now! this spring i've been sprouting lentils, sunflower and alfalfa seeds, and mung beans to add to my salads, adding protein and a real feeling of eating LIVE foods...and can't wait to try the quinoa! let me know how your results turn out! and happy cooking and sprouting! 


Sunday, May 22, 2011

tulips for alice!


i cannot let this day go by without acknowledging mama's birthday here. if she were alive, it would be her 101st!

so i dedicate this day and these tulips in my garden to mama. as i gardened today and planted seeds, i remembered that she loved gardening and shared this passion with me as a child. it is one of my joys, and she often said it was her "therapy", as was her art.

mama indulged me as a child by taking me to the local nursery, which is still in business on sunset boulevard in los angeles and i visited recently, aptly named sunset nursery, and allowing me to choose whatever flowers i wanted for transplanting into our garden. i still remember choosing celosia...a vibrant magenta and cockscomb, a variation of the flame-like plant that is crested like a rooster's, of course! my propensity for bold color emerging early on!

so blessed to have had such inspiring parents and grandparents, with their roots in the mountains of lebanon, their fingers familiar with its soil, and their spirits guiding me through my journey.

the photo of mama and sitto on the cover of alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking was taken when they first arrived to this country in 1926 and mama was a sweet and lovely 16!

here's an "arty" photo of steamed brussels sprouts fogging up my camera lens. and because it is spring in oregon and this is a food blog, and i've had these photos to share for awhile, this seems like a good time to show you—brussels sprouts with garlic, lemon, and olive oil.

it is the same basic-essential-all-time-and-all-vegetable dressing of garlic mashed into a paste with salt, fresh-squeezed lemon juice, and olive oil.

here's the tangy vegetables in a less arty photo. the dressing is fantastic on steamed asparagus, broccoli, brussels sprouts, spinach, chard, beets, as a dip for artichokes, and on and on! the recipe is on page 43 of alice's kitchen!


it is so easy to make a big batch to keep on hand in the fridge for last minute salads, steamed veggies, and it's heavenly on sliced avocados.

garlic-lemon dressing is also an essential complement to kafta, drizzled on just after grilling or broiling. here's a sneak preview of my next blog post featuring this lebanese grilled lamb dish—something i hadn't made or tasted for many years as a vegetarian, that has become a renewed favorite.


sahtein and happy cooking!





Saturday, April 16, 2011

lenten lemony lentil soup with chard—tasting at food front coop today!


the lenten season in spring transports me to a sublime lebanon culinary experience written about in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking on my visit to a village downhill from Douma and its' Greek Orthodox monastery. it was Lent, and after meeting a Romanian painter painting the monastery walls, i was invited to join a few sisters, a monk, and the painter for lunch. tasty and simply nourishing lentil soup made without olive oil to comply with the strict traditions of Greek Orthodox lenten fasting. 

upon my return to portland, i adapted my mother's fabulous lentil soup recipe to replicate the lemony lentil soup with chard tasted in Kfar Hilda, Lebanon.



making this soup takes me to to the memory of my beloved grandmother, Dalal, whom i helped sift meditatively through dry lentils on a tray plucking out undiscovered small rocks or pebbles before washing them. 

the onions are chopped fine, the garlic minced, and these with the lentils go into a soup pot with water or vegetable stock. brought to a boil, and simmered for an hour, the seasonings are added and the soup further cooked until the lentils are done. 

in my kitchen, a new fatima graces the table where i chop the spinach or chard greens added in the last 5 minutes of cooking the soup, along with some lemon juice.

in seasons and regions where lemons are unavailable, citric acid makes a perfect and healthy substitute, derived from citrus fruits. mama alice had this on hand in the kitchen for whenever lemons on our tree weren't ripe, in season, or available.

the asparagus will be chopped and sauteed or steamed along with spinach and chard greens dressed with our superb garlic, lemon and olive oil, dressing that enlivens any spring, summer, or fall vegetable.

alice's kitchen cookbook has 3 recipes for lentil soups, each of them a favorite. a few years ago while visiting detroit, i tasted lentil soup in one of the prolific and fantastic lebanese restaurants that was yellow. after much searching, i discovered the red lentils from 

if you're in northwest portland today between 5 and 8 pm, stop by food front co-op for a taste! signing alice's kitchen, too! will post some photos of the event and finished product. stay tuned!

happy cooking and spring blessings!

