Lagman
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1/3 cup vegetable oil
1 large white onion, sliced
3 pounds boneless leg of lamb, cut into 4 or 5 large pieces (fat not trimmed)
2 1/2 pounds large carrots, cut crosswise on the diagonal, then into 1/2-inch matchsticks
4 cups boiling water
1 teaspoon ground turmeric
1 tablespoon salt
5 1/2 cups medium-grain white rice
1 tablespoon cumin seed
Pomegranate seeds, for garnish (arils; optional)
Heat the oil in a large, wide, heavy-bottomed pot over medium-high heat. Once the oil shimmers, stir in the onion. Cook 6 minutes, stirring a few times, until some onion begins to be crispy at the edges. Add the meat and sear on all sides, turning the pieces as needed; this will take 8 to 10 minutes.
Add the carrots and stir to coat, then pour in 2 cups of the boiling water and add the turmeric, using a spatula to dislodge any browned bits on the bottom. Give the mixture a good stir; once it’s boiling, add the salt. Make sure the meat is submerged; cook, uncovered, 30 minutes. The liquid in the pot should be at a steady, low boil.
Meanwhile, place the rice in a large mixing bowl. Cover with cool water and rinse, drain and repeat two more times. Fill with water again, covering the rice by 1/2 inch or so. Let sit for 20 minutes.
Add the remaining 2 cups of boiling water to the pot.
Spread large spoonfuls of the rice carefully over the surface of the what’s in the pot, spreading it evenly for complete coverage; you don’t want the rice to mix into the bubbling liquid at all. (The rice is going to steam atop the meat and vegetables below.) Cook 5 minutes, then scatter the cumin seed evenly over the rice. Reduce heat to medium-low; cover the pot tightly and cook, undisturbed, for 30 minutes until the rice is tender.
Uncover; gently stir enough to find all the pieces of meat and transfer them to a cutting board. Stir to incorporate the rice and vegetables; turn off the heat. The grains of rice should not be sticking together.
Cut the meat into 3/4-inch pieces, discarding any fat that hasn’t rendered, if desired.
To serve, divide the meat atop generous portions of the polow. Garnish with pomegranate seeds, if using.
serves 8:
¾ lb brown lentils
2 c water
2 tbsp pomegranate molasses
1½ tsp Aleppo pepper
1 tbsp salt
1 c mini macaroni
2 med red onions, peeled and cut into thin rings
3 tbsp olive oil
5 cloves garlic, minced
½ bunch cilantro leaves, finely chopped
½ bunch flat leaf parsley, chopped
1 sm pomegranate, seeds only
1 lemon, juice freshly squeezed
freshly ground black pepper
IF YOU HAVE IT: 1 tsp dried or 1 tbsp fresh sumac
In a large saucepan or small soup pot, combine water and broth. Bring to a boil, add lentils and cook 20 minutes. Add macaroni and cook until tender. Drain and pour into a large serving bowl. Blend in the pomegranate molasses, Aleppo pepper and salt. Blend in all but 1 tsp of the lemon juice.
While the lentils and macaroni cook, sauté the onion rings in 2 tbsp olive oil until soft and golden. Be careful not to burn. Remove with a slotted spoon and put in the minced garlic cloves. If needed, add the last tbsp. olive oil. When they start to brown—not burn, add the cilantro leaves, stir once and remove from heat. Add the sumac if you have it. Put the onions on top of the lentils and macaroni in the serving bowl, then the fried garlic. Top with chopped parsley and then the pomegranate seeds. Finish with the last tsp. of fresh lemon juice.
Labu Dikrul is made in two
stages, so it can be made ahead and is thus great party food. Tibetans normally
serve it with rice or steamed buns called tingmo to soak up the delicious gingery
broth.
serves 4
1½ -3/4 lbs. stewing lamb pieces with bones
1 lg. daikon, peeled
2 med./lg. onions
3 inches fresh ginger, peeled
7 lg. garlic cloves, peeled
¼ tsp. Szechuan pepper or ¼ tsp. coarse ground black pepper & 1 dried chili
½ tsp. salt
4-6 cups water or beef broth
1 lg. tomato, cored
¼ tsp. mild chili or 1/8 tsp. cayenne powder
1 tbsp. corn, safflower, canola, mustard oil
6-8 med. Asian mustard greens (1/2 a bunch)*, chopped
*You can substitute Spinach but you won’t get the pungent flavor.
Cut the daikon into two inch long pieces (probably 5 to 6). Quarter one onion. Smash the ginger and 6 garlic cloves with the back of a knife.
