T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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249.1 | Groats is groats | FURILO::BLESSLEY | | Mon Apr 14 1986 14:39 | 8 |
| I think you could get by with a variety of "generic Middle-eastern"
dishes - hummous (various spellings!), falafel, almost anything
made with lentils :-), couscous. Check you're local library if you're
in a town with over 10K people in it - there's usually a wide variety
of cookbooks. Sorry - no recipies at hand.
-Scott
|
249.4 | Couscous | STAR::TOPAZ | Zippy | Wed Apr 16 1986 13:55 | 30 |
| OK, I'll give my couscous recipe. (Couscous is a grain that is
almost like a combination of rice and pasta; the term 'couscous'
usually refers to a lamb or hen stew that is served over the cooked
couscous grain.):
Take 5-7 lbs. of lean, cut-up stewing lamb (or 3-5 lbs. if it's off
the bone), and brown it in oil in a dutch oven or similar heavy
stewing pan. When the lamb is browned, add 3/4 of a bottle of red
wine, and let the wine boil down for about 4-5 minutes until you can't
smell alcohol any more. Then add 1 small turnip (cut in 2" pieces),
two handfuls of dry (unroasted) chick peas, 3 or 4 large carrots cut
into 2"-pieces), a large white onion (sliced), 3 Tb. tomato paste, 6
cloves of garlic (crushed), a lot of cayenne pepper, and enough canned
beef bouillon to cover (about 3 cans). Bring to the simmer, cover,
and cook on top of the stove for 3 or 4 (or more) hours.
A half-hour before serving, ladle some of the stew liquid into two
small saucepans. In one saucepan, add 3 or 4 tsp. of cayenne pepper,
and let that simmer; this is called "le pique". In the other
saucepan, add 1 and 1/2 handfuls of raisins; this is called "the
raisins". In yet another saucepan, cook the couscous (grain)
according to the directions on the box.
To serve, pile the cooked couscous grain in the center of a large
(mammoth) serving plate, and put the lamb stew all around the cooked
grain. Put le pique and the raisins in smaller bowls. In Morocco,
people will eat all this stuff with their fingers; I prefer forks
and knives.
--Don
|
249.5 | Chicken Puffs | MERIDN::OTTO | | Mon Apr 21 1986 17:57 | 11 |
| Hi. I once went to a Moroccan dinner party. We ate on the floor,
without silverware! The food included MidEastern chicken (stuffed
with raisins, tomatoes, apricots), lamb, spinich salad. My favorite
was a chicken puff: puff pastry filled with cooked diced chicken,
cinnamon, onion, raw egg, and chopped almonds. This was topped
with sugar and baked until the dough was done. It sounds rather
disgusting (with the onion and sugar), but it was delicious!
Have a great time at the party and please pass on the recipes!
Robin
|
249.6 | Harissa | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 18:15 | 20 |
| I know the party is over by now, but I found a bunch of Moroccan
and other North African recipes - for next time?
Harissa
Harissa is a hot pepper sauce of North African origin. It is
traditionally used to accompany couscous.
2 T crushed dried chili peppers or cayenne
2 t ground cumin
2 t caraway seeds
2 cloves garlic
1 t salt
Combine the ingredients ans grind them together in a pestle and
morar, blender, or food processor. Store the harissa in a clean
dry jar. Use directly from the jar when adding to the couscous
stew. To make harissa sauce for serving in a small dish as an
accompaniment to the finished couscous, cook the harissa with 2-3
T olive oil over a low heat for 5 minutes.
|
249.7 | Anchovy or Sardine Fingers | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 18:18 | 18 |
| Anchovy or Sardine Fingers
Serves 4 to 6.
This North African dish is quick to prepare and tasty. Serve it
as part of a selection of mezze (hors d'oeuvres).
1 T finely chopped fesh mint or parsley
1/2 t grated nutmeg
1 small can anchovies or sardines in oil
fingers of toasted bread
freshly ground black pepper to taste
black olives, halved
Combine the mint or parsley and the nutmeg. Drain the oil from
the fish and then roll them individually in the parsley or mint
and nutmeg mixture. Place them on the fingers of toast, sprinkle
with pepper, and finally garnish with olives.
|
249.8 | Lentil Soup (Shourabat Adas) | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 18:22 | 25 |
| Lentil Soup (Shourabat Adas)
Serves 6.