Saturday, March 26, 2011

lent...the season for fabulous vegetarian lebanese recipes from alice's kitchen!



naturally, i want to begin with lentils—a staple of lebanese lenten cuisine. in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking, there's 3 fabulous lentil soup recipes, which i love. but my childhood favorite lentil dish was mjaddrah with salata. i imagined the lentil and rice mixture topped with carmelized onions as the earth, piled with salad that were the vegetables growing out of the earth. indeed, i began gardening with mama at an early age. it's in my blood and the creative mind engaged equally early.
mama's version of mjaddrah is a mixture of two parts lentils to one part rice. mama used faster cooking white rice, which is added later in the cooking process; naturally, i use brown rice probably not so available in the 1950s yet more nutritious. its' longer cooking time allows the convenience of adding it to cook for the same amount of time as the lentils.

in the writing of alice's kitchen with mama, i learned there are two variations of mjaddrah: one made with equal proportions of rice and lentils, called mdardarah; the other is mjaddrah with bulgur or burghul instead of rice. last week having dinner at a portland lebanese restaurant, hoda's with some friends: two jewish and one lebanese—my friend haitham—commented that their mjaddrah was not like his family dish, which was made with bulgar rather than with rice. hoda's mjaddrah looks more like mdardarah (equal portions of rice and lentils, and much drier than mama's more porridge-like mjaddrah). typical to the many discrepancies from region to region and village to village, this does not surprise me. nonetheless, hoda's version was thoroughly enjoyed.

since these words all sound similar, here's a summary of the way i understand it, according to Alice:
mjaddarah—2 parts lentils to 1 part rice, cooked to a porridge consistency
mdardarah—1 part lentils to 1 part rice, cooked to a dry, rice-like consistency
mjaddarah ma burghul—2 parts lentils to 1 part bulgur, cooked to a porridge consistency


the recipe for mjaddrah is on page 132 of alice's kitchen, along with recipes for the other two variations. if you want to wing it, mjaddrah is one of the easiest recipes in the cookbook, and one of the most popular. 

begin by sauteing one large chopped onion in a big pot with olive oil. when the onion is translucent and slightly golden, stir in the rinsed, soaked, and drained lentils and brown rice. after a few minutes, add water or stock to cover by at least one inch, a bit of sea salt, and a dash of cayenne pepper. place lid on the pot and bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer for approximately an hour and a half, stirring occasionally, and adding water if it begins to dry out.


while this is cooking, chop 3 large onions for what most people would agree is the most scrumptious part of the mjaddrah—the topping of carmelized onions. these are easy to make, and require a lot more onions than you'd imagine, since they cook down to one third of their original volume, and because people tend to scoop them off the top, once they've tasted them. so it's best to have enough!


the onions are simply cut julienne and sauteed in olive oil initially with high heat to get them started, reducing the heat and stirring frequently so they don't burn. instead they become deliciously golden and sweet, and their natural sugars become carmelized. my well-seasoned cast iron pan is a favorite for this.


amazing how much one medium onion shrinks in volume through the carmelizing saute.

this combination of legumes, grains, and vegetables is colorful, nutritious, and enjoyable all year long, from lenten season, through summer, when mjaddrah is yummy served leftover either cold or at room temperature, stuffed into a pita pocket, or simply with salata, and through fall and winter. a favorite for vegans, vegetarians, and those who are carnivorous and merely want a refreshing change.


for salata, i've recently embraced using organic canned chopped tomatoes (drained) in my winter and spring salads instead of buying tomatoes out of season, grown in another climate zone, and shipped north. canned tomatoes are picked and processed when summer-ripened, and are far tastier than winter or hothouse types. and according to my dear lebanese foodie friend, samar, processed tomatoes have more lycopene available, so they provide more antioxidants that our bodies more readily absorb. here's a good article summarizing the lycopene tomato story.

