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Sharing Morocco: Exotic Flavors from My Kitchen to Yours Cookbook Review

January 13, 2015 by Renee

Lamb Tagine

Welcome to January! Hope you have all had a nice long break and are ready to start the new year. I spent most of my break going room to room in my house emptying closets and drawers, making bags for donation and bags for garbage. I purged quite a bit and still feel I could make one or two more rounds and will probably spend a few more weekends doing so. It’s amazing how much you accumulate!

In purging, I also culled my cookbook collection down to a mere 206 books. But of course, this leaves several emptyish shelves which I am sure will be filled again as so many terrific books came out last year that I am still in the process of acquiring. (But, I am trying to purge a few more in the process as well. Must keep a balance you know!)

One book that arrived recently is Ruth Barnes’ Sharing Morocco: Exotic Flavors from My Kitchen to Yours.  The title is was what drew me in. I love Moroccan food and hoped that this book would guide me in making traditional fare at home.  Like so many home cooks, the author, Ruth Barnes,  is a busy spouse, parent, and professional who cannot spend all day in the kitchen preparing complicated meals. Her goal was to make the cuisine accessible to the home cook. In the book she shares tips and techniques for preparing Moroccan classics like bastilla, lamb with apricots and prunes (my re-creation above), and chicken with preserved lemons, as well as more familiar dishes like baba-ganoush, baklava, and kebabs.

The recipes have been quite simplified and she identifies several common ingredient substitutes and breaks down the complex spice combinations so often found in Moroccan cuisine into manageable formulas. What is left are such easy recipes that anyone can make these dishes in their own home.

I made the Lamb Tagine with Apricots and Prunes. It’s a fairly quick “stew” that doesn’t require a lot of preparation but figure about 2 hours and 15 minutes total cooking time-so it’s better for a weekend dinner than a midweek meal.  I hardly expected the kids to like the flavors but was pleasantly surprised when they all did- even my pickiest eater. While not so pretty to photograph, the dish tasted very good and I would make it again. I served it with a side of Israeli Couscous that was cooked in beef broth with sauteed onion.

Lamb Tagine with Apricots and Prunes
 
Print
Cook time
2 hours 15 mins
Total time
2 hours 15 mins
 
Author: Ruth Barnes in Sharing Morocco
Cuisine: Moroccan
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
  • 3 tbs. olive oil
  • 3 lbs boneless leg of lamb, trimmed and cut into 1 inch cubes
  • 1 large yellow onion, chopped
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 2 tsp freshly grated ginger
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • ½ bunch cilantro, chopped
  • 1 tsp salt
  • ½ teaspoon pepper
  • 1½ cups low sodium beef broth
  • 3 tbs honey
  • 1 cup dried apricots
  • 1 cup dried, pitted prunes
  • 1 tbs sesame seeds, for garnish
  • ½ cup walnut halves, for garnish
Method
  1. In a cooking tagine or Dutch oven, heat the olive oil and brown the lamb on all sides. Remove the lamb to a platter.
  2. Saute the onion for about 5 minutes until they begin to soften. Return the meat to the pan and add the cinnamon, ginger, turmeric cumin, cilantro, salt and pepper. Continue cooking for 2 minutes.
  3. Add the beef broth. Lower the heat, cover, and simmer 1 hour 15 minutes.
  4. Stir in the honey, apricots, and prunes and cook for a further 15 minutes.
  5. Remove the lamb ad fruit from the tagine and place on a serving tagine or platter. Spoon the sauce over the meat and fruit.
  6. Garnish with the walnut halves and sesame seeds.
3.2.2885

I would consider this book to be a good entry level experience to the flavors of Morocco and one that would fit any home cook just learning about Moroccan foods.  You can buy it here on Amazon:

Ruth Barnes Sharing Morocco

 

Disclosure: Thank you so much to the Lisa Ekus Group for sending me this copy of  Sharing Morocco: Exotic Flavors from My Kitchen to Yours by Ruth Barnes. Recipe reprinted with permission. 

Filed Under: Eat, Cookbooks, Meats Tagged With: Cookbook Review, Lamb, Moroccan

Mediterranean Vegetarian Feasts by Aglaia Kremezi

November 29, 2014 by Renee

Mediterranean Vegetarian Feasts
Mediterranean Vegetarian Feasts may be Aglaia Kremezi’s best cookbook yet. Or, at least it’s my favorite! I’ve been taking this book to bed with me each night this week, devouring every word and making lists of ingredients to add to my pantry and recipes to try.

The book, a collection of simple, fresh vegetarian dishes comes from Aglaia’s home kitchen on the island of Kea and features beautifully shot photos by one of my favorite photographers, Penny De Los Santos. I love looking through the pages and seeing familiar dishes we made, places we visited and people that I met during my weeklong stay on Kea at the culinary school run by Aglaia and her husband, Costas. It brought back many wonderful memories.

A few weeks ago I was honored to be invited to Aglaia’s book launch luncheon at Bustan, a pan-Mediterranean restaurant here in NYC. It was so lovely to see her again.  The chef, Israeli native Efraim (Efi) Nahon, recreated several dishes from Mediterranean Vegetarian Feasts as well as introduced us to some items on their menu. It was a truly fabulous meal.

Bustan Menu

Bustan

Bustan Lunch

Aglaia tells us that she is not really a vegetarian but she ate very little meat growing up as it was saved for once or twice a week and for special occasions due to its price and availability. She mainly ate vegetables that were grown in her family’s garden. These recipes that she shares are the same ones she grew up with. They aren’t new, faddish or in style. They are the traditional, regional dishes that have been around for years and they correspond to the healthy, vegetarian cooking that is now popular.

