From Wolfert's "The cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean".
This meal served as the finale to my Turkish cuisine cooking segment. Thankfully, the dishes turned out well so we ended on a good note. Unlike other pilafs I've made recently, the texture of this one was spot on: not too dry, not too mushy or wet. Also, I used homemade lamb stock (from the casserole lamb), which obviously gives an extra special flavor.
The casserole was definitely unique and, as Nick pointed out, certainly not your stereotypical Turkish dish. The lamb flavor was very strong and the eggplant was nice and creamy in texture. I was concerned that the layers would not bind together well, given the relative lack of sauce or liquid applied before baking; however, I think the eggplant absorbed much of the juice from the tomato and the meat and ended up pulling it all together.
Monday, June 7, 2010
Collard green salad with yogurt dressing
From "Mediterranean fresh: a compendium of one plate salad meals and mix-and-match dressings" by Goldstein.
Turkish comfort food? I enjoyed it. Even after braising for a good 20 minutes, the collard greens still had a really robust texture -- not necessarily a bad thing.
The recipe called for 2 pounds of collard greens. I only used one bunch, which I estimated at closer to 1 pound. It seemed like there were plenty of greens in the final product, though.
Turkish comfort food? I enjoyed it. Even after braising for a good 20 minutes, the collard greens still had a really robust texture -- not necessarily a bad thing.
The recipe called for 2 pounds of collard greens. I only used one bunch, which I estimated at closer to 1 pound. It seemed like there were plenty of greens in the final product, though.
Böreks with swiss chard and walnuts
From "The Sultan's kitchen: a Turkish cookbook" by özcan Ozan.
I confess to making a bunch of modifications:
Interestingly, the walnuts became very soft after cooking, almost like they had absorbed a bunch of moisture. My cheese substitution did not work very well -- it definitely did not have the nice creamy consistency that warm feta does.
All in all though, they were tasty!
I confess to making a bunch of modifications:
- Used regular butter instead of clarified
- used Mexican queso fresco instead of feta (hey, it's still a fresh cheese)
- used olive oil (spray) instead of the egg, milk, butter, oil mixture to bind the pastry layers
- used simple olive oil instead of the egg yolk wash on the top
- used the official "bourek" dough instead of standard filo dough.
Interestingly, the walnuts became very soft after cooking, almost like they had absorbed a bunch of moisture. My cheese substitution did not work very well -- it definitely did not have the nice creamy consistency that warm feta does.
All in all though, they were tasty!
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