Showing posts with label harissa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harissa. Show all posts

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Loubia with Lamb Kefta

Andreas and Michelle went to Iceland just before we went to Italy so we haven't seen them in a hot minute. Our schedules finally allowed us to get together to see their absolutely stunning pictures. Iceland is very near the top of our list of places to visit in the next couple of years. I can hardly wait.

Loubia with Lamb Kefta
Andreas likes to cook and likes to pick my brain to learn new things. This time, he wanted to learn about spicing and I believe he mentioned Moroccan food specifically. At the same time, Ann seemed fixated on lamb and white beans, so I decided to do a bean stew common to the Maghreb, a dish called various things in various locales.

Loubia is a stew of white beans that I have encountered often. I know it in French as tagine d'haricots blancs or cassoulet algérienne. I also know that Andreas loves my cassoulet. And I also know that because it requires hours in the oven, it is not a dish that I can show him how to make right before dinner.

So what to do?

I decided keep on with the slow-cooked beans, but show him how to make two condiments for the beans, a red sauce and a green sauce. The red sauce was my version of harissa (red chiles, cumin, coriander, fennel, caraway, cinnamon, salt, garlic, lemon juice, and olive oil). The green sauce was my version of chermoula, an analog of chimichurri (parsley, cilantro, lemon zest, coriander, fennel, salt, garlic, lemon juice, olive oil). Chermoula is a typical condiment for fish, but I love it with meat in the same way that I love gremolata, salsa verde, or chimichurri with meat.

Long-cooked and mild dishes such as this loubia can often benefit from a zesty, acidic sauce to help wake up the taste buds. Also helpful is a bright green salad with an acidic dressing, such as the one I made from arugula, julienne of apple and fennel, and a tangy vinaigrette made with Sherry vinegar.

Lamb Kefta in the Classic Shape

First thing in the morning, I put my beans that had soaked overnight in lightly salted water on to par-cook for 90 minutes. I used my old stand-by beans, Steuben Yellow Eye beans from Rancho Gordo. Into the pot, I tossed a large sprig each of rosemary, sage, and thyme which would subtly flavor the beans.

Meanwhile, I got busy making the kefta (kofta, kafta, kufta: your choice). Because I was going to serve the beans and kefta with two assertive sauces, I did not highly season the lamb as I often do. The seasonings are a lot of garlic, a decent bit of a mild paprika, some salt, and a bit of coriander, cumin, and dried chile flakes. All the seasonings I mixed into a slurry with a couple of eggs and some white wine (definitely a no-no in the Arab world; substitute any stock or cream). Then I added a couple pounds of ground lamb and a half a cup of rolled oats.

I typically do add some type of starch to my meatballs and meatloaf to loosen the texture of the cooked product so that it is not super dense. I have used panko, panade (bread soaked in cream), cooked rice, and raw rolled oats all to success. Because I always have them on hand, I use rolled oats most frequently, a bonus if you have guests who are gluten-free.

After mixing the forcemeat (with the best tool of all, my hands), I put it in the refrigerator to settle and so that the oats could start to absorb the liquid and bind the mixture. When the beans were just about at the end of their 90-minute par-cook, I shaped the kefta, diced a leek and a large carrot, and minced half a bulb of garlic.

Then it was standard cassoulet procedure from there: brown the meat (the kefta), cook the aromatic vegetables in the same pan scraping up all the brown bits (the fond) from the bottom of the pan, drain the beans and save the cooking liquid for soup, mix the vegetables with the drained beans and season, put a layer of beans in the cocotte, add the meats, top with the remaining beans, fill with a deeply-flavored meat stock to just cover the beans, and finally bake in a slow oven, replenishing the stock as necessary and punching down the crust every hour or so.

While I Cooked, Ann Set the Table and Chose Utensils and Plates
I wanted to have something to snack on while the girls chatted and Andreas and I made the harissa and chermoula. I decided on a baked feta to take advantage of the oven since it would be going anyway in finishing the loubia. This couldn't be easier to make by whipping up a roasted red pepper sauce in the blender and layering it under and over slices of feta.