2 c lentils (red, brown, or green), washed
5 c stock or water
1 medium onion, finely diced
1 medium carrot, sliced
1 t ground cumin
juice of 1 lemon
salt and black pepper
2 T olive oil
2 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
1 large onion, thinly sliced
lemon wedges
Put lentils in a heavy pot with the water or stock, add the diced
onion and carrot, and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat, cover,
and simmer for 1 hour or until the lentils are very soft. Blend
the mixture or push it through a sieve. Return it to the pot and
add cumin, lemon juice, and salt and pepper to taste. Return to
a gentle simmer for 15 minutes. Heat the oil in a frying pan and
saute the garlic for a minute or two. Add the onion and fry until
it is golden brown. Serve the soup in bowls and top each one with
a portion of the browned onions and garlic. Serve a side dish of
lemon edges for extra lemon juice if needed.
|
249.9 | Harira | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 18:36 | 77 |
| Harira
Harira is a Moroccan soup made from mutton or lamb, vegetables,
chickpeas, and grains. It is eaten all year round but traditionally
each day of Ramadan at sunset. Ramadan, the ninth month of the
Islamic calendar, is a time when all practicing Moslems fast from
sunrise to sunset and the first meal of the day needs to be
substantial. For devout Moslems the harira is prepared without
meat during Ramadan, and a recipe for meatless chickpea harira follows
this one.
Harira with Lamb and Chicken
serves 8 to 10
4 T olive or semsame oil or butter
1 lb stewing lamb or mutton, cut into large cubes
1 small boiling chicken, cut into 8 pieces
2 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
2 medium onions, finely chopped
1/2 c chickpeas, soaked overnight and drained, or 8-oz can cooked
chickpeas, drained
8 c water or stock
1/2 t each: turmeric, powdered ginger, coriander seeds, and cinnamon
salt and black pepper to taste
1 lb ripe tomatoes, quartered
1/2 c lentils, washed
2 T finely chopped parsley
1/4 c rice, washed
2 beaten eggs
juice of 1 lemon
lemon wedges
cayenne or hot pepper sauce
In a large heavy frying pan heat the il or butter and lightly brown
the lamb or mutton cubes on all sides. Transfer them to a large
pan and repeat for the chicken pieces, garlic, and onions. Add
the chickpeas and water or stock to the pan. Stir in the spices,
salt, pepper, tomatoes, and lentils. Bring to a boil, cover, reduce
the heat, and simmer for 40 minutes. Add the parsley and rice and
cook a further 20 minutes. Remove the chicken pieces from the pan.
Skin them, separate the meat from the bones, and put the meat back
in the pot. Adjust the seasoning and bring to a boil again. Reduce
the heat and set to simmer. Whisk the beaten eggs and lemon juice
together and slowly whisk it into the soup to form strands of egg.
Serve the soup immediately with lemon wedges and cayenne or hot
pepper sauce for those who like hot dishes.
Chick-Pea Harira
serves 6 to 8.
1 1/4 c chick-peas, soaked overnight and drained
1 diced medium onion
1/4 c butter or vegetable oil
1 small bunch parsley, finely chopped
1/2 t turmeric or saffron
1 t ground cinnamon
salt and black pepper
1/2 c rice, washed
3 T flour
2 eggs, lightly beaten (optional)
juice of 1 lemon
Put the chickpeas, onion, butter or oil, parsley, turmeric or saffron,
and cinnamon ingredients into a heavy pot and stir over a medium
heat for 3-4 minutes. Add 8 c water and bring to aboil. Cover,
reduce the heat, and simmer until the checkpeas are cooked (about
1 hour). Season to taste with salt and pepper and add the rice.