another winter variation to our salata which typically includes cucumbers in season is the addition of extra chopped celery, providing crunch without the sogginess of out of season cucumbers, and the benefit of cooking sustainably.

one mjaddrah story i will never forget is on one of my trips to douma, as a vegetarian, my cousin gloria invited me for ghadda, the main meal served in mediterranean style, at mid-day. she asked me—in the traditional desire to please—what i would like her to cook. i asked for mjaddrah and as much as she wanted to please me, she didn't want to make this. i practically had to beg her, as it is still one of my favorite meals. finally she agreed on the condition that i would not tell anyone what she prepared. the sweet generosity of the villagers and their desire to honor the guest is by the most elaborate meal preparation. and the truth about mjaddrah is that it is peasant food. in fact, it may be something that Jesus ate according to biblical references and food historians. and so my cousin gloria was reluctant because she felt it was too simple. happily, she indulged me with one of my most memorable meals in the village.

the delightful and uniquely memorable version of my cousin gloria's mjaddrah lies in the fact that she used tiny "french" lentils, which i had never before tasted, and her carmelized onions were tiny squares almost minced instead of julienne. sublime, simply sublime. good enough for Jesus, certainly good enough for me!

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

alice's kitchen still life by my artist friend, linda vogel!


my dear amazing collage and multi media artist friend in oakland, linda vogel, sent me this lovely still life that she recently photographed using alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking with one of mama's little ceramic ducks that she made and gave to linda on one of her visits to santa cruz.

mama loved lace and gold, grew roses, and spent a gazillion hours making art: this still life beautifully captures mama's creative and lovely spirit. thanks so much, linda!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

happy new year! started off with traditional 'amah and blessings



okay, i know it is well past january 1 and i am finally posting my new year's post!

so you can see how behind i have been! the good news is i am catching up! finally today downloaded the photos of the new year's 'amah i made and enjoyed to bless and bring in the new year...which got off to an incredibly hectic start.

in the pacific northwest, where it snowed this morning, it is still cold enough to cook and eat some comfort food: in my culture this is 'amah...whole wheat berries simmered with anise seed until tender.

served warm with golden raisins, walnuts from my walnut tree, and agave syrup to sweeten it. the simple recipe can be found in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking on page 207.


now that i've broken the ice and posted in 2011, the way is open for more! stay tuned and keep in touch!
a warm welcome to all the new followers!

blessings to you and yours in the new year! and as mama would say, happy cooking!

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

douma recipe featured in beirut restaurant!

a recipe from douma my family village is featured on the website of a beirut restaurant, semsom...it's a fun layout


with a recipe of a lebanese mountain version of gnocchi, maakroun, or macaroni!! in writing this, the history of this word begins to intrigue me—did the arabs get it from the italians or vice versa. so after only a few minutes of internet research, i find this from noted food historian and writer clifford wright, excerpted from an article which you can read in its entirety by clicking on the link:

The origin of macaroni lies not with the Etruscans, Greeks, Romans, or Chinese, but apparently with the Arabs.

so we can add this to the long list of arab inventions, which food-wise includes the following words with at least arabic and persian origins: sugar, coffee, alcohol, artichoke, alfalfa, apricot, candy, caraway, jasmine, lemon, orange, safflower, saffron, spinach, sumac, syrup, sherbet, sorbet, soda, tahini, tarragon, and tuna. and of course the ice cream cone is purported to have been invented by an arab-american, as described by ideafinder.com:

Syrian immigrant Ernest Hamwi rolled up some of his “zalabia” (a waffle-like pastry) from his pastry cart into cones and gave them to Arnold Fornachou, who had run out of paper dishes to serve his ice cream. Word spread quickly though the Fair and many other vendors began selling ice cream in waffle cones. These edible ice cream cones became so popular that everyone wanted to take credit for there invention and many did.

the lebanese restaurant semsom is located in beirut and is franchising out into the wider world! here are the current locations:

Lebanon
Sassine plaza, Ashrafieh, Lebanon
Tel: +961 (0)1 - 20 04 32
+961 (0)3 - 46 66 46
CityMall, Seaside, Level 1, Dora, Lebanon
Tel: +961 (0)1 - 87 37 25
+961 (0)3 20 26 29
Le Mall, Sin El-Fil, 1st Floor
KSA
Bin Suaiman Center,Prince Sultan Road
Jeddah, KSA
Qatar
Opening soon!

here's your chance to open a lebanese restaurant, with a great philosophy of combining lebanese traditional with lebanese modern cuisine!

semsom also had a recipe competition open until january 31, 2011 for your best lebanese recipe!
do you, my beloved readers, think i should submit one from alice's kitchen?
if so, let me hear from you and which one do you suggest?!

also, please let me know how you like this diversion with words from my more typical blog entries!
with love and holiday blessings,
linda

Monday, November 29, 2010

mhammara—lebanese grilled red pepper and walnut dip—divine holiday appetizer straight from lebanon!


i discovered luscious mhammara dip on a bus tour of monasteries my mother and i took with the Greek Orthodox church choir from our village of douma in 1998. before sunrise we joined the initially quiet small group on the bus as they picked us up at Hotel Douma where we were staying...the lovely circular building in the area at the edge of town that used to be called snobar, or the pine tree grove, which you can see still surround the hotel in the photo. the hotel reminds me of the capitol records building in hollywood near where i grew up. 


okay, the douma hotel is not as tall! but they are both built in the round! and it is a great place to stay when visiting douma!

the aroma of arabic coffee perfumed the bus, and a darbuka was tucked silently next to a young man in the front of the bus. mama and i were strategically placed next to the driver, who, once the sun energized the group was clapping with both hands (not on the steering wheel) to accompany the singing and drumming, while manuevering beirut traffic, which as we descended from the mountains, thickened much like the bottom of the arabic coffee pot into a dense mass.

and this is how the day began. mama soon joined in the singing in arabic of the lebanese national anthem, which she remembered from her childhood!

we stopped for ghadda, the main meal of the day at 1 or 2 in the afternoon, at an amazing restaurant in the mountains, after having visited two wonderful monasteries full of icons and mosaics and relics. the long table spread with a beautiful feast of appetizers included mhammara, mounds of fresh vegetables, dozens of little plates, and entrees that were mouth-watering delicious!

the mhammara dip wasn't something i grew up with that mama made, but i fell in love with it, and when i returned to the states, devised a recipe which is in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking on page 175 to replicate what i remembered and loved. my recipe is a simple and quick one, that is a hit whenever served—and is quickly made up in my mini food processor.

the basic ingredients are sweet red peppers, walnuts, sesame seeds, garlic, salt, lemon juice, pomegranate molasses (dibbis rimman)—a favorite of northern lebanese for tartness in fattoush instead of lemon juice, some chili paste, and bread crumbs to absorb the juices if it's too runny.



starting out with fresh red peppers, just like the eggplant in baba ghannouj—see my previous post—these beauties get roasted right over the flame until the skin is blackened, which is a much quicker process than for the eggplants. immediately they're popped into a paper bag that is closed to retain the flavors and to slowly cool. while they are on the stove top charring, i add chopped garlic and salt to the processor and pulse them together.


next, i carefully and easily peel all of the charred skin and discard, rinsing the pepper under cool water to remove any bits of black. i then cut out and remove the stem, membrane, and seeds. any liquid inside the pepper can be added to the food processor, along with fresh garlic, salt, the red peppers, walnuts, sesame seeds, lemon juice, sesame seeds, pomegranate molasses, and chili paste. 



i pulse this very quickly so as not to make a pureé, as i prefer this to be a bit on the chunky side, rather than creamy. it tastes great both ways, only a matter of preference.



garnish with a walnut half, and serve with pita chips, arabic bread, or any type of crackers!
a great complement to hommus and baba ghannouj for a holiday party!



sahtein, happy cooking, and happy holidays!



Sunday, October 31, 2010

daddy's fabulous tomato mint garlic salad!


i cannot let summer go by without presenting photos of this fabulous salad that was my father's recipe. when mama was gone on a summer afternoon, daddy would prepare this for our lunch. created only with garden-ripened tomatoes, this garlic-laden salad, spiked with fresh spearmint and a drizzling of olive oil is simple to make and exciting to taste. typically we scooped little bites of tomato salad with snippets of arabic bread, using the bread to soak up the juices.

this summer portland was so cool that my lebanese mountain tomatoes from seeds my friend josephine brought from lebanon, really didn't ripen; only the little orange sun-gold cherry tomatoes were small enough to ripen and graze on. but the farmer's market tomatoes were excellent substitutes for my home-grown mostly green tomatoes that are in the basement waiting to ripen in the dark, or are being used in soups and in plates that do not require sun-drenched flavor that only sun-ripened tomatoes provide.

the few ingredients for this salad are: tomatoes, spearmint, garlic mashed into a puree with salt, and olive oil. of course, you'll find the complete recipe in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking on page 64.


just mix everything together and chill for about 15 minutes before serving, allowing the flavors to meld and the juices to marinate it all. serve with pita bread or french bread. excellent left over, should you have any left!


although my father did not spend much time in the kitchen, when he did it was great!

Thursday, September 9, 2010

baba ghannouj! secret to the best ever!



baba ghannouj—the fabulous lebanese eggplant dip that my little doggie is named after—can be sublime or it can be dull. to make it sublime, there is a secret which is, of course, shared in my cookbook, alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking

here are some photos that show the secret for fool-proof-to-live-for baba ghannouj! people who have tasted our recipe swear it is the best they have ever eaten—even uttered from the mouths of those who don't like eggplant. this version has a smokiness and a garlic base that sings in your mouth!

first, we begin with one or two big, firm, and beautiful in-season eggplants; but wait till you see what we do to them!



if you have a gas stove, like i do and like mama did, the best way is to put the eggplant directly on the flame for about 15 minutes on one side and then gently turn it so as not to pierce the skin and release the juices by using two wooden spoons to hold the ends of the eggplant. three turns will char the entire eggplant and it will look like this when done and placed on a wooden cutting board to cool.



if you are not fortunate to be cooking with gas, you can broil the whole eggplant, or better yet, put it on the grill, which will achieve the same smoky result.

the next step is to butterfly or filet it like this when it has cooled enough to handle:


and carefully open it up so it looks like this:


carefully scoop out the tender eggplant with a spoon, leaving the charred shell and any bits of burned skin behind.



transfer it directly into a bowl of the food processor that already has garlic and sea salt pulsed and minced in it. pulse the eggplant well with the garlic and sea salt.


next add fresh squeezed lemon juice and tahini (sesame seed puree) and pulse.




and the last touch, a bit of dried spearmint—this addition came from fellow doumanians, the haddads, and is not something mama did, but has become my preference—mix, taste, and adjust seasoning, adding more lemon, salt, or tahini. the haddads sometimes add a bit of yogurt to theirs, and i've only done this when i needed to stretch my recipe for unexpected guests.




spread on a lovely serving dish, garnish with dried and fresh spearmint and a drizzle of olive oil! wallah!—the best baba ghannouj you've ever had! 




if you require more details, the precise recipe can be found in alice's kitchen: traditional lebanese cooking, on page 161. when i was growing up, mama didn't have a food processor and made this the traditional way, by pounding and pulverising first, the salt and garlic, and then the eggplant.

and baba ghannouj fans will be pleased to know there's an alternate version to this without the tahini, called called batinjan mtabbal. in lebanon, it is garnished with pomegranate seeds, giving it a colorful, tart edge. be sure to let me know how yours came out and which you prefer!

my computer died a couple of months ago, and i'm so delighted to finally be back to my blogs—i've been cooking and photographing all summer, so there's lots more to post! stay tuned and sahtein!