The roasted red pepper sauce is a pint jar of roasted red peppers, a couple tablespoons of my homemade harissa, a couple tablespoons of the intense umami-bomb estratto di pomodoro (Sicilian tomato paste), a couple cloves of garlic (minced), and a touch of salt. Ten seconds of whirring in the blender and it's done.

I also cut up some olives (Castelvetrano) and toasted some pine nuts for garnish. I stole a bit of parsley from the bunch that I picked for chermoula as an additional garnish.

Baked Feta in Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
Olives, Pine Nuts, and Parsley for Garnish
A Couple of Italian Girls

Loubia with Lamb Kefta
Loubia is Generally Saucier; I Made This Just Like Cassoulet
Arugula Salad with Apples, Fennel, and Sherry Vinaigrette
Loubia with Harissa and Chermoula

Friday, August 25, 2023

Morocco via Marseilles

It's not a big secret that I love the food of North Africa; at the restaurant, my tasting menus often included dishes from or in homage to Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco. I find the use of spices fascinating and second only in the world to Indian cooking, another love of mine. North African cuisine also relies heavily on my favorite style of cooking, the braise, in the form of its ubiquitous tagines. Tagines are stews, essentially, cooked in the flat earthenware dish with the conical lid which gave its name to the dish.

Ann and Michelle
And I am a big student and lover of French provincial cooking, the more rustic dishes of the countryside versus the haute cuisine of Paris and the Michelin-starred restaurants. Provence, as a region, really excites my palate with its broadly Mediterranean cuisine, a far cry from the more pan-European cuisine of Paris and the north. I have fond memories of eating exciting and for me at the time, novel, dishes in Aix, Nice, Cassis, and Marseille.

What do these two regions on opposite sides of the bright sunny blue Mediterranean have to do with each other? A lot, as it turns out. People and their food have been coming and going across the water from continent to continent for millennia. And as people and cultures have mixed, each side of the sea has influenced the other in innumerable ways. The second language of the North African nations is French and the second cuisine of the south of France is North African, interpreted through the French lens. Highly spiced tajines, for example, are widespread along the Mediterranean coast of France.

I am always truly fascinated how distinct cuisines meet across political boundaries to inform each other. Think of Tex-Mex or the Polish influence in Pittsburgh and the Rust Belt. The mixing of African and French cooking to form une cuisine afro-française delights me.

We had new friends Andreas and Michelle over for dinner last evening and in the process of brainstorming the menu, Ann was pushing in the Moroccan direction. This naturally had me thinking of a tajine. And then I remembered a subtly spiced chicken tajine that I had once in Provence spiced merely with cumin, garlic, and olives. I would make a version of this tajine but naturally, I would make it my own, adding both saffron and preserved lemons to the dish in my food memory for a subtle, yet complex dish.

What to serve with a tajine? Well, naturally, one would make a very plain couscous to soak up all the delicious braising juices. But a dietary restriction precluded any gluten in the dinner. Ann suggested (she's very good at helping me to focus in my menu-making) panisse, the delightful chickpea French fry replacements from Marseille, the major French port on the Med. Why not panisse? It and other chickpea flour dishes (such as socca from Nice) are so common to Provence though they are likely to originate from another close neighbor, Italy.

That left one more dish for the menu, a side salad. Chopped tomato salads are common across the entire Mediterranean from North Africa to the Levant and back through Turkey, Greece, Croatia, Slovenia, Italy, and France. Everyone has a simple salad of chopped tomatoes simply dressed. I thought to make a Moroccan version spiced with cumin until a sachet of fennel pollen arrived in the mail the afternoon of our dinner. Fennel pollen would make a tremendous substitute for cumin. And with that, the menu was largely set: panisses, tomato salad, and chicken and olive tajine.

Any time we have people over for dinner for the first time, I like to set a menu of dishes that I can execute in advance so that I can spend my time socializing rather than cooking. We save guest participation dinners for those who like to cook for future gatherings. However, Ann conveyed to me that Andreas was really into cooking or at least seeing some cooking, to pick the mind of a chef, and so Ann and I did minimal prep beforehand and left much of the actual cooking for after Andreas and Michelle arrived.