Put the lamb, daikon, quartered onion, ginger, garlic, pepper and ¼ tsp. salt in a medium casserole or lidded saucepan and barely cover with water. Depending on the width of the pot, this will require four to 6 cups. Bring to a boil, cover, lower heat and simmer for an hour or a few minutes longer, until the lamb is just tender enough to fall easily from its bones.
Remove the lamb and daikon
from the broth. Boil the broth hard for 15 minutes to reduce it. (This is the point at which you can cool
everything and put it in the refrigerator until you want to serve it.) Return the lamb and daikon to the broth and add the greens. Cook just long enough to wilt the greens. Or if you are doing this the second day, long enough to make everything hot.
Amdo paley, meaning bread from northeastern most province of Amdo whose cooks are legendary across Tibet, is another way of describing thick bread, a round loaf about 1-2” high. It can be baked in an 8” cake pan or fried on top of the stove. Baked is more cakelike. Stovetop gets crunchy crust. Tibetans like bread so one “loaf” might only feed 2-3 people. The rest of us will get 4-8 servings depending on how much sauce or soup we need to sop up.
Basic Paley recipe
4 c unbleached all purpose white flour1 c whole wheat flour
1 tsp salt
combine these in a large bowl. Create a well in the center and put in it:
2 tbsp instant yeast (this is the modern accommodation to speed the process)*
2 c warm water
Blend everything, cover the bowl and let the dough rise in a warm place for ½ hour.
Knead it again. Form your chosen paley shape. Cover it and let it sit to rise again 15-30 minutes, however much time you have. Longer will make lighter bread.
This is cake like.
Chicken with za'atar and maftoul
Za'atar is a local blend of herbs you can now buy ready jarred. There is a Syrian version and a Palestinian version now marketed as Israeli za'atar. Maftoul is a specialty of the region that harks back to the origins of dried pasta: little balls made for the armies of Islam to carry in their pockets. It is the local form of couscous and is sometimes prepared with lamb and seven vegetables like Moroccan couscous with seven vegetables. You can buy it in Middle Eastern stores. The tiny balls of dried pasta are similar to Sardinia's fregola, which are tiny balls of roasted wheat pasta. You can substitute that here. Tabbouleh is a Lebanese/Palestinian/Syrian parsley salad normally made with bulghur.
Serves 4
4 large chicken legs and thighs in one piece)
Olive oil
3 tbsp dried mint
5 tbsp pomegranate molasses
2 tbsp dried red chili flakes
4 tbsp za’atar
1 tbsp flaky salt
For the maftoul tabbouleh
1 1/2 cups maftoul (also known as pearl couscous) or fregola (Italian roasted pasta
balls)
3 1/2 cups water
4 tomatoes
1 bunch of scallions
Large bunch flat-leaf parsley, leaves only
1 tbsp salt
Olive oil
1 pomegranate, seeded
1 red chili, sliced
Preheat the oven to 400º.
Line a baking tray with parchment paper and lay out the chicken pieces on it.
Combine the olive oil, mint, pomegranate molasses, chili flakes, za’atar and salt. Season both sides of the chicken with this mix. End up skin side down and roast in the oven 15 minutes.
While the chicken cooks, cook the maftoul or fregola by package instructions until it has just passed the al dente stage. Remove and rinse under cold water, drain and set aside.
While it cooks, chop tomatoes and spring onions into small, equal-size pieces. Finely chop the parsley.
Once the chicken has browned slightly, turn it over and cook skin side up another 15 minutes. until it’s thoroughly cooked. If you want to add more mint and za’atar, do so at the flip.
In a large bowl, mix the cooked maftoul/fregola with the chopped tomato, scallions and parsley. Add the lemon juice, salt and olive oil to taste. This salad should be sharp and tangy to contrast with the creaminess of the pasta, and there should be plenty of parsley mixed through – it is essentially a parsley salad. Transfer to a deep dish and set aside.
When the chicken is cooked, place it on top of the tabbouleh and drizzle some of the cooking juices over. Serve sprinkled with pomegranate seeds and the sliced chili.
Serves 4
For the beans
1 leek
1 tbsp olive oil
2 garlic cloves
¼ tsp chili powder
2 cans black-eyed peas
½ unwaxed lemon
½ lb bunch chard
For the herb smash
1 bunch fresh cilantro, leaves only
2 green chiles
2 garlic cloves
¼ c shelled walnuts
1 tbsp honey
2 tbsp good quality olive oil
juