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Middle East and North Africa

Recipe

4 medium leeks, cleaned and cut in large pieces

1 medium carrot, peeled and cut in medium coins

¼ cup olive oil + 2 tablespoons olive oil

2 cup water

Juice from ½ lemon

½ tsp lemon zest

2 tsp flour

1 tsp sugar

1 scant tsp salt

3 tablespoons freekeh or brown rice, rinsed

1 tsp thyme

2 tablespoons parsley, roughly chopped

Heat up the ¼ cup of olive oil in a heavy bottomed pot. Add the vegetables and sweat for a few minutes. Add the rest of the
ingredients and bring to a simmer. Simmer, partially covered, for half an hour. Remove from heat, stir in the 2 tablespoons olive oil, bring
to room temperature, add the thyme and parsley. Cool in the refrigerator.

Add the thyme and parsley. 

Serve as an appetizer.

These leeks are an adaption of the Greek and Turkish way of cooking vegetables with a lot of olive oil, some water, flour, and a hint of lemon. Leeks are typically prepared with a few carrots and rice as well. Most vegetables can follow this method of preparation, and also have their side kick. Artichokes prepared in this way, for example, always have peas involved. Keep an eye out this Spring for more of these olive oil vegetable dishes.
Recipe

This is a simple, yet luxurious compote featuring fresh figs. We used Black Mission figs for this recipe, but you could also try it with Brown Turkey or Calimyrna. Figs are incredibly healthy and full of fiber and important minerals, such as iron. Actually, what we think of as one fruit, is actually millions of tiny little fruits (each miniscule pulp inside is actually a little fruit in and of its own). This healthy spread is great for a myriad of settings, so take a look at the serving suggestions below.
The cooking time is about 30 minutes start to finish.

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 small shallot, thinly sliced horizontally
2 cups fresh figs, quartered
1/4 cup water
pinch of salt
pinch of ground cumin
1 star anise
1 scant tablespoon organic honey

Heat up the olive oil in a small saucepan. Add the shallot and cook them slowly until they cook through, then gain color and caramelize.
Add the figs to the pan and stir with a wooden spoon. Pour in the water and seasonings and keep cooking until the figs soften and start to break down. Make sure to keep stirring so that the fruit does not get stuck in the pan.
Cook until the water is gone and the mixture has broken down and melded together into a compote.
Stir in the honey and cook for a few more minutes. Remove from the heat and season to taste. Remove the anise and serve.
Makes about 1 cup.

Serving Ideas:
Serve over slices of fresh mozzarella di bufala (pictured above).
Serve on crackers with fine cheeses, such as manchego, idiazabal, and asiago.
Serve on crackers with smoked bluefish.
Use as a spread on sandwiches with coldcuts.
Eat with yogurt for a light dessert.

Recipe

This is a simple appetizer using only 3 ingredients. It is inspired by Turkish cuisine, in which ripe, sweet melons are often paired with salty cheeses. Fresh basil provides color and a slight accent. According to where you live, adjust the ingredients: if you do not have a local feta, another type of crumbly cheese will do. Feel free to experiment with different varieties of heirloom melons as well.

The amounts will depend on how many people you will want to serve, so you will have to use your eye and intuition for this recipe, but below are some approximate amounts.

1 cantaloupe
¼ cup feta cheese
3 basil leaves

Slice the cantaloupe in half, and scoop out the seeds. Slice the halves lengthwise into thin pieces. 1-2 pieces per person will suffice.
Slice the rind off with a sharp knife and discard.
Arrange the melon slices on a serving platter and pour over any juice that they released when they were sliced.
Crumble the cheese over the slices.
Stack the basil leaves and roll up like a cigar. Thinly slice across to create a chiffonade.
Garnish the melon slices with the basil and serve.
Serves 4 people with 2 slices each, or 8 with 1 slice each.