The book provides detailed ingredient descriptions and preparation techniques that will make the most of your garden or farmers’ market fare so there will be as little waste as possible. She also provides wonderful head notes with stories about each recipe and alternative variations for several. There are even menus to help you plan seasonal dishes and an extensive sourcing listing. It’s an invaluable resource for Mediterranean cooking.

At Bustan, one of the dishes we tried was the Pseudo- Moussaka with Spicy Tomato Sauce, Walnuts and Feta. This dish, with the warm rich flavors is perfectly balanced with sweet and spice. I loved this flavorful dish and I had to made this recipe first. It was just as good as the one at the restaurant and although there are several steps to follow, it was quite easy and now that I’ve made it once, it can be easily recreated. Half of the walnuts could easily be replaced with chopped meat to make a non-vegetarian version.

Medirerranean Vege Feasts -1

Medirerranean Vege Feasts -3

I also made the Roasted Cauliflower with Musa’s Zahter Relish. Roasting cauliflower is such a great technique as it maintains a slight crunch and intensifies the nutty flavor. The Zahter Relish is like a dressing or sauce that you drizzle over the cooked vegetable. It’s incredibly bright and savory and we decided it was quite like a Chimichurri sauce and would also be delicious over a steak and other grilled or roasted vegetables. Aglaia also suggests adding a bit of white wine to it and serving it over fish. How wonderfully versatile!

Medirerranean Vege Feasts -4

For the mezze course, I made the Grilled Feta, Tomato, and Pepper with Olive Oil and Oregano (Bouyourdi) and the Garlic Spread known as Skordalia. I was quite generous with the garlic cloves and certainly warded off evil for at least several hours. They made great accompaniments to the roasted red pepper sauce, olives, and fresh hunks of country bread that we ate with them.

Medirerranean Vege Feasts -7

Medirerranean Vege Feasts -6

For lunch on Thanksgiving day, I also made the Crispy Cheese Pie (Lazy Woman’s Pie) a variation to the cheese pie made by Balkan women in their wood ovens. We needed something while cooking the traditional fare and this was a quick and easy preparation of feta, ricotta and herbs in a phyllo crust. It’s such a great lunch that I’ve frozen half to take slices with me to work next week with a side of salad greens.

Lazy Womens Pie- Crispy Cheese Pie

There are so many more recipes in the book that I am looking forward to making. Some, I’ve made before, like the Flourless Almond Cookies from Kea and the Spinach and Cheese Pie and a version of the Stuffed Summer Vegetables with Rice, Farro and Pine Nuts. But there are so many that I need to try. I’m excited for each of them.

I see Mediterranean Vegetarian Feasts as one of my favorite cookbooks and plan to use it often and I’d recommend it to anyone vegetarian or not.

 

*This post includes my affiliate links to Amazon where you may buy the book.

Filed Under: Kitchen Sink, Cookbooks Tagged With: Aglaia Kremezi, Cookbook, Vegan, Vegetarian

New Design and a Clean Slate

November 28, 2014 by Renee

StudioPress Premium WordPress Themes: Foodie Theme
 
Welcome to the newly redesigned Kitchen Conundrum!  As with many things, sometimes things happen. Some are intentional, while some are not, and sometimes you’ve just been thinking about something and then something occurs and that just jumpstarts the whole process.  That’s exactly what happened with this redesign.

I had full intentions of posting every day for NaBloPoMo. (Really!) That was until I tried to log in to the Dashboard after returning from Spain only to find that my password had been changed and my site hacked.  I had two kinds of security on my site too. WTH? How did this happen?

I may never know.  But I ended up having to pay GoDaddy to roll back my site as far as they could (just 30 days) because as luck would have it, my backups were corrupted as well.  Of course the roll back was not far enough back either and I ended up cleaning up a lot, A LOT! of bad code. After working into the wee hours many nights in a row and having to get up for work, I gave up and paid Sucuri to clean up the rest of the code and to monitor my site. They also provide several other services and if you’ve ever had your site hacked, they would be a good service to look into.  In addition, I added Wordfence Premium security, and implemented country blocking. Sorry, too many hacking attempts from IP addresses in certain countries that shall remain nameless.

So, it’s been four years since I started this blog and it has seen a few changes over the years but I thought it was time for a real facelift.  Not just a color change. So while I was working on the cleanup (which included removing a lot of old files from my hosting account too), I decided it was time to do just that.

I moved from my original Thesis theme, where every change took a long time with hooks and more HTML and CSS than should have been necessary to this new lighter framework, Genesis, which still requires a little bit of coding here and there but it’s not nearly as labor intensive.  I’ve incorporated a new, sleeker design (Foodie Pro by Shay Bocks) that boasts a lot less clutter both on the inside and on the outside.  I’ve worked on Genesis sites before and I really like how user friendly their framework is. It does still have some quirks but there are easy “workarounds” and they have excellent support.

The site is still a work in progress,  I hope to have the gallery page up and running this week and clean up any errant pages and posts that still may be a bit out of whack (like photos that didn’t transfer with posts). Over all though, it’s essentially done. A few tweaks here and there but nothing earth shattering or too time consuming.

But with all that out nearly of the way, the best part is that I have several posts coming up featuring some amazing cookbooks I’ve read this year and recipes I’ve created.  Not to mention, places I’ve been. It’s been quite a busy year! I hope you will stop back and catch up.

 

*These are affliate links. I only recommend them because I actually use them.

 

Filed Under: Kitchen Sink

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