While Wil is ripping the kitchen apart in order to install our dishwasher (finally), I decided it's time to sit down and write a new blogpost.
It's been too long again...
I have been cooking a lot lately, mainly from my new favorite cookbook "Casa Moro - The second cookbook".
You can find more information about the restaurant and published books here:
http://www.moro.co.uk/shop.php
No, I don't have their first cookbook. But I will probably get it very soon, given that their Spanish and Middle Eastern recipes are sooo delicious.
This one here is going to be part of our summer party next Saturday.
It's a bit of work, but it's totally worth it.
There is (almost) nothing better than cinnamon spiced ground meat.
The original recipe which is assumed to have originated from Iran, or Lebanon, or Syria called for lamb, but we used beef instead, simply because we didn't have lamb at home.
Here is what you need:
Potato Dough
700g potatoes, skins on
sea salt
1 rounded tablespoon plain flour (plus extra for dusting)
Meat Filling
25g butter
2tbsp olive oil
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1 tsp ground cinnamon
2 pinches freshly ground pepper
2 pinches freshly grated nutmeg
3 cardamom pods, black seeds only ground to a fine powder
3 cloves, ground with a pinch of salt to a fine powder (together with the cardamom seeds)
200g finely ground beef (or lamb)
50g pine nuts, lightly toasted
1tbsp tomato purrée
3tbsp roughly chopped flat-leaf parsley
sea salt and black pepper
Instructions
To make the dough, boil the potatoes in salt water (with skin on!) until cooked, but not mealy and mushy.
Drain well in colander for about 10 minutes.
While they are still warm, peel, then mash thoroughly.
Stir in the flour and season to taste with a little salt.
The dough is now ready.
While the potatoes are boiling, make the filling.
Melt butter with olive oil over medium to high heat.
Add the onions and soften until it is translucent and lightly browned.
Now add all the spices and cook for another minute.
Add the ground beef, stirring and breaking it up.
Stop stirring and let it stick for a minute or so. That way it can stick to the pan and brown a little, which adds more flavor to the meat.
Cook for about 5-8 minutes, until the meat is nicely browned.
Finally stir in pine nuts, tomato purée and parsley.
Season with salt and pepper.
Now to prepare the potato cakes.
Make sure your hands are dry.
Then flour them, as well as the working surface.
Divide the dough into four balls.
Flatten one ball to a disc of about 1cm thickness.
Place two tablespoons of filling in the center, then bring up the sides of the dough-disc, in order to enclose the meat filling.
Neaten the shape and patch up any cracks and gaps.
The result should look like a round patty, 10cm across and about 3-4cm thick.
Repeat with the other dough balls, always making sure that wherever you place the dough/patties the working surface is well-floured, to prevent the dough from sticking.
Generously cover the bottom of a frying pan with oil, about 3-4mm deep.
Place over medium to high heat, until hot and nearly smoking.
Gently lift up the cakes with a spatula and carefully lower into the oil, one by one.
Do not disturb until they are a dark golden color and crispy on the bottom, then carefully turn the cakes with the spatula, in order to brown the other side, as well.
When done, take out and using kitchen paper gently dab off any excess oil.
Keep warm in a low oven, or serve immediately.
We served our potato cakes with:
200 g Greek yoghurt, thinned with 2tbsp of milk and seasoned with one garlic clove crushed to a paste with salt using mortar and pestle.
Notes
For the party I will try to turn the cakes more into bite-sized balls...We'll see how that goes.
You have to be quite careful not to make the potato dough tear apart.
Also, make sure the potatoes don't cook too long.
If they get too mushy the dough will be much more difficult to handle.
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Monday, August 26, 2013
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Welcome to the prairie!
Yes, meat&chocolate is still alive. It just went through a hibernation and metamorphosis process.
New home, new plans, new name!
New home, new plans, new name!
A little more than one month ago Wil, my pet rabbit Beule and I moved from Berlin to the Canadian prairies. We traded our little tiny apartment in the vibrant capital city of Germany for a life on the countryside south of Calgary.
As you can probably imagine, this is a huge change for us, and quite an adventure.
There are tons of things we need to learn and have to get used to.
For example, we are now completely dependent on a car. The town of Okotoks is 5km away and it takes us about 45 minutes to get to downtown Calgary. I didn't drive for over 12 years because I always lived in big cities with a good public transport system. Now I have to drive in order to buy groceries or to get to work, and I have to practice being a hoarder buying enough food in advance.
So that's definitely a little challenge, because I'm used to just popping downstairs to the grocery store next door for some spontaneous wine, chocolate etc.
But there are also a lot of good things about living on the countryside. Rather than listening to drunk party folks yelling in front of our house at 4am in the morning, we get to fall asleep to coyotes howling in the fields, and wake up to deer eating the crabapples in our garden. And then there is wide-open space, beautiful sunsets and a breathtaking view of the Rocky Mountains.
Here are some impressions of our new home:
Our little house on the prairies, including our temporary but mandatory pick-up truck. |
Our property with the big red barn! |
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Our future vegetable garden - photo taken from our kitchen window |
The view we wake up to every morning. I love the rockies! |
We even got a little barn cat. We named her Schröder, after my maiden name.
She is still a kitten, but very hungry and growing quickly.
She is still a kitten, but very hungry and growing quickly.
And yes, before you ask, my rabbit Beule arrived safe and sound and is enjoying his Canadian home....
...especially his new favourite spot in front of the fireplace.
With so much space and freedom we made tons of (food-) related plans.
But first of all we need to build up our lives here.
A few days after our arrival I took on a part-time position at the Kensington Wine Market to learn more about wine, beer and whisky. I've also been helping out as a production assistant at photo shootings for HeroImages. The last time I worked for them I was asked to do some spontaneous food styling for one of their "Christmas"-shoots.
Food styling for HeroImages...The Christmas Ham |
So two jobs within the first two weeks of being here...I guess that's not that bad!
You see, I've been quite busy the last couple of weeks and I'm still pretty overwhelmed. Therefore cooking and blogging didn't really happen, also because we didn't have well-functioning internet.
Well, we cooked, but not really anything new...
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One of our standard meals for the past four weeks: scrambled eggs from hutterite eggs with tomatoes, chive from our garden and maple bacon. |
This is going to change very soon! I'm so excited and motivated to try out new recipes and get to know our new kitchen a bit better. But I also want to focus more on the self-sufficient aspect of living on the country side. Wil and I want grow our own fruits and vegetables, hunt, forage, make cheese, smoke meat and maybe have livestock of some sort.
Hibernation is over, my friends. I'm awake and ready to throw myself into new food adventures!
Labels:
Alberta,
Berlin,
calgary,
Canada,
cooking,
countrylife,
countryside,
food,
food blog,
prairie,
self-sufficiency
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