It is nice to have recipes on hand that just depend on simple combinations of quality ingredients. This Summer appetizer is just that. Ripe cantaloupe, soft and crumbly feta cheese, and sweet basil go together so well that you do not need to do anything fancy. Next time you are summer entertaining and looking for something simple, try this easy appetizer inspired by Turkish cooking.
Blog entry

After a wonderful week in Istanbul, my family traveled south to the town of Kucukkuyu on the Aegean coast. I say we traveled south, but in order to get here, we actually drove west around the Marmara Sea on the European side, and then took a ferry across the Dardanelles to arrive here. I had learned about the strategic importance of the Dardanelle Straits when I was in high school, and about Russia’s efforts to take them from Turkey. I guess back then I could not quite grasp how important this body of water really was. But being here now, and traveling through the narrow waterway, that opens up the door to Asia like a key, I have a newfound wonder at Turkey’s geographical position.
Anyway, as I have already mentioned, we are settled in a small seaside village called Kuçukkuyu. My cousins have an apartment here, which they have owned for more than 10 years. Rumor has it that this area has the best food in Turkey, due to its abundance of fresh produce. The area is well known for its olives, and there are groves covering the landscape. It is also famous for its tomatoes, and we have managed to eat them at every meal. We eat them sliced for breakfast, along with cucumbers, olives, and cheese. They are a permanent fixture at lunch and dinner in çoban salatasi, a “Shepard” salad, with chopped tomato, zucchini, and peppers, as well as a myriad of other stews and sauces. The area is also famous for their Ezine cheese, a strong-flavored goats milk cheese, which is served in triangular slices at every meal.
One thing that I like about Turkish cuisine is the combination of flavors and textures that balance each other out: salty and sweet, crunchy and soft, etc. For example, watermelon is often eaten here combined with white cheese. It is a very simple preparation: watermelon slices are served next to slices of the salty semi- soft cheese. Not only does it combine salty and sweet, but also crisp and smooth. Many people have been putting out recipes of this type of dish, as it has become a popular combination also in the States. I just read this one for Watermelon Salad with Feta or Cotija at Simply Recipes. But don't worry about needing any additional ingredients- do like the Turks do: simple slices of watermelon and white (feta) cheese side by side.

July 14, 2008   |   1 comments
Tags: Europe, Middle East and North Africa
Blog entry