Return to a boil, reduce the eat, and simmer until the rice is
cooked (about 25-30 minutes). Now, beat the flour and 3/4 c water
into a smooth paste and stir into the soup. Continue cooking, stirring
occasionally, for a further 15 minutes and then remove the soup
from the heat. Adjust the seasoning, add water if needed, and,
if you wish, stir in the lightly beaten eggs, which will form strands
and thicken the soup. Add the lemon juice and leave the soup to
stand for a few minutes or until the egg is cooked.
|
249.10 | Fried Egg Pastries (Brik) | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 18:40 | 22 |
| Fried Egg Pastries (Brik)
4 sheets filo pastry (buy it frozen)
4 T butter, melted
4 small eggs
1 small onion, finely diced
1 T finely chopped parsley
salt and black pepper
oil for deep frying
lemon quarters
Brush each sheet of filo pastry with melted butter and fold it into
a 5-inch square. Break one egg into the center of each square and
sprinkle over it some onion, parsley, and salt and pepper to taste.
Fold one corner of the square to the other to form a triangle and
seal the edges. Use more melted butter if needed to get a good
seal. Repeat for each sheet of filo pastry. Heat the oil to 400
oF and deep fry the pastries one at a time, turning once, until
golden brown (about 2-3 minutes). Drain on absorbent paper and
serve with wedges of lemon.
The pastries may also be shallow fried in a heavy frying pan.
|
249.13 | Tagines | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 19:05 | 67 |
| Tagines
Lamb and Paricot Tagine
serves 4
4 T butter
2 lb lamb, cut into 2 inch cubes (you can also use chicken, or a
mixture)
2 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
1/2 t turmeric or saffron
1/2 t ground coriander
1/2 t ground cumin
1/4 t groun ginger
salt and black pepper
cayenne (1/4-1/2 t for mild seasoning, 3/4-1 t for hot)
2 medium onions, fonely sliced
1 c dried whole apricots, soaked overnight
juice of 1 lemon
Melt the butter in a heavy saucepan and add the meat. Cook, stirring,
over moderate heat until the meat is browned on all sides. Stir
in the garlic and spices, and season to taste with salt, pepper,
and cayenne. Cook a further five minutes and add half the onion,
the water the apricots were soaked in (but NOT the apricots), and
enough further water to cover the meat. Bring to a boil, reduce
the heat, cover, and simmer for 1 1/2 hours or until the meat is
tender. After 45 minutes add the remaining onion. Add more water
as needed, but the sauce at the end of the cooking period should
be thick. When the meat is tender add the apricots or other fruit
and continue cooking until the fruit is soft but not disintegrating.
Adjust the seasoning if necessary.
Kofta (Meatball) and Vegetable Tagine
serves 4 to 5
1 lb lean lamb or beef, finely ground
1 small onion, finely minced
2 T finely chopped parsley
1 T finely chopped fresh mint or 1 t dried mint
1/4 t cayenne
1/2 t ground cinnamon
1/2 t groun cumin
salt and black pepper
4 T butter
2 medium zucchini, thickly sliced
2 medium potatoes, peeled and cut into large cubes
1 1/4 c cooked chickpeas or other beans
2 large tomatoes, skinned and quartered
4 eggs (optional)
Combine the meat, onion, parsley, mint, spices, salt, and pepper
in a blender or food processor and mix to a smooth paste, or do
it by hand with the back of a wooden spon. Form the mixture into
1-inch diameter balls. Melt the butter in a large heavy frying
pan and saute the meatballs until they are nicely browned all over.
Add the vegetables and enough water to just cover. Season to taste
with salt and pepper and bring to the boil. Reduce the heat, cover,
and simmer until the meatballs and vegetables are tender and the
liquid reduced to a good thickness. Remove the pan lid to thicken
the sauce if necessary.
If you like eggs, break them carefully and separaetely over the
top of the meatballs and vegetables and ook gently until they are
set.
|
249.14 | Roasted Lamb Moroccan Style | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 19:27 | 21 |
| Roasted Lamb Moroccan Style
Serves 6
(veal may be used instead of lamb)
3-4 lb shoulder of lamb, boned, trimmed of excess fat
1 lemon halved
salt and black pepper
1 t paprika
2 t ground coriander
1 t ground cumin
2 cloves garlic, put throgh a garlic press
4 T butter, softened
Preheat the oven to 350 oF. Open the shoulder up and rub both sides
with the lemon halved. Sprinkle with salt and pepper all over.
Combine the paprika, coriander, cumin, garlic, and butter and mix
into a paste. Rub this into the meat. Tie up the shoulder, and
bake it uncovered in a shallow baking dish in the preheated oven
for 1 1/2 hours or until the meat is tender and well browned.
|
249.15 | Lamb with Prunes | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 07 1986 19:31 | 26 |
| Lamb with Prunes
serves 4
serve with rice
2 T butter or olive oil
1 1/2 lb lamb, cube
1 medium onion, sliced
3 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
1/2 t turmeric or saffron
1 cinnamon stick broken into 1-inch lengths or 1 t ground cinnamon
salt and black pepper to taste
1 T flour
water or stock
1 1/2 c prunes, soaked in water and pitted
Heat the butter or oil in a heavy pan and brown the lamb cubes all
over. Remove the lamb to a plate and set aside. Fry the onion
and garlic in the same pan in the juices and fat left by the meat
until lightly browned. Add the turmeric or saffron, cinnamon, and
seasoning, stir well, and saute for a few minutes. Stir in the
flour and cook a little longer. Slowly mix in 2 1/2 c water or
stock, return the meat to the pan, bring to a boil, reduce heat,
and adjust the seasoning. Cover and simmer for 1 hour or until
the lamb is nearly tender. Add the prunes, cover, and simmer for
a further 10 minutes.
|
249.16 | Lamb with Lemon Juice | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 08 1986 19:22 | 26 |
| Lamb with Lemon Juice
Serves 4. Serve with rice and salad.
4 T olive oil
2 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
1/2 t ground saffron or turmeric
1 t ground coriander
pinch of ginger
1 1/2 lb lean lamb, cubed
1 medium onion, chopped
2 lemons, quartered
salt and black pepper
1/2 c olives (optional)
Combine the oil, garlic, saffron or turmeric, coriander, and ginger
and stir the lamb in the mixture until each piece is coated. Transfer
the whole to a heavy pan and just cover with water. Add the onion
and lemon, season to taste with salt and pepper, and bring to a
boil. Reduce the heat, cover, and simmer for 1 hour or until the
lamb is tender. Remove the lamb to a plate with a perforated spoon.
Reduce the sauce to a thickness of your liking. In the meantime,
cover the olives (if used) in cold water in a small pan and bring
to a boil. Drain and repeat the process. Put the lamb and treated
olives back in the reduced sauce and heat through, stirring. Adjust
the seasoning.
|
249.17 | Moroccan Chicken Dishes | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 08 1986 19:46 | 158 |
| Chicken
Chicken with Chick-Peas
Serves 6.
1 roasting chicken, about 3 lb
1/2 c butter or olive oil
3 medium onions, finely chopped
1/4 t cayenne
1 t turmeric
4 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
juice of 2 lemons
1 1/4 c chick-peas, soaked overnight and drained
salt and black pepper
2 T finely chopped parsley
2 T raisins (optional)
Clean the chicken inside and out with a damp cloth. Heat the butter
or oil in a large flameproof casserole dish or saucepan (big enough
to hold a whole chicken) and stir in one-third of the onions and
all of the cayenne and turmeric. Gently fry them, add the chicken,
and fry it, turning, until it is nicely yellowed all over. Add
the garlic, lemon juice, chick-peas, and enough water to just cover
the chicken. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Bring to a
boil, cover, and simmer for 1 hour or until the chicken is tender.
During the last half hour of cooking add the remaining onions,
the parsley, and the raisins. Toward the end of the cooking period,
adjust the seasoning, and if the cooking liquid is too thin, leave
the lid off the pan to reduce it. Serve with the chicken cut into
pieces and the chick-pea sauce poured over the top.
Chicken with Olives
Serves 4. Serve with couscous or rice and lemon wedges.