Cooking Chickpea Flour for Panisses
Bartender Annie Pre-Mixing a Batch of  Cocktails
About a week before the dinner, I started the process of preserving a lemon, cutting it into lengthwise quarters, coating it in salt mixed with a touch of cinnamon and thyme, and covering the whole with some kalamata olive brine (rather than lemon juice). I used to keep big batches of preserved lemons in the refrigerator, but they take up too much space, so now I just make them to order. They will cure fairly well in a week on the counter, but two weeks is better.

As an aside, we used to make preserved lemons (and dozens of other pickles) in huge containers at the restaurant and pray that the health inspector would not come in during the two-week period that we left them on the counter before refrigerating them. Health inspectors are notoriously bad at overlooking food items that are traditionally not refrigerated: butter, eggs, cured hams, cheeses, and all manner of pickles including sauerkraut and preserved lemons.

Also, I made a batch of harissa, the super spicy chile and spice paste that is ever so common in North Africa, especially Tunisia. I did not know when I made the batch what I would use it for other than as a condiment to accompany the tajine. I have made my own harissa for so long now that I can barely remember the process of reading through recipes for it and trying a bunch of commercial versions to come up with my own version.

One thing I don't like in a lot of commercial versions is a dependence on tomatoes or tomato paste in the sauce. If it's supposed to be a chile sauce, why use tomato as a filler? And so my version came over time to be a mixture of crushed red ripe jalapeños (easily available in the US), smoked paprika, spicy Hungarian paprika, garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, a pinch of cinnamon, and spices. For my spices, I add texture to the sauce by leaving half of the spices whole. My spices include roughly equal parts of fennel, caraway, and cumin. The whole spices soften after about a week while all the flavors marry in the refrigerator. In my not so humble opinion, my harissa beats any that I have ever tasted.

Later in the week when talking with Ann about the menu, she clarified for me that her idea was to serve the panisse as a first course rather than as a couscous replacement with the main course. I loved that and immediately thought that we needed a dipping sauce for the crunchy sticks of cooked chickpea flour. Out of seemingly nowhere, the idea of harissa aïoli jumped into my mind and so the sauce issue and how I would use the harissa were settled.

Early yesterday morning, I ground a bunch of cumin and chopped a lot of garlic which I mixed with olive oil to make a paste. I then rubbed this paste into a batch of chicken thighs and put them in the refrigerator to marinate all day until needed at dinner time. Next, I pounded out a couple of cloves of garlic into a paste in my big green granite mortar and made a batch of plain aïoli that I flavored with a bunch of harissa to give a spicy sauce the color of Russian dressing.

After that, I made a batch of batter for the panisses by whisking water, salt, and olive oil into chickpea flour, bringing it a boil while stirring, then cooking over low heat while stirring constantly for ten minutes. Finally, I would spread the super thick batter into a greased dish to cool to room temperature on the counter. My basic recipe is roughly 250g of chickpea flour to a liter of water with a teaspoon of Kosher salt and a drizzle of olive oil. This is the perfect amount to put into a 9"x9" brownie pan.

In the afternoon, Ann mixed up a bunch of her Oaxacan Old Fashioneds (reposado tequila, mezcal, bitters, and agave nectar). She also rimmed four coupes with smoked salt, meaning that all she had to do when Andreas and Michelle arrived was to chill the drinks and strain into the cups. 

Panisse with Harissa Aïoli
When our guests arrived, I fired two frying pans on the cooktop, one for browning the chicken and one for frying the panisse. While the first batch of chicken was browning, I flipped the panisse cake onto my cutting board and cut it into fingers which Andreas and I fried in olive oil to crispy goodness.

While everyone was enjoying dipping these crunchy fingers into the spicy aïoli, I drained the excess oil from the chicken pan and added diced onion, preserved lemon, and saffron. The onions cooked until translucent at which point I added both green and black olives, both pitted, and moistened the mixture with a bit of chicken stock. Once the sauce was boiling rapidly, I poured it over the chicken which went into a 400F oven, covered, until the chicken was tender, about an hour.