I have fallen a bit behind in my blog entries, but my vacation is going by so quickly, that it is hard to stay on top of everything. Last night we went to a concert at Aya Eirene, a Byzantine church in Topkapi Palace that was never converted to a mosque. I did not get to visit the church, so my knowledge of its history is limited. What I do know is that it is called Aya Eirene, which means Holy Peace, and it was never converted to a mosque, because the mother of Mehmet the Conquerer was Greek, so he left it for her. It is also the only Byzantine church with its apex and nave fully intact. Please correct me if I am wrong about any of that information. We saw Rufus Wainwright perform in this Byzantine church, as part of the Istanbul Caz (Jazz) Festival, sponsored by the Istanbul Culture Foundation. It is not so often that one gets to sit in a fully intact Byzantine church inside the grounds of Topkapi Palace, and listen to beautiful music. Anyway, afterwards we went over to the Seven Hills hotel, which is in between the Aya Sophia and the Blue Mosque, but set back in the quieter streets of the area. They have a lovely rooftop restaurant, and the view of the crescent moon shining between the minarets of the Blue Mosque, complete with birds flying in the moonlight, was one of the most spectacular views I have ever had. We ordered a few mezes (eggplant for me of course!), and drank raki. The food was simple and delicious, but it was the view that made that meal memorable. During the day the Sultanahmet neighborhood is crammed with tourists and shop owners trying to lure you to see their goods, but at around 6-7 o'clock in the evening, locals go out to the cafes and play backgammon and drink tea. It is so pleasant to be in that neighborhood of the evening, enjoying the monuments in the peace and quiet.
The night before I had dragged my family across the Bosphorous to Kadikoy, where we ate at Ciya, a restaurant whose chef I have been reading about for a few years. Musa Dagdeviren travels around Turkey gathering recipes from different regions (usually learning from home cooks), in order to compose his interesting menu. I knew that it was going to be great when a giant puffed up bread arrived at the table, inflated to make it resemble a blow fish, covered with black and tan sesame seeds. We went inside and put together a little plate of meze: sea vegetables, smoked eggplant in yogurt, wheat in yogurt, humus, muhamara (red peppers with walnuts), and lahmacun (ground lamb baked on a very thin dough). For my main dish I had little meatballs stewed with cherries in a light tomato broth. The rest of my family ordered lamb kebabs of different sorts, and I think that everyone was pleased. Turks know how to cook meat. And to my relief, it is never covered in some heavy sauce, or paired with a pound of mashed potatoes. The meat itself is of good, natural quality, and the juices are enough of a flavoring.
For dessert we ordered a variety of the offerings on the menu. There were tomatoes, which were candied with sugar and lemon, and actually tasted quite like guava paste. We had pistachio baklava, and a semolina cake filled with pistachio, served with a meringue cream. But the most interesting dessert was the candied walnuts. It was made with young whole walnuts, including the shell, which were cooked in a sugar syrup along with other aromatics. It basically was a dark ball, that once cut through the center, had a light brown outline of what we recognized as the walnut.
Getting to the Asian side in the early evening can take a long time with traffic, but Istanbul has a long history without the bridges connecting the two continents, and has used ferry boats in some form or another for too long for me to even guess. Crossing over the Bosphorous at sunset, facing the Golden Horn, it was hard to imagine that my daily routine involves being crammed on the 6 train listening to the monotonous voice of woman telling people to stand clear of the closing doors, rather than the echoes of the call to prayer that ring out across the rolling sea.
I put up some photos from these experiences on flickr, so please check them out: http://www.flickr.com/photos/kitchencaravan/2651675069/in/photostream/

July 9, 2008   |   1 comments
Tags: Europe, Middle East and North Africa
Blog entry

Last night we all went over to the Bostanci neighborhood on the Asian side of Istanbul for a family dinner at my cousin's parents' house. I love the Asian side of Istanbul. It's residential streets are full of trees, and there are plenty of nice shops and cafes. My cousin's mother had been cooking for days, and laid out an amazing spread. Turkish meatballs, baked eggplant with yogurt, rice, dolma (stuffed grape leaves), and artichokes filled with potatoes, peas, and dill. The artichoke dish is one of the family favorites, and Nese buys the artichokes months ahead of time and freezes them to make sure she will have enough for when we arrive. The bottoms are slowly cooked with potatoes, peas and dill, and the combination is just divine. I was telling my cousins yesterday that I hated dill until I came to Turkey for the first time. I think that before I had eaten Turkish food, my exposure to dill had been limited to seeing it as a garnish on cured fish. In Turkey, it is paired with fresh fish and shrimp, salads, and vegetables such as artichoke, of which it brings out the best of flavors. After the main courses we had ekmek kedayif, which is a sort of kedayif, but made with "bread" instead of the shredded burma dough. It is insanely sweet, soaked with a thick lemony syrup, which is cut by the thick kaymak cream that you put are to put on top. There was also baklava and fresh cherries and apricots, which are in full season. Eating in a Turkish home is the best gastronomic experience one can have here, and I am lucky enough to have many opportunities like this one.

July 7, 2008   |   0 comments
Tags: Europe, Middle East and North Africa
Blog entry

