An Exotic Weekend Dinner: Ethiopian Food

I am one of those people that’s always seeking the newest, latest, most different. I tend to get bored with tasks, activities and even meals pretty soon after starting. Call it a little ADD, but it’s more like “what am I missing by not trying something new?”

Cooking plays a big part of feeding my desire to try something new almost every day. And last week trying my hand at homemade Ethiopian food was the way to do it.

Homemade Ethiopian foodI found the two recipes I made to be incredibly easy to make, Doro Wett (a chicken stew) and Fossolia (a stewed green bean and carrot dish). The chicken dish came together just like any other dutch-oven chicken braise and the green bean dish was also a snap. BOth could be done in one pot each. Love that simplicity! The reciopes were somewhat time-consuming (I was cooking for at least an hour and a half) but the whole process was surprisingly fluid, and I was able to improvise any ingredients I didn’t have on hand.

The desire to make Ethiopian food began by the serendipitous finding of Injera bread at my local specialty store. If you’ve never had it, it’s delightfully sour like sourdough bread, but has the bubbly texture of a crumpet and the flatness of a crepe. It’s amazing.

If you come across Injera in your local store, or feel in the mood to whip some up yourself, I highly recommend these two Ethiopian dishes to serve alongside. And don’t forget to use the Injera as your “plate” – it soaks up all of the delicious juices of your cooking!

Doro Wett (Ethiopian Chicken Stew)

Makes 6 servings. Recipe by Marcus Samuelsson.

  • 2 medium red onions, diced
  • Salt
  • 1/4 cup Spiced Butter (or 4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, divided
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom, preferably freshly ground
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 cloves
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • One 1 1/2-inch piece ginger, peeled and chopped
  • 1 tablespoon Berbere or chili powder
  • 2 1/2 cups chicken stock, divided
  • One 4-to 5-pound chicken, cut into 10 pieces, wings reserved for another use
  • 1/4 cup dry red wine
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 2 hard-boiled eggs, peeled

Combine the onions, a pinch of salt, and half of the spiced butter in a Dutch oven or other large deep pot over low heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the onions are golden, about 15 minutes. Add the remaining butter, the cardamom, black pepper, cloves, garlic, ginger, and berbere and cook until the onions soften and take on the color of the spices, about 10 minutes.

Add 2 cups of the chicken stock and the chicken legs and thighs, bring to simmer, and simmer for 15 minutes. Add the remaining 1/2 cup chicken stock and the wine, bring back to a simmer, and simmer for 10 minutes. Add the chicken breasts and simmer for 20 minutes.

Gently stir in the lime juice and eggs and simmer for another 5 minutes. The sauce will be loose and soupy. Season with salt to taste.

Fossolia (Ethiopian Green Bean dish)

Serves 6. Recipe from here.

2 onions, chopped
1/3 c. canola oil
3-4 oz. tomato paste (about 1/2 of a 6 oz. can)
4 cups green beans, ends snapped off and cut or snapped into halves or thirds
3 carrots, cut into stick-shaped pieces
2-3 tomatoes, chopped
minced ginger and garlic (as much or as little as you’d like- I use about 2 tsp. each)
salt, to taste

Start by cooking the onions on medium heat for about seven minutes, or until the onions begin to turn translucent and soften. Add the oil and continue cooking for several more minutes. Stir in the tomato paste and allow several minutes for the ingredients to simmer together. Add the green beans and carrots, stir well, and cover. Continue cooking on medium heat for 10-15 minutes, then add the tomato, ginger, garlic, and salt, and simmer until all of the vegetables are tender.

 

Home Canning Tomato Sauce

I know you. I’ve seen you in the pasta aisle at the grocery store. You’re scanning the utterly unending varieties of “pasta sauce” trying to compare prices and flavors and brands. You look a little confused.

I don’t blame you.

And what really is “pasta sauce”? I mean, I could throw some milk on pasta and call it “sauce”, couldn’t I? Heck, I could throw practically anything in and call it sauce…I’m sure that’s what Prego does.

Next time I see you, we’re going to have a little intervention. You’re not gonna like it. But you need it. You need to know what real, homemade tomato sauce tastes like. Now, you’re going to pout a little. Say “it’s too hard!” But I’m going to make you do it.

And you’ll be much happier afterward.

Why? Because you don’t need to pay $5 at the store for a bottle of so-so “pasta sauce” that probably contains a cup of sugar or, worse, high fructose corn syrup. You know better. And now, you have me. I will teach you, oh lost one.

Let’s begin! First, veer left to the produce section – get five pounds of tomatoes, stat!

