Friday, 14 January 2011

Basic Recipe: Sugar Syrup


Sugar Syrup is poured over baked desserts like bakalawa and basbousa and all fried Arabic sweets are dipped in it for a sweet coating.

Ingredients
2 cups sugar
2 cups water
1 tbspoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon honey (optional)
1 tablespoon rose or orange blossom water (optional)



Place the sugar, water and lemon in a saucepan and simmer for about 20 minutes. Add the rose or orange blossom water at the end.

Saturday, 8 January 2011

Pumpkin and Bechamel Pudding قرعة بالبشامل

Stewed pumpkin topped with bechamel is a surprisingly addicitive combination. It is a dessert that is well-loved in Egypt and Eastern Libya. While pumpkin is almost a staple vegetable in Libyan cuisine, it is mostly used in savoury dishes, such as couscous, lamb stew or steamed pasta. This pumpkin pie is one of the few exceptions. The Egyptian version of the pudding includes a sprinkling of raisins and nuts between the layer of pumpkin and bechamel, and these can be easily added to this East Libyan recipe.  Pumpkin with bechamel is easy to make, and is delicious served either hot or cold.



Serves 6
Ingredients:

1/2 kilo pumpkin
100g butter (melted)
100g flour
2 cups sugar
2 cups milk
2 teaspoons vanilla sugar or 1 teaspoon vanilla essence
Stick of cinnamon (optional)
2 eggs



Cut pumpkin into squares and place in a pan with 1 cup of sugar and just enough water to cover, and the cinnamon stick if using. Cook on low heat until pumpkin is tender.


Remove the pumpkin, leaving about 2 cups of liquid in the pan. 
Add the flour to the liquid.


Add 1 cup of sugar and 2 cups of milk while whisking.


Add the eggs and the vanilla and stir until smooth.


To inrtensify the sweet bechamel's pumpkin flavor, add a few pieces of pumpkin and mash. Pour in the melted butter  and give one final stir.


Mash the rest of the pumpkin squares with a fork roughly.


Spread less than a third of the pumpkin bechamel in an oven-proof dish, add mashed pumpkin on top, and then cover with the rest of the pumpkin bechamel. 


Place in the oven until surface becomes golden. Serve hot or cold.


Tuesday, 4 January 2011

Mixed Stuffed Vegetables: Tajin Mahshi محشي مشكل

Stuffed cabbage and vine leaves are best cooked on the stove, but Mahshi vegetables like paprika, tomatoes, onions, courgettes and aubergines are easier to make as a casserole. The larger varieties of aubergines and courgettes tend to get  mushy when stewed.

Tajin Mahshi is usually a main meal served, but for guests stuffed vegetables are always just a side dish. Mahshi is a great make-ahead dish, as it tastes even better the next day, and warms up well. You can also prep extra vegetables and stuffing, and freeze both to make it less of a chore next time.
Serves 6
Ingredients
3 Aubergines (ideally small, or cut large ones in half and use the bottom ends)
3 Courgettes (ditto)
3 Firm Tomatoes 
3  small paprika Peppers (preferably the smaller Arabic variety, less sweet and with firmer flesh)

Stuffing:
500g finely chopped lamb (or substitute minced meat)
1 cup finely chopped large onion
1cup finely chopped tomato
2 cups finely chopped parsley
2 cups short-grain rice, pre-soaked for 10 minutes and drained
2 tablespoon tomato paste
1-2 finely chopped chillies (optional)
pieces chopped spring onions (optional) 
1/2 cup olive oil
2 tsp salt
1 tsp of each, black pepper, turmeric, ginger,cinnamon

Cooking Liquid
1 tablespoon olive oil
1teaspoon tomato past
1cup boiling water
1 tsp of each salt, black pepper ,ginger, turmeric, cinnamon


 

To core the courgettes and aubergines use the pointed end of a vegetable peeler to hollow out a segment, then hold the peeler in place and rotate the vegetable until you have scraped away almost all the flesh. Remove the tomato pulp with a teaspoon, dice the pulp and add it to the stuffing mix.


Mix all the ingredients for the filling, stuff the vegetables leaving space for the rice to expand (fill to about 3/4). Place the vegetables in an oven-proof dish (one layer only). Line the pot with parsley stems or potato slices before placing the stuffed vegetables in it.


Mix and spoon the cooking liquid over the vegetables, cover with foil and place in the middle of the oven at 250°C for about one hour. Remove the foil and cook for further 15 minutes (until all liquid is absorbed and the Mahshi is slightly browned).

Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Pumpkin, Potato and Lamb Stew with Barley Dumplings

This is an alternative presentation which got some Palestinian dinner guests who usually baulked at the traditional version to try Bazeen. Form the bazeen into bite-sized dumplings before pouring the stew over them. Arrange halved boiled eggs and chopped chillies on top, and serve with lemon quarters.











Sunday, 19 December 2010

Bazeen بازين

Bazeen, an Amazigh dish most often made from barley, is one of the most distinctive North African dishes. It is a staple in Western Libya, and often served for lunch on Fridays. There are variations on the basic lamb bazeen, serving it with stews featuring camel meat, chicken, squid or broad beans. A favourite winter variation is Bazeen served with Hassa soup made with dried meat (gideed). The most well-known Bazeen is made of a mixture of 3 parts barley flour to 1 part wheat flour. The flour is cooked in salted water to make a hard dough, and then formed into a rounded, smooth dome, with the tomato sauce, potatoes, boiled eggs around it, the mushroom shown in the picture is my addition, not part of the original recipe. An untraditional alternative is to serve bazeen as dumplings in a stew.

Serves 4-6
Ingredients
about 1 kilo meat (preferably shoulder and leg of lamb)
1 large chopped onion
1/2 cup olive oil
3 tbsp tomato paste
1 tbsp fenugreek
1 tbsp tumeric
1 tbsp red chilli 
tbsp black pepper
1 tbsp salt
1 large garlic clove
2 chopped fresh green chillies
3-4 medium potatoes peeled and halved
500g pumpkin cut into medium sized cubes (optional)

for the dough
1 kilo barley flour
1/4 kilo plain / wheat flour 
1 tbspoon salt
about 11/2 litre boiling water ( more as needed )




Pour the olive oil in a  pot.


Add the fenugreek, onion and chillies to the pot. Stir and cook until the onion begins to soften.


Add the meat to the pot.


Add the spices and mix.


Add the roughly chopped garlic cloves.


Add tomato paste, mix well.


Add about 1/2 litre of boiling water. Cook on low heat for about 15 minutes then add another litre of boiling water and cook on medium heat  for further 45 minutes 


                 Add potatoes halves, cook on low heat, meanwhile prepare the dough


Mix the barley with the plain flour in a deep bowl.


In a deep pot, pour 1 litre of boiling water and add 1 tbsp salt.


Pour in the barley mix, all at once.


With a wooden spoon, push in the edges, creating an island of flour in the middle of the pot, allowing the water to bubble around it. Do not disturb the flour in the middle. Do not cover the pot.


Stick a wooden spoon in the middle of the island, and move the spoon a little so the water can bubble up inside, then do not disturb. Leave the dough to cook for 45 minutes on medium heat.


Hard-boil 6 eggs.


Test the potatoes. They should be just cooked, firm rather than mushy!  Remove the sauce from heat at this point.


After 45 minutes the dough should be ready. Using the wooden spatula mix well with the water in the pot, you might need to add more hot water to make a medium hard dough. Using the spatula press the dough against the edges of the pot to remove any lumps. The best way to do this is to place the pot in the sink, holding it against a corner with one hand to get a good purchase. 

If you have a machine that will knead bread dough then it will handle bazeen fine, and you will get a smooth ball of dough in minutes. 

Test the dough by pressing it in your fist and checking if it holds together well. Remove the dough from the pot. Place in a large flat serving bowl and knead it to get rid of the lumps, then form into a ball. If there are deep cracks you need to knead it again.


Form the bazeen by placing your palm on the ball and rolling in circular motions around the dish until you have a smooth dome with a flat base.

Press the edges down to make the dough stick to the dish.


Pour the tomato sauce around the dough. Arrange the meat, potatoes, and pumpkin if used. Peel and add the six hardboiled eggs. Bazeen is served with fresh chillies and lemon and is typically eaten in a communal dish, using the right hand.

Friday, 17 December 2010

Libyan Dougnut: Sfinz (سفنز (معجنات مقلية

Sfinz are usually served for Friday breakfasts. Sfinz is a spongy fried bread that can be made plain and eaten with sweet toppings like date molasses and honey, or else fried with an egg. Sfinz doughnuts are also served with afternoon tea. This amount makes about 10-12 sfinz. A great way to use leftover sfinz dough is to bake herb bread.




Makes 10-12 Sfinz
Ingredients
4 cups fine white flour
4 tablespoons olive oil for the dough
4 teaspoons sugar 
2 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoon baking powder
One cup warm milk and 1/2 cup warm water (or one and a half cups warm water)
1/2 cup warm water for the yeast
(25g fresh yeast or 1 tablespoon dried yeast + 1 teaspoon sugar)
corn oil for deep frying

To Serve:
Qashta cream
Date syrup
Honey
Kiri cheese

 In a small bowl mix the fresh yeast and sugar, with 1/2 cup warm water, leave in warm place until it becomes frothy



                     Mix all the dry ingredients in a large bowl, add the yeast  mix.


Add the olive oil and one and a half cup warm water gradually.  Knead well to get a soft consistency dough, which will be easy to spread by hand later. The sfinz dough is soft and sticky dough, so you need well oiled hands to work with it.


Oil your hands, then shape the dough into a large ball and brush it with oil. Cover with a cling film, and leave until the dough has risen, it should be treble its original volume. (Most convenient is to leave it overnight and finish making the Sfinz the next morning)

Knead the dough again so it falls, then leave to rise again. Next we will start to shape the dough.


Oil a tray, and with oiled hands take a handful of dough and squeeze into large egg size, making about 10 sfinz balls. Place the balls on a well oiled surface and cover them with cling film. Leave to rest for 15 minutes.



Oil a dinner plate. put one dough ball in the middle of the plate. Flatten each ball to the same shape as the plate, dipping your hands in oil as needed. The edges should be a bit thicker than the center, like a pizza crust.

Fry in hot oil. If you are making plain sfinz just fry, turn to the other side until both sides are golden brown.


When you fry sfinz, the top side of the sfinz will pop up as soon as it placed in oil. To make egg sfinz flip the sfinz onto the opposite side as soon as it pops up. This side will have a " hollow." You should have an egg in a bowl ready to pour into the hollow.

Push the sfinz down with a spatula and spoon hot oil on top to fry the egg as well. Once the egg has set you can flip to brown the egg side.


Egg sfinz are great rolled up with a slice of cheese, or just plain, and the egg can be hard or runny.


Drizzle plain sfinz with date molasses, or tear off pieces to scoop up Qashta cream or Kiri cheese and honey.


Sfinz is best eaten as soon as possible after frying, but warms up well in the microwave. It also keeps for a day or two in the fridge if stored in an airtight container.