Tag Archives: middle eastern

My tabbouleh! This is how it’s done!

Before I share today’s recipe, I guess I owe you guys an explanation for the sporadic posts this month and for being away from all your wonderful blogs. I haven’t been on vacation or anything (I wish :) !), it’s just the third trimester taking its toll. I haven’t been able to spend more than thirty minutes, make that ten, behind my laptop without suffering from a terrible headache that won’t go away unless I turn out the lights and get some sleep. Too much sleep, for all I know, but I am trying to see the positive side of things. After all, I might as well get some quality sleep while I still can! If headaches are not enough, add to them increased heart palpitations and shortness of breath while cooking in a heating up kitchen. So I found myself recently mixing up a salad for lunch and grilling, or broiling some sort of lean protein to go with it. So no new recipe experiments to share as well. Other than that, I am enjoying my screen free time with some good music and I am still meditating and practicing breathing exercises which always seem to help when the headaches are not quite that strong. By the way, it took me about four days to finish this post! Productivity at its best ;) !

Anyway back to the recipe, back to my favorite Lebanese dish, the ever so loved tabbouleh. I don’t want to sound conceited, but I do make one pretty tasty succulent tabbouleh and ever since I started blogging, my husband is begging me to post my recipe. But the thing is I don’t have any recipe, I just follow my sense of smell! Say what? I guess every Lebanese who has ever prepared tabbouleh has done the same. When the tabbouleh smells right, I know that the seasoning is perfect and the lemon to oil ratio is exact. I have never measured how much parsley goes in there or onions or mint or lemon juice and so it never got posted. Can you imagine the kind of recipe? Mix all ingredients and smell the aroma! If it smells like tabbouleh, you’re done, if not, keep adjusting the salt, lemon and oil. Weird, right? Not for me, though. But say, you gave me the benefit of the doubt and played along my way, what does tabbouleh really smell like? I’d say fresh, herby, zesty, and all the adjectives of deliciousness you can come up with!!

Traditional tabbouleh is NOT bulgur based, it is parsley based. I just flinch at the sight of all the tabbouleh recipes out there that just don’t do the dish any justice. Soaking one cup of bulgur in chicken stock? No, thanks! Adding radishes, cucumbers, or grilled vegetables? Double no thanks! Using quinoa or lentils instead of bulgur to make it gluten-free? Okay! But I’d say omit the bulgur altogether; it is not the star ingredient. If you still want to use lentils or quinoa as the main ingredients, just call it a lentil salad or a quinoa salad but please don’t call it tabbouleh!

So for posting the recipe, I measured and tasted and smelled and here it is! The parsley bunches I used were rather on the smaller side this time, so maybe you would need only two to yield four to five cups chopped. As for the lemon, I prefer to add a bit more than what I mentioned but I am a big fan of citrus. My husband prefers it on the milder side. So, start with a quarter cup and if you like add around two more tablespoons. Some people would disagree with the scant amount of bulgur I add, but believe me, you don’t need more. But hey, you are eating this and don’t let me discourage you. You can go up to a quarter cup of the finely ground variety.

Ingredients ( 5-6 servings)

  • 4 bunches parsley, chopped ( will lead around 4- 5 cups chopped parsley)
  • 1 bunch mint, leaves picked and chopped ( around 1 cup)
  • 4 medium tomatoes, juice and seeds included
  • 1 medium yellow onion, finely diced
  • 2 tablespoons fine ground bulgur, rinsed
  • 3/4 – 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 lemons, juiced ( around 1/4 cup), 1 of them zested
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • allspice

Rinse the bulgur thoroughly and set in a bowl. No need to soak in boiling water at all. Prepare the parsley, discard the stalks and chop the leaves rather finely. Pick the mint leaves and finely chop as well. My earliest cooking memory would definitely be helping mum pick up mint leaves and arranging parsley in beautiful homogeneous bunches on Saturday afternoon in preparation for Sunday lunch. What’s a Lebanese family lunch without the tabbouleh and the hummus? I used to dread these afternoons; I didn’t want to pick leaves, I wanted to do some chopping. Of course, I was too young to handle a knife, but thinking of these moments now is so endearing. You have to appreciate every step that goes into the making of a great dish, right? Not to mention that my leaf-picking skills got much better ;) !

Dice the tomatoes and add them to your bowl. Finely dice the onion and sprinkle it with some salt and allspice and then pass your knife over it a few times till the onion is well-seasoned. This will release the onion juices and flavor the whole dish. If you’re not eating it directly, this is the time where I’d put it in the fridge to cool. Right before serving, add the lemon juice, lemon zest, oil and salt. Taste for extra seasoning and enjoy the authentic Lebanese experience.

If you have verjuice or verjus, a very acidic juice made by pressing unripe grapes ( sharab al hosroum in Arabic) and like the sour, tart taste, I recommend you try it instead of some of the lemon juice.

Serve it with romaine lettuce, cabbage leaves or fresh vine leaves. My husband loves to have it with a hot green chili pepper. I, on the other hand, love some crunch. I got this from my mum who sprinkles a small handful of roasted peanuts on top of her plate. I don’t do that every time I have tabbouleh but sometimes I just feel like having an extra salty bite.

So this is my tabbouleh. I hope you’ll give it a try!

Bon appetit or as we say in Lebanon sahtein :) !

Balila – A Chickpea Appetizer

Chickpeas are the star ingredient in balila, another Levantine dish that you’ll find in some mezzes. In Lebanon, you can typically find it in breakfast menus alongside foul medammas (fava beans prepared in a similar way to balila), eggs and some vegetables.  Not a light breakfast, but I am telling you every once in a long while, it’s tasty!

You can always use canned chickpeas for this recipe, but I never have. I find myself always having some kind of preportioned boiled ready-to-use beans in my freezer.

Soaking and cooking your own beans can save you money and extra salt, and reduce your exposure to BPA that can leak from the linings of the cans. I buy my beans ( chickpeas, red kidney, black beans…) in bulk. All I need is some planning and I know I have my freezer stacked with healthy beans that I can add to salads, cook into stews , or make into appetizers when I have someone coming over. 

Rinse and soak the beans in water overnight. You can add sodium bicarbonate to speed the cooking. Throw away the soaking water and put them in a pot, cover with water and DO NOT add salt. The salt at this stage hardens the beans increasing their cooking time. Remove the foam that starts to show on the surface, reduce to simmer and leave anywhere from 45 minutes to 1 hour and 30 minutes until they are tender. Leave to cool (you can add salt at this stage). Drain. Portion your cooked beans and divide them into containers or freezer bags. They last in the freezer up to 6 months.

My tip for having the most smooth melt-in-your-mouth chickpeas is rubbing off the outer layer before freezing or serving. What you have to do is once they have cooled, grab a handful and rub it between your hands (as if you’re starting fire :) ). You will see the outer skin peeling off. No need to sweat over it and remove all of them, just the majority! Believe me, this will make a huge difference in texture. It’s also one of the main reasons behind an amazing creamy hummus and a mediocre one.

Ingredients ( served 6 as part of the mezze, less of course if served alone)

  • 3 cups cooked chickpeas ( from 1 cup dry)
  • 4 garlic cloves, mashed with 1/2 – 1 teaspoon salt
  • 3 - 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • cumin, optional

Mash the garlic with salt and add it to the chickpeas. Drizzle with the olive oil. Plate and sprinkle some cumin on top. Serve with pita bread and some spring onions if you like.

 Bon appetit :)

Baba Ghannouj or Eggplant Dip

Translated from Arabic, ”baba” means dad and “ghannouj” means cuddly, so baba ghannouj is literally a cuddling daddy. Cute name for this Levantine Middle Eastern appetizer! An integral part of any mezze, baba ghannouj has a smokey flavor and a creamy texture that I find so addictive. The main ingredients in baba ghannouj are of course the eggplant and the tahini or sesame paste.

Tahini is made by grinding sesame seeds which are a good source of calcium and are high in unsaturated (healthy) fats. However, they do not contain cholesterol as they are of plant origin. Even though the fats in the tahini are healthy, they are an important source of calories. One tablespoon of tahini has around 90 calories.

 

Ingredients ( served 6 as part of mezze- you’ll have some leftovers as well)

  •  3 large eggplants (the size pictured above)
  • 3-4 tablespoons tahini (sesame paste)
  • 1-2 cloves garlic, crushed with a little bit of salt
  • 1/2 to 1 lemon, juiced
  • salt, to taste

Grill the eggplants. An outdoor barbeque gives the best flavor, but for convenience you can use a stove top grill which I did. As soon as they are done, place them in a bowl and cover with a plastic wrap. Once they have cooled down and softened, peel the skin off. It’s okay to have a few bits of skin left; it will add to the flavor. Drain the water that comes out of them to remove most of the bitterness and use a pestle or a fork to mash them. You want a little bit of texture and not a puree, that’s why there’s no need to bring down your food processor! Add tahini, the lemon juice and the garlic. Taste. You can always add a bit more tahini, lemon or garlic, but I like the eggplant flavor to shine. I don’t like overwhelming it with the other flavors. If you find it to be a bit bitter, you can balance it out with a tablespoon of low-fat yogurt. To make it lower in fat and calories, you can even substitute half the tahini with low-fat yogurt. Drizzle with olive oil and enjoy it with Lebanese pita bread.