1 c black or green olives, or a mixture
1 chicken, about 3 lb, cut into serving pieces
1/2 c olive oil
2 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
1 small onion, finely sliced
1 t ground ginger
1/2 t turmeric
salt and black pepper to taste
juice of 2 lemons
Cover the olives with water, bring to a boil, drain, repeat, and
set aside (this reduces their bitterness). In a heavy frying pan
or casserole dish fry the chicken pices in the oil until lightly
browned on both sides. Add the garlic, onion, ginger, turmeric,
salt, and pepper, and continue frying for a further 5 minutes.
Turn and move the chicken about during this time. Add 2 c boiling
water and cover the pan or dish tightly. Simmer gently until the
chicken is nearly tender (when a skewer pushed into the chicken
meets a little resistance and draws a slightly pink juice). Remove
the lid, add the olives and lemon juice, and continue cooking uncovered
until the chicken is tender (when the skewer meets very little
resistance and the juice is clear) and the sauce is quite thick.
Spicy Stuffed Chicken Moroccan Style
Serves 6.
1 3-4 lb roasting chicken, or 2 Cornish hens, about 2 lb each
salt and black pepper
1/2 c butter
1 small onion, finely chopped
1 c rice, washed and drained
4 T chopped walnuts or almonds
4 T raisins, washed and drained
1/2 t ground ginger
1/2 t cayenne
1 t cinnamon
1/2 t nutmeg
1/2 t saffron or turmeric
2 c water or chicken stock
Pat the chicken dry with paper towels and season all over with salt
and pepper. Set aside in a cool place. Melt half the butter in
a heavy frying pan and saue the onion until it is just softened.
Stir in the rice, walnuts or almonds, and raisins and stir-fry
over a moderate heat for 2-3 minutes. Combine the spices and add
half the mixture together with half the water to the frying pan,
season to taste with salt and pepper, and mix well. Bring to a
boil, cover, reduce heat, and simmer until all the liquid is absorbed.
Meanwhile in a heavy casserole dish melt the remaining butter and
brown the whole chiken all over. Allow the rice mixture and chicken
to cool a little and then stuff the checkn and secure the openings
with skewers. Reserve any stufffing left over and serve it warmed
up with the chicken. Put the chiken into the casserole dish. Combine
the reamining water and spices and bring to a boil. Add the mixture
to the dish, cover, and simmer over a low heat for 1 1/2 hours or
until the chicken is tender. Add more water as needed.
Chicken Tagine
Serves 5-6.
1 chicken, about 3 1/2 lb, cut in pieces
2 cloves garlic, put through a garlic press
1/2 t turmeric
1/4 t ground ginger
2 T olive oil
salt and black pepper
4 T butter
2 medium onions, sliced
1 c chick-peas or other dried beans, soaked overnight, drained
1/2 t paprika
1/2 c olives (optional)
2 T chopped parsley
juice of 1 lemon
Pat the chicken pieces dry with paper towels. Combine the garlic,
turmeric, ginger, and oil and rub the mixture into the chicken.
Season the pieces with salt and pepper and set aside for 1 hour.
Put the chicken, the butter, and half the onion in a large pan
and just cover with water. Bring to a boil, add the chick-peas
and paprika, adjust the seasoning, cover, and simmer for 1 - 1 1/2
hours or until the chick-peas and chicken are almost tender. Add
more water if needed. Meanwhile cover the olives with cold water
in a saucepan and bring to aboil, drain, and repeat the process.
Add the olives, remaining onion, and parsley to the an and continue
cooking. When the chikcne is tender remove it from the pan to a
hot plate and keep warm in the oven. Reduce the sauce to a moderate
thickness. Serve the chicken with lemon juice squeezed over and
then the sauce poured over.
Chicken, Rice, and Orange Pilav
Serves 4-6
2-3 lb boiling chiken, cut into 6 pieces
salt to taste
2 medium onions, thinly sliced
1 c thinly sliced carrots
4 T butter or oil
shredded peel of 1 orange
1 t ground cardamon
1 t ground cinnamon
1/2 t turmeric or saffron
1 c long-grain rice
salt and black pepper
Put the chikcne opices in a saucepan, add 3 c water and salt, and
bring to a boil. Skim off any foam that forms, reduce the heat,
cover the pot, and simmer until the chicken pieces are almost tender
but not to the point where the meat is falling off the bone. Remove
the chicken from the pan and cur off the lean meat. Discard the
fat, skin, and bones. Reserve the stock in the pan. In a large
frying pan saute the onions and carrots in the butter or oil until
the onions start to brown. Stir in the orange peel, spices, and
rice and season with salt and pepper. Stir and cover with the contents
of the frying pan, and spread the mixture evenly. Bring 2 c of
the reserved chicken stock to a boil and pour it into the pan.
Cover and cook over a low heat for 25 minutes or until the rice
is tender and all the liquid is absorbed. Place a warm serving
dish upside down over the casserole and invert the rice and chicken
onto the serving dish.
|
249.18 | Couscous with Sweet Moroccan Sauce | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 08 1986 19:52 | 29 |
| Couscous with Sweet Moroccan Sauce
Serves 4
1/2 c butter
2 medium onions, diced
1 T cinnamon
1/2 t saffron or turmeric
1 t ground ginger
4 T pine nuts or almonds
1/2 t freshly ground black pepper
slat to taste
2/3 c sugar
1 1/2 c raisins, soaked in hot water and drained
1 lb couscous
Melt the butter in a heavy pan and saute the onion until it is just
softened. Stir in the spices, nuts, and seasoning, and cook, stirring,
for 2-3 minutes. Add 1 1/2 c water, sugar, and raisins and bring
to aboil. Reduce the heat, cover, and simmer for 25-30 minutes.
The sauce should be quite thick; if not, remove the cover and reduce
the liquid over a moderate heat. Meanwhile prepare the couscous.
Place the couscous in a large bowl and gently sitr in 2 c cold
water. Immediately drain it away and allow the wet grains to stand
for 10-15 minutes. As they swell up, rake them with your fingers
to break up any umps that form. Steam the couscous over boiling
water for 30 minutes, or until tender. Pile the cooked grains on
a serving dish, make a hoolow in the top, fill with the sauce, and
serve.
|
249.19 | Spiced Lamb and Chick-pea Casserole | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Fri May 09 1986 11:04 | 28 |
| Spiced Lamb and Chick-Pea Casserole
Serves 4.
2 T olive oil
8 oz lamb, cubed
2 medium onions, diced
1 lb ripe tomatoes, peeled and chopped, or 8 oz canned tomatoes,
chopped
1 T chopped parsley
1/2 t ground coriander
1 t ground ginger
1 t ground cinnamon
1/2 t turmeric
3/4 c chick-peas, soacked overnight, drained
3/4 c lentils, washed and drained
salt and black pepper to taste
juice of 1 lemon
2 eggs, beaten
Heat the oil in a heavy saucepan and brown the lamb on all sides.
Add the onion and lightly saute. Add to tomatoes, parsley, coriander,
ginger, cinnamon, and turmeric, stir well and cook for 1-2 minutes.
Stir in the chick-peas, add 4 c water, lentils, salt, and pepper,
and bring to a boil. Cover, reduce the heat, and simmer for 1 hour
or until all the ingredients are tender. Stir the lemon juice into
the beaten egg and gently beat the mixture into the stew with a
fork to form strands of egg. Remove the pan from the heat and serve.
|
249.21 | Eggplant-Chickpea Stew | TUDOR::ERYN | | Mon Feb 01 1988 09:01 | 24 |
| The following recipe is from a friend's middle eastern cookbook,
and it does have a middle eastern name but I can't remember what
it is. I call it eggplant-chickpea stew over couscous. Also, there
is a note in this file on morrocan food which has some more couscous
recipes.
Eggplant-Chickpea Stew:
1 eggplant,peeled and cut in 1/2" cubes 1 onion
2 Cups cooked chickpeas (or 1 can) 1-2 Tbs OLIVE oil
1 16-oz can tomatoes or equivalent in fresh, puree, or paste (I
have made it with all variations and it comes out fine).
salt and pepper
Chop onion and saute in OLIVE oil until soft (It must be real olive
oil because the flavor makes the dish, even though there isnt much).