Recipe after the jump.

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Where Have (I) You Been Corn Chowder?

That’s a good question. Where have I been? I’ve been ignoring you, I know. I’m sorry. You see, a lot is going on with me these days. I’m moving to the Bay Area (yay!) while also launching my company, Cherryvale Farms (big yay!)…so I’ve been a bit preoccupied.

And of course all of my kitchen is currently in boxes. And I’m sort of living out of my parents house. Oh, and I’ve been to three weddings in the past month, all of which were out of town. Did I mention Walnut also consumes a large portion of my day?

So, this is the first cooking endeavor I’ve done in recent days. It’s a chowder. It’s kind of Fall-y but I’m sticking by it. Because it tastes good. And it uses the best of summer corn. Oh, and it’s pretty.

Plus I put some cinnamon in it and that tastes good. You should make some. Maybe grill the corn first. That would be fabulous. And you get to spend some time at the grill, which I know you’ll be doing all weekend anyway.

I picture eating this chowder at the beach, out of a big pot simmering over a grill. Sea breeze in my hair. Sand, well, everywhere. Giant plastic spoon and a little tiny paper bowl. That’s how I like it.

 

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Chicken in Mojo Sauce and Mashed Plantains

My boyfriend, Daniel, is half Cuban. His other half is Jewish; we call him a “Jewbano”.  Sometimes he breaks out the Espanol and his slurred Cuban drawl sounds like he just got off the plane from Havana.

Daniel loves Cuban food, loves his Cuban mother and love love loves plantains. And I, being the wonderful girlfriend that I am, know how to cook a good meal for my man.

Granted, this meal would not have come together without the gift of fresh green plantains from Daniel’s mother. Daniel and my stomachs thank you.

This is a plate of mashed plantains and chicken in mojo sauce. It’s amazing. TO DIE FOR. You will lick the plate. I know it’s not that pretty (all that yellow kind of melds together) but the flavors are wild. A little lime, a little orange, onions, garlic, sweet plantains. You’re drooling again. I get it.

Make this for your Cuban or non-Cuban counterpart. Drink a Cuba Libre with a straw. Pair it with a salad of heart of palm dressed in vinegar and olive oil. Pretend your bare feet are brushing up against warm sand instead of your un-swept kitchen floor.

Recipe after the jump…

 

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Pakistani Style Chicken Curry with Rice

We all have that one cookbook on our shelf that scares us. We bought it because we wanted to be cool. To have the challenging cookbook that looks pretty on our shelf. For our friends to, you know, admire, when they come over.

But, admit it, you’re intimidated by this book. Every recipe calls for a thousand ingredients, many of which require a trip to a specialty store to procure. You open this cookbook every week or two. Glance through the pages. Say “oh, that looks good!” then scan down to the ingredients and realize, well, a special trip to India Sweets and Spices just isn’t on the agenda.

Stop doing that.

Be bold. Make this recipe!

This recipe, for most people at least, will probably require a trip to the specialty market. This recipe will take about an hour to make. You will sweat (from the heat). You may cry (from the onions). You will definitely smell like ginger and garlic afterward, but you will glow with the pride of knowing you took on a serious culinary challenge.

Recipe and test of will after the jump…

 

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Savory Cream of Wheat

I love breakfast. In fact, I’m kind of obsessed with breakfast. Eggs, potatoes, meat and I kind of get along. We like each other. We’ve had a long, lasting and delicious relationship.

Sweet breakfasts, on the other hand, are not usually my thing. For me, breakfast should be hearty, protein-packed and healthful. French toast, pancakes, etc. don’t fit that bill in my kitchen (or on brunch dates). It’s not that I’m opposed to sweet breakfasts, they just weigh me down with their sugar. I don’t feel spry and energetic after a plate of pancakes. I want a nap.

So today I’m up in Santa Cruz again, working on our recipes and meeting new vendors, and staying at my parent’s house. I woke up this morning with grand ideas of bacon and eggs for breakfast. Maybe a potato. Sadly, there was none. Not even tofu to make a scramble.

I plotted my options:

Drive down the street and get a bagel at the market. > Don’t want to get dressed.

Make a sweet potato hash with vegetables. > Takes too long to cook. No eggs to top them with oozy goodness.

Make cream of wheat. > I don’t like sweet breakfast!

Solution: Savory Cream of Wheat (Wheat Farina) with Sauteed Vegetables. It’s creamy, cheesy, doesn’t take any longer to make than, say, pancakes, and totally delivers on flavor and full-tummy-ness.