Star of the Show: Tomato Salad
Between sips of wine and while the chicken was cooking, I made a quick tomato salad. It is so hard to get decent tomatoes in this part of Oregon, so I rely on grape tomatoes year round. They aren't awesome, but they aren't bad either. After splitting the tomatoes in half, I minced a quarter of a red onion and a big handful of Italian parsley from the farmers market. These I mixed into the salad with the juice of a lemon, some olive oil, salt, black pepper, and a big sprinkle of fennel pollen.

Fennel pollen is something that I used to use frequently at the restaurant, mainly by sprinkling it over a finished dish. There is something special about a big piece of roasted Striped Bass garnished with a slug of great olive oil, a grating of lemon zest, a sprinkle of coarse salt, and a sprinkle of fennel pollen.

Fennel pollen is exactly what it sounds, the dried pollen from fennel plants created by harvesting fennel blooms, letting them dry, and then shaking them to release the pollen. Fennel pollen is wickedly expensive but its unique and inimitable flavor makes it so worth the price. And a very little goes a long way as it is extremely flavorful. At first taste, the flavor is clearly of fennel, like fennel seed. But unlike fennel seed, the flavor is stronger, deeper, richer and finishes with a delightful fruitiness. Get you some today and play with it. You are guaranteed to fall in love with it as much as Ann and I have.

I had not set out to create a salad that would upstage every other thing that we ate or drank, but that was the happy result of substituting fennel pollen for cumin. Everyone was blown away by this simple salad. I will never forget it. The combination of fennel pollen and tomatoes yields a result that is far, far greater than the sum of the two parts. Happy, happy belly!

Chicken and Olive Tagine
Once the chicken was tender, I pulled it out of the oven and placed it on the stovetop where I boiled it rapidly to evaporate and concentrate the braising liquid. The result as you see in the photo above was as delicious as it was simple. To recap, the chicken was marinated in cumin and garlic, browned, and mixed with onions cooked in olive oil with saffron and preserved lemon to which I added green and black olives and chicken stock.

Ann, Andreas, Michelle

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Ras el Hanout

During my tenure as a restaurant owner and chef of a fine dining restaurant, I used to get all kinds of trade publications in the mail. Today in the age of digital magazines, how weird does that sound? Although I always blazed my own trail as a chef, those magazines kept me abreast of American restaurant and menu trends. Some years ago, a big trend was chefs putting ras el hanout on everything.

Ras el Hanout Spices in Grinder
Ras el hanout is a general purpose spice blend from North Africa that is used in the same sense that garam masala, five spice powder, quatre épices, dukkah, and so forth are used. While these spice mixes are convenient and used by millions of cooks around the world, I never appreciated the one-size-fits-all nature of them, because rarely does one size fit all. And I probably spent too much time in an Indian kitchen where each dish had its own specific masala.

One of the things that caused American chefs to fall in love with ras el hanout is the complex mixture of sweet and savory spices that adds a definite North African flair to dishes. Some versions are highly complex indeed, counting dozens of ingredients. No matter the composition, we can all agree that those flavors are wonderful.

I happened on a couple of lamb foreshanks at the farmers market last week and instantly I knew I was going to do a lamb shank tagine, in my ever so traditional Western tagine, my crockpot. 

I don't keep spice mixes in the house because I like to tweak the mix for each dish according to my mood, so the first order of business was to make some ras el hanout. For my blend, I used allspice, coriander, paprika, cumin, caraway, fennel, and black pepper, in decreasing order of amount. I would have added powdered ginger, but I didn't have any, so I leaned a bit heavier on allspice and coriander.

Most people add cinnamon to their mix, but I prefer just to drop a cinnamon stick into the tagine. Many versions include spicy ground chiles, but I left them out, knowing that I would be adding some of my harissa paste (recipe here) directly into the dish. Garlic and saffron went into the dish separately as well.

Ras el Hanout
To start the tagine, I put into the crockpot:

a 28-ounce can of tomatoes
2 carrots, chopped
a large onion, chopped
6 cloves of garlic, minced
a couple huge spoonfuls of harissa
a cinnamon stick
a pinch of saffron 
3-4 tablespoons of my ras el hanout
a teaspoon of Kosher salt
 
Ready to Cook
After a good stir, in went the two lamb shanks to braise for about five hours. (How weird to be only cooking two shanks versus the 40 or so at a time we would cook at the restaurant!) At the end, I added a quart and a half of cooked chickpeas and let them warm through for about 20 minutes. After a final seasoning, the falling apart tender shanks were ready to serve, each with a dollop of harissa on top.