Add peeled, chopped eggplant and a little water. Cover and cook
until eggplant is almost soft, add tomatoes and chickpeas (and salt
and pepper), cook until eggplant is done. Serve over couscous. Its
very simple but it is very good. If you are using canned tomatoes
and canned chikpeas, you probably won't need any salt. I also add
some of the cooking water or canning water from the beans.
Eryn Utz
|
249.20 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif. | Mon Feb 01 1988 21:20 | 6 |
| I stumbled across this after seeing the later note asking for cous-cous
recipes. The "puff pastry thing" in .5 is called a bourack, at
least in Algeria. Two good books are: (spelling freehand) Paula
Wolfert's Cous-Cous and Other Good Food From Morocco, and Irene
Day's The Moroccan Cookbook.
|
249.22 | another couscous recipe | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Feb 02 1988 10:28 | 38 |
| See note 249.
Here's another couscous recipe for you:
3/4 lb each zucchini, white turnips, carrots, onions
1 red or green sweet pepper
2 T oil or melted butter
1 3-1/2 lb chiken, cut into serving pieces
1/2 t ground cinnamon
1/2 t ground cumin
1/4 t turmeric
3 T honey (optional)
(salt)
pepper
1/4 c raisins
1 c drained canned chickpeans (garbanzos)
2/ 1/2 c quick-cooking couscous grain
3 T butter
Trim ends off zukes, cut into quarters lengthwise, and cut into
1 1/2 inch pieces.
Peel turnips and quarter, then cut into 1 inch pieces.
Trim and peel carrots and cut into 1 inch lengths.
Peel onion and cut into quarters, then into 1-1/2 inch cubes.
Core an dseed pepper,and cut into 1-1/2 inch squares.
Heat onion in kettle and add onion; cook 5 minutes.
Add chicken and cook until outside is not raw.
Add 5c water or broth, spices, honey, (salt), pepper; bring to a
boil and cook 15 minutes covered.
Add zucchini, turnips, carrots, pepper, raisins, and chickpenas,
and bring back to a boil. Cover and cook 15 minutes.
Meanwhiel, bring remaining water to a boil in a saucepan. Add the
grain and return to a boil. Let simmer 2 minutes, then remove from
heat. Cover and let stand 10-15 minutes. OR: follow directions
that came with the couscous.
Stir butter into grain.
Serve chicken stew (use as much of the liquid as you like) over
the grain.
Serve with harissa, if you like.
|
249.23 | Yum Yum, Cousous ou sept legumes | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Wed Feb 03 1988 10:41 | 24 |
|
I have a very similar recipe as in rep -1 but I add eggplant,
two to three chopped tomatoes, and some kind of winter squash for
veggies. I also add stew beef, lamb shoulder, and precooked hot
sausage for meats. I also prefer to precook the chicken so the
final dish isn't as greasy. Another good trick is to cook the
semoule <couscous grain> in the cooking liquid from the stew.
Semoule by the way is the right term for grain and not couscous.
Couscous is the name for the entire dish but that's a very small
point. To cook the semoule use equal measures of dry grain to
liquid. Put the semoule in a pan and add the boiling liquid cover
the pan tightly and remove from the heat. It takes about 5 minutes
to cook and fluff with a fork before serving. Remember the grain
swells about three times the dry size so use a big enough pan.
I also prefer to serve the raisins on the side but if you
do that soak them in the cooking liquid for 30min or so before
serving. I also use saffron instead of the turmeric which gives
the dish a much better flavor. Finally if you can't find or don't
feel like making the harissa use sambal thinned with alittle of
the cooking liquid. If you haven't guessed couscous is a personal
favorite of mine.
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249.24 | Here's a home-grown couscous recipe | KAHOTK::FRIDAY | | Mon Feb 22 1988 13:38 | 53 |
| We have couscous at home quite regularily and have a home-grown
recipe that we like. If you've got a LARGE clay baker try this.
We don't measure much of anything, so this is pretty "free form".
This dish makes lots of leftovers.
Soak the clay baker.
1 roasting chicken, 3-4 lbs.
Some potatoes, peeled and cut into large chunks.
Some carrots, cut into chunks (we love carrots and
so use a full bag, but you might not like them as much)
Some onions, peeled and cut into chunks (We like onions
too, and so use lots of them.)
A can of chick peas.
A can of mushrooms.
Put the chicken into the roaster, and pile the
vegetables around it. Our chicken ends up smothered,
just barely visible. Try to keep the chick peas underneath
the other veggies, as they tend to dry out a bit.
Pour a cup or two of a dry white wine over everything.
Bake covered in a 400 degree oven for about two hours.
The chicken will almost fall off the bones.
We serve this on top of couscous prepared as follows:
Remove a cup of liquid from the bottom of the clay baker
that the chicken was roasting in. Also, remove a few of the
cooked chick peas, a small amount of the onions, a chunk or
two of carrot, and a couple of small bite-sized pieces of the
baked chicken. Heat all this back to the boiling point, but
don't cook any longer than that.
Put the hot liquid (and carrot/onion/chick-pea/chicken pieces)
into a bowl and add a cup of couscous. (We use
the small boxes of couscous; is that what everyone else uses?)
Make sure that the couscous is covered by the liquid. Cover
and let it set for maybe 10 minutes.
In a frying pan melt a stick of butter. Cook the couscous
in the butter, with constant stirring. When you pour the
couscous into the pan they will be in a big clump, but the
cooking breaks them up. They're done when they kind of sag,
sort of like moist brown sugar does.
We like to mix some hot sauce with this. I suggest the cooked
red-pepper sauce (I think it's called sambal oelek), as it gives
it a real zing.
Enjoy,
Rich
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249.25 | PASTILLON RECIPE ????? | LEMAN::SCHUTTE | | Wed Apr 06 1994 05:56 | 13 |
| Recipe needed. I am looking for a Moroocon recipe
called Pastillon.
Pastillon can be sweet or savory. It is absolutely the most delicious
dish that I have eaten!
Kind regards,
Catherine
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249.26 | cooking couscous? | HPCGRP::BURTON | DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY | Fri Oct 07 1994 09:16 | 4 |
| My wife is getting ready to host a Moroccan dinner and was wondering if you can
use a sieve or steamer instead of a couscousiere to cook couscous?
Jim
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249.27 | Near East ... use pan and water? | NAPIER::HEALEY | MRO3, 297-2426 | Fri Oct 07 1994 11:01 | 5 |
| I have a box of Near East couscous and I think I can cook it normally!
I haven't tried it yet...
Karen
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249.28 | you won't need one | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Oct 07 1994 12:51 | 7 |
| You don't need to steam American-type couscous - in fact, you hardly
even need to cook it at all. You mix in boiling broth, take it off the
heat and cover it, and then fluff it up a few minutes later, and it's
all done. It's GOOD, too. I don't recall ever having had authentic
couscous, so I'm not sure how authentic it tastes.
/Charlotte
|
249.29 | WW coucous takes a little more H2O | ISLNDS::WHITMORE | | Wed Oct 12 1994 11:11 | 12 |
| .28 is correct. If you're using whole grain couscous, you need to add
a little more water to the pot and let it stand a little while longer
(and I've found that its better not to add any oil/butter to the broth
when cooking the whole grain couscous). Normal couscous is as easy as
following the directions on the Near East package.
FYI: Its a heck of a lot cheaper to buy your coucous in bulk than in
the little near east boxes. But I cut out the side of the near east
box and leave it in my couscous jar so I remember the ration of water
to couscous!
Dana
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249.30 | Moroccan Cookbook | BIS1::GOULDEN | | Wed Oct 19 1994 10:26 | 10 |
| Does anyone know the name of a good Moroccan Cookbook?
I have looked in the book shops here but they don't stock them so I will
probably have to order one, and since I hate ordering a book I haven't
seen, I was wondering if someone had any suggestions.
Thanks,
Peter
P.S. (ISBN number might be useful if you know it)
|