My family is on a vacation in Turkey. We will be in Istanbul for a week, before heading to the Aegean coastal town of Kucukkuyu. Tonight we celebrated my mother's birthday on the top of the Marmara Pera Hotel at their Mitla restaurant. The dinner was great, but the one piece of important cultural information that I would like to focus on for this entry is the fact that whenever you order a drink in Istanbul, they always bring you fresh fruit and/or nuts. This might seem like a trivial detail, but it means so much more in a broader gastronomical sense, at least to me. The nuts that you eat in Turkey actually come from Turkey. They are lightly roasted, lightly salted, and always fresh. That means lots of crunch and flavor, without the added grease and salt so common of our nut tins. I have always associated hazelnuts with chocolate and desserts, but here, munching on the plain hazelnuts that hail from the Black Sea Coast is such a delight. The fruit is an even nicer touch. The succulent apricots, cherries, and watermelon slices that are brought out with drinks are gorgeous. I have never understood why in the United States bars never serve free (and healthy!!) snacks with cocktails. If you are lucky, you might get a stale potato chip or pretzel, but not fresh nuts and fruit. I feel like Istanbul is so much more civilized than New York in this respect. (I am recalling an evening at a very "in" bar in which the only food was grilled burgers with guacamole). Or maybe it is the fact that when I enjoyed my cocktail, I was looking out over the Golden Horn at some of the most precious pieces of architecture in history. Until tomorrow. . .

July 5, 2008   |   0 comments
Tags: Europe, Middle East and North Africa
Recipe

Tahini is a wonderful addition to salad dressings, because it gives them a creamy, nutty flavor. We use dried cherries to bring out a natural sweetness.

2 tablespoons tahini (sesame seed paste)
2 lemons, juiced (about ¼ cup)
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons dried cherries

Blend all of the ingredients together until smooth.
Serve with spring greens and peas.

Tahini is a wonderful addition to salad dressings, because it gives them a creamy, nutty flavor. We use dried cherries to bring out a natural sweetness.
Recipe

Koshari is the national dish of Egypt. Brown rice, thin noodles, and elbow macaroni are combined in a dish, to which a lightly spiced tomato broth is added. We top it with sprouted beans, lentils, and fried onions.

¾ cup brown rice
1 ½ cups water
1 cup elbow macaroni
2 T olive oil
3 T onion, small dice
1 garlic clove
¼ tsp cumin
¼ tsp Aleppo pepper (optional)
1 28 oz can of whole peeled tomatoes (Muir Glen is our fave)
½ cup sprouted lentils (or mix of lentils with other small beans)
½ cup sprouted chickpeas
Garnish: ¼ cup onion, thinly sliced + 3 T olive oil

To cook the brown rice: heat up the 1 ½ cups of water in a pot and bring to a boil. Add the rice, bring the water back to a boil, then turn down the heat, cover, and simmer until all of the water has been absorbed and the rice is cooked through.

In another large pot cook the elbow macaroni according to the instructions. Drain and reserve.

In a third pot, heat up the olive oil. Gently sauté the onion in the olive oil until translucent, then add the garlic. Add the cumin and Aleppo Pepper (or a mild Paprika if you can’t find Aleppo), and stir.
Add the whole peeled tomatoes to the pot, leaving their liquid in the can, and gently break them up with your wooden spoon.
Cook the tomatoes down for about 10 minutes. Blend the sauce with the reserved liquid and then return it to the pot and simmer until it is the right consistency and has a nice flavor. It should not be as thick as tomato sauce.

For the garnish, gently fry the onion in the olive oil until dark and caramelized.
Drain on a plate lined with towel.

To serve, combine the rice and pasta in a bowl. Ladle over some of the tomato sauce, and then top with the sprouted lentils and chickpeas. Top with the fried garlic.

Alternatively, you can place each component on the table and allow the diners to put together their own dish.

Koshari is the national dish of Egypt. Brown rice, thin noodles, and elbow macaroni are combined in a dish, to which a lightly spiced tomato broth is added. We top it with sprouted beans, lentils, and fried onions.
Recipe

1 ½ cups sprouted chickpeas
1 garlic clove
¼ c. olive oil
¼ c. water
lemon juice
Salt
Paprika
Cumin
1 tsp. toasted sesame seeds

Start grinding the garlic in a mini blender until finely chopped. Add the chickpeas, and continue to grind, adding the olive oil, water, and lemon juice. Once it forms a puree, season with salt, paprika, and cumin. Finally, stir in the sesame seeds and serve.

Makes a lively dip or sandwich filler!