Lamb Shank and Chickpea Tagine with Harissa
The sweet and savory spices of ras el hanout are simply terrific with lamb. And simply torture to smell while cooking for the better part of the day!

Unanticipated bonus: the leftover chickpeas and broth from the tagine became hummus the following day!

Monday, June 8, 2020

A Hankering for Lamb


Lamb Burger, Tzatziki, Harissa, Horiatiki Salata

Although I am not a big carnivore, I really do love lamb and would eat it in preference to beef just about any time. Lamb shanks are one of my all time favorites, but I would never turn up my nose at leg of lamb, marinated in rosemary, garlic, and red wine, grilled to medium rare. And in the burger department, I do believe I prefer lamb to most beef.

Out here in northwestern Oregon, lamb seems hard to come by and what I do find is exorbitantly priced. Maybe I just need more time to find the right suppliers. Or maybe it is the region. The Willamette Valley seems to be given over more to crops and nursery plants, where the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia hosted a lot more livestock.

I was spoiled in my restaurant days always having a ready supply of lamb. We would take delivery of a whole lamb each week. We went through about five suppliers in the tenure of the restaurant, so it must be hard to make a living raising sheep. Still, we had a constant stream of farmers coming to the restaurant to solicit our business and no shortage of lamb.

I would use the carcasses to teach my cooks (after they graduated from rabbits and fowl) how to break down and use every part of a larger animal, a skill that every chef should have, but so few possess. If we are going to kill an animal to eat it, we are obliged to let none of that animal go to waste. And we did not at the restaurant, a point of particular pride for me.

I would sometimes let a cook break down a lamb, but truth be told, I enjoyed doing it myself. I find something very zen about quickly and efficiently processing a carcass for maximum use. It also allowed me time away from the business aspects of running a restaurant to ponder how to use each cut of the animal.

Even though it was a lot of work each week with each new lamb, I enjoyed the mental gymnastics of figuring out how to put a lamb on the menu. Aside from the offal, which scared a lot of diners and mainly ended up as chef snacks and family meals, every bit had a use on the menu. When diners are looking for rack of lamb or a high-value cut that they recognize, it takes a lot of creativity to put the so-called lesser cuts (necks, breasts, and briskets) on the menu in a way that entices customers to order them.

The hind legs would inevitably end up on the grill in some form or another. The small top loins and tiny tenderloins would end up in a mixed grill, or sometimes on the nightly tasting menu where we would do something special with them. The shoulders and sirloins might get cubed and braised for a tagine or stew or they might also end up on the grill. 

The ribs might go on the appetizer menu, first slow-roasted to tenderness, then grilled at service. The bits and pieces would head for the grinder where they might end up in a terrine, in a meat pie, or on the lunch menu as lamb sliders.

The bones, neck, and so forth would end up getting braised, the picked meat going into some dish (lamb tamales or pot stickers, for example) and the stock being brought down to a demiglace for garnishing the grilling cuts.

The shanks would often go into the freezer for weeks until we could collect enough to put them on the menu. The much sought after racks, we would typically break down into one- or two-bone chops and put them on the tasting menu.

Customers would often ask, "Why don't you put rack of lamb on the menu?" I would always answer with a question of my own, "With two racks per animal and one animal per week, how many weeks would it take to have enough racks to get through a single night at the restaurant?"

With the 24x7 availability of cuts at the supermarket, I believe that many people are so disconnected from the process of butchery that they have forgotten the limited supply of choice cuts on a single animal, if they even considered it. Which brings me back to lamb burger: the lesser cuts often end up in the grinder for burger.

This reflection was brought about by the lamb burgers we had the other night, pan-seared and served with tzatziki, harissa, and a faux horiatiki salata.

Tzatziki


Tzatziki, by any one of its names, is ubiquitous in the Mediterranean and it varies depending on the cook and the region. Each batch that I make is different, depending on what I have on hand and what my mood is. I like my tzatziki really thick, so I make it that way. I prefer red wine vinegar to lemon juice, so I make it that way. I prefer oregano to dill, so I make it that way. I don't peel my cucumbers, because I like it that way. I hope you get the point: use this "recipe" as your jumping off point and make it your way.

1 quart Greek yogurt
1/4 cup extra virgin oil
2-3 tablespoons of red wine vinegar (or lemon juice) to taste
1 5-inch section of cucumber, rind on, finely diced
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon dried oregano (or a big bunch of fresh oregano, minced)
salt to taste

Mix everything and adjust the seasoning to your liking. It's better after it stands overnight in the refrigerator.

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Grilled Zucchini with White Bean-Artichoke Pesto, Harissa, and Hummus Dressing

I love vegetables, especially roasted and grilled vegetables. When we left Virginia in 2017, we sold our grill. Since then, because finances have been thin, we had no grill until just weeks ago. One of the things I have missed the most is grilled zucchini. Now that I have a grill, I'm working towards satisfying that itch, with the delicious vegetarian summer dinner that you see below.

Grilled Zucchini Platter

Last week, I grilled zucchini and put the squash on a platter with piquillo peppers and olives, then drizzled the platter with harissa and a dressing made of hummus, lemon juice, and olive oil. In the center of the platter, for some protein, I put a bowl of white bean-artichoke pesto. I would have loved some pita with this, but we are trying to shed a few of the many pounds we have gained during this quarantine. The pesto, at Ann's urging and because we love spicy food, has a healthy tablespoon of harissa swirled in.

White Bean-Artichoke Pesto


It seems kind of weird to call this a pesto, but that's what it goes by. This is a very quick spread or dip made from items in my pantry. If you leave out the cheese, you'll need a touch more salt, but the result will be vegan.

1 can cannellini beans (15.5 oz net)
1 can artichoke hearts (8.5 oz net)
4 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 teaspoon Kosher salt
1/4 cup grated Pecorino Romano cheese (optional)
juice of half a lemon (more to taste)
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil

In a food processor, puree the white beans, artichoke hearts, and garlic to a semi-smooth paste. I like to leave some texture in the final product. Add the salt, lemon juice, and cheese and mix. With the motor running, drizzle in the olive oil until the pesto is as loose as you want. Adjust lemon juice and salt to taste.

Quick Harissa


Harissa is a spicy condiment from North Africa, most frequently attributed to Tunisia. Lover of spicy food that I am, I have had a lot of harissa in my life and none that I like better than the quick harissa that I developed at the restaurant. I call it quick harissa because rather than process dried chiles, I make it with Huy Fong Foods' sambal oelek as a base.

I cannot get enough of this delicious sauce. Every batch is different depending on my mood and ingredients at hand, but this is a base recipe. My inspiration originally came from Copeland Marks (a phenomenal culinary writer) and his book The Great Book of Couscous: Classic Cuisines of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia.

1 tablespoon caraway seeds
1 tablespoon fennel seeds
1 tablespoon cumin seeds
2 cups sambal oelek
8 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
juice of one lemon
1/2 cup olive oil

Mix the caraway, fennel, and cumin seeds. Reserve one third as whole seeds and grind the remainder in a spice mill. I like the whole seeds in my harissa for texture. Mix all the ingredients and let stand for a few hours: it gets better with age. Adjust the seasoning to your liking. I store mine in the refrigerator after topping it with olive oil. 

Hummus Salad Dressing


I make batches of hummus weekly as hummus is one of my absolute favorite foods. I probably have a recipe for hummus somewhere on this blog, so I'm not going to give a recipe for that here. Do you really need a recipe for chickpeas, garlic, salt, olive oil, tahini, and lemon juice, all whirled up in a food processor?

I use hummus for all kinds of things, including tomato-hummus bisque and a really quick and easy salad dressing, that I mainly use for dressing vegetables.

1/2 cup hummus
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
juice of one lemon
salt

Mix well and adjust the salt and lemon juice as necessary.

Wine Wednesday in McMinnville

Each summer we try to make one or more trips to our former home of McMinnville over in the Willamette Valley, about 3.5 hours from Bend, giv...