Friday, March 27, 2009

Tagine Pots anda Preserved Lemon Recipe

I have been thinking about tagine cooking today: a quick google search came up with a cool site to buy a clay tagine pot and~! a recipe for preserved lemons. I know I'm cheating with content but you know what- 1. I want to plug another small business and 2. today was my first day off in 8 weeks. I'm taking DH to a seizure follow up with a (new) neurologist tomorrow morning so maybe we will get some good news.. :) Yea EEG results were normal!


tagine pot by le creuset, cast iron
Title: Preserved Lemons
Categories: Condiments, Fruits,
Harned 1994, Moroccan, Preserving
Yield: 1 batch
You will need :
5 Lemons
1/4 c Salt; more if desired
1 Cinnamon stick
3 Cloves
5 To 6 coriander seeds
3 To 4 black peppercorns
1 Bay leaf
Freshly squeezed lemon juice -- if necessary

The author writes: “Preserved lemons, sold loose in the souks, are one of the indispensable ingredients of Moroccan cooking, used in fragrant lamb and vegetables tagines, recipes for chicken with lemons and olives, and salads.

Their unique pickled taste and special silken texture cannot be duplicated with fresh lemon or lime juice, despite what some food writers have said. In Morocco they are made with a mixture of fragrant-skinned doqq and tart boussera lemons, but I have had excellent luck with American lemons from Florida and California.”

Moroccan Jews have a slightly different procedure for pickling, which involves the use of olive oil, but this recipe, which includes optional herbs (in the manner of Safi), will produce a true Moroccan preserved-lemon taste.
“The important thing in preserving lemons is to be certain they are completely covered with salted lemon juice. With my recipe you can use the lemon juice over and over again. (As a matter of fact, I keep a jar of used pickling juice in the kitchen, and when I make Bloody Marys or salad dressings and have a half lemon left over, I toss it into the jar and let it marinate with the rest.) Use wooden utensils to remove lemons as needed.”

“Sometimes you will see a sort of lacy, white substance clinging to preserved lemons in their jar; it is perfectly harmless, but should be rinsed off for aesthetic reasons just before the lemons are used. Preserved lemons are rinsed, in any case, to rid them of their salty taste. Cook with both pulps and rinds, if desired.”
To make preserved lemons: If you wish to soften the peel, soak the lemons in lukewarm water for 3 days, changing the water daily.
Quarter the lemons from the top to within 1/2″ of the bottom, sprinkle salt on the exposed flesh, and then reshape the fruit.

Place 1 tb. salt on the bottom of a sterilized one-pint mason jar. Pack in the lemons and push them down, adding more salt, and the optional spices, between layers. Press the lemons down to release their juices and to make room for the remaining lemons. (If the juice released from the squashed fruit does not cover them, add freshly squeezed lemon juice - not chemically produced lemon juice and not water.*)

Leave some air space before sealing the jar. Let the lemons ripen in a warm place, shaking the jar each day to distribute the salt and juice. Let ripen for 30 days.

To use, rinse the lemons, as needed, under running water, removing and discarding the pulp, if desired - and there is no need to refrigerate after opening.

Preserved lemons will keep up to a year, and the pickling juice can be used two or three times over the course of a year.

According to the late Michael Field, the way to extract the maximum amount of juice from a lemon is to boil it in water for 2 or 3 minutes and allow it to cool before squeezing.
Cathy's note: I thought that the Safi spice combination sounded so good that I included it all as part of Wolfert's recipe although, when she wrote it, she only called for the lemons and salt as the main ingredients and made the rest of the ingredients optional.
From _Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco_ by Paula Wolfert. New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc., 1987. Pp. 30-32. ISBN 0-06-091396-7.



Tagines are Moroccan slow-cooked meat, fruit & vegetable dishes which are almost invariably made with lamb. Although not authentic, beef can be used as a substitute and turns out great as well.

I found a great informational Asian recipe/history site- this is how 'I' travel :) Fantastic Asian Recipes this link is to Burmese cooking.

I had the great good fortune of eating Burmese food several times in the few years I lived in LA. A friend ( Hello Phil!) whose family had fled Burma were able to bring with them their family cook.

I find it so interesting that when people flee, they choose to bring the food preparer- the essence of life rather than the 'Benz. And for the most part the nurturing food preparer is willing to follow to continue the mission.
COOL TOOL This is an interesting site called nutribase.com that gives short definitions of cooking ingredients.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Real Life hard times means supporting Online Friends

Life can pull big punches that's for sure. I didn't know wren but I am glad her people reached out to her online friends- yes they are 'real'. I was thinking of this issue last night at 2:30 AM while reading my DH's e-mail mailwasher preview subject lines.

I was working on Sunday at the store and our 11 year old, who was home with D at about 2:30 in the afternoon. "Mom come home something bad is happening" well the 10 minute ride took 5, and I found out that all the neighbors on our 7 house lane were not home but a friend across the way would meet me at the house. Got home- 911 at once. poor darling DH was having a seizure. he had 2 more on the way in the ambulance.

my darling again almost killed by medications he didn't want to take. So an idea -~ yes thankfully I keep having them.

But seriously since my DH has 'the worst side effects' to medications, his DNA or blood should be worth at least as much as his bill in research $-?

Please support single payer insurance. I'd love to ski again but have no insurance

Friday, March 6, 2009

Still happy about the Seattle Foodbuzz dinner at Brasa on Sunday night

Escalivada
(Roasted eggplant, onion, and pepper with olive oil)
Catalonians eat this dish as a first course or as an accompaniment to meats. The special characteristic of these roasted vegetables is their smoky flavor, since orthodoxy demands roasting them over embers (the Catalan word escalivar means 'to roast over ashes or embers'). I have prepared them in the oven with good results.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Seattle Foodbuzz dinner

I am very pleased that I will be meeting 15 other Seattle area Foodbuzzers at Brasa this Sunday March 8th. We are going to meet in the lounge for Happy Hour and have half price items from the Brasa Bar menu > I for one am looking forward to a Spanish feast! Paella, Spanish Fried Squid, and Cataplana Fish Stew are what I want to try.


A Cataplana cooking vessel is pictured to the left. The term Cataplana is used both as the name of the dish served as well as the pot it is made in akin to tagine or tandoor. The Cataplana is shaped like a giant clamshell and you can see from the picture it has clamps at the sides to hold it shut during cooking.
From the recipes I looked at you use any combination of fresh seafood that you like- fish, squids and shellfish. Then follow the basic directions below.
Cover the bottom of the cataplana with onions, garlic, and olive oil
Add green and red peppers and tomato
Arrange the fish in the cataplana and add more onions and garlic on top
Add parsley, cilantro, tomato sauce, salt and pepper
Cut one pre cooked potato into four and add to the ingredients already in the cataplana
Add aromatic herbs and olive oil, white and port wines to the stew
Finally, close the cataplana and put on the stove for 15 to 20 minutes -Enjoy!

The fine people at Foodbuzz are going to contribute $50 per person toward the dinner, which is amazing! Then all 16 of us are going to review, review, review! Thank you Foodbuzz!

Frommer's Review
Chef Tamara Murphy
, much lauded over the years by national food magazines, is one of Seattle's finest chefs, and here, at her attractive Belltown restaurant, she has introduced many a Seattleite to the joys of Mediterranean cuisine. Because the space is equally divided between lounge and dining room, and because it serves dinner until midnight on weekends, Brasa attracts a wide range of diners -- from foodies out for an evening of haute cuisine and fine wine to revelers looking for a late-night bite. If you've got a few dinner companions, start with a variety of tapas; then, for entrees, stick to the wood-fired and grilled items and you won't go wrong.