Recipe after the jump…

 

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Spaghetti with Spring Peas and Artichokes

It’s raining in Los Angeles today. Rain? In May? In Southern California? This just can’t be!

I mean, I bought Spring peas this weekend. As in those little nubbins of joy packed so neatly in their envelope of delicious Spring-iness. As in April showers bring May flowers. As in, no rain. We should be done with rain.

Guess not.

So, I made a Spring dish of Whole Wheat Spaghetti with Fresh Peas, Artichokes and Bacon. While it was raining outside. Someone please report this back to Mother Nature. Because she’s obviously gone on vacation.

This dish is lovely, Spring-y, bright green and wholesome. It’s the kind of dish I like to eat and then go on a long walk through the park. A walk through the park that looks green and lush and like Spring. Thus, not in the rain.

Recipe after the jump…

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Warm Butternut Squash Salad with Chickpeas and Shallots

I think butternut squash is magical. I mean, it comes it bizarre shapes. It’s hard as a rock when raw, yet edible. It’s color is nothing short of sherbet. It kind of reminds me of unicorns.

But enough about that. Let’s roast the damn thing.

This is a perfect weeknight meal for me. The chickpeas provide the protein, the butternut squash makes it creamy and the tomato, spices and shallots make it spicy and rich. Plus you can do the butternut squash in advance and throw this whole dish together in like 15 minutes.

You can also have this as a side. Maybe serve it with a petit filet of unicorn. Stranger things have happened. Recipe after the jump.

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Carrot Soup with Sage and Yogurt

Today is one of those days where nothing seems to be going right. The groomer butchered by dog’s previously fabulous curly locks. There is a mountain of laundry haunting me from the bedroom. My hair is doing this weird flip out thing that looks like I intentionally tried to mimic Jennifer Aniston’s iconic Friends haircut. I have green food dye on my hands that won’t go away. Pout. Pout. Pout.

While thinking of what I was going to make for the blog today I told myself it better be bright and happy to chase these bitter blues away. It also needed to chase away the bulge care of the White Trash Cookies and Mayonnaise episodes of last week. I mean, I was headed to the beach this weekend! What on earth compelled me to bake such belly busters?! Ugh. Needless to say, my bikini was feeling a bit too teeny.

Anyway, after I write this, I’m going to go watch Real Housewives of Wherever and drown my sorrow in this yummy Carrot Soup with Sage and Yogurt. And I’ll pretend my dog isn’t giving me the evil eye over receiving the worst haircut ever. I might tear up a little if the Housewives go at it with pepper spray and then make up over Cosmotinis. Walnut and I will cuddle, and I’ll sip this soup, and I’ll try to pretend today is already over.

Recipe after the jump…

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Deconstructed Chinese Chicken Salad

I really wanted a Chinese Chicken Salad today. Like the kind you find in diners that haven’t changed their menus in 30 years. The kind with crunchy cabbage, those crispy noodles and the limp, neon mandarin orange pieces. But I didn’t have any cabbage. Or crispy noodles. Or a can of those nasty mandarins. I did have some Chinese spinach. And some shirataki noodles. And some real mandarins. I looked at those ingredients and said, “let’s make a deal”. Luckily, they came along for the ride.

Serve this “salad” at room temperature and you’ll taste all of the components of a typical Chinese Chicken Salad, but it’s packed with more fresh vegetables and nothing from a can. Because you know that greasy spoon down the street bought cases of those mandarins when he opened, um, 30 years ago, and he’s still working his way through them.

Let’s start with the noodles. I used shirtaki (the tofu wonder noodle!) because that’s what I had on hand and, let’s be frank, I was too lazy to boil some dried pasta. I mean, someone should slap me! Too lazy to boil pasta? We’ll leave that for another post.

Then we need some chicken. I had roast chicken leftovers so I picked off some of the meat and cut it into bite-sized pieces. A nice fresh chicken breast sauteed in a pan would do just fine. Cut into bite-sized pieces.

Next, the veggies. I had some really awesome Chinese-Cabbage-I’m-guessing-sort-of-greens in the fridge. To be honest, I don’t actually know the name of them. They look like a longer version of spinach and have really pretty little yellow buds. No idea what they are and I was too lazy to ask the lady at the Farmer’s Market. Lazy, again. Apparently this is a theme today! I also added mushrooms because that seemed like a good idea. Really no other reason. Ha!

Now, what Chinese Chicken Salad is complete without a vinaigrette?! Recipe follows, complete with vinaigrette recipe that includes fresh mandarin juice. Quite a step up from the diner, wouldn’t you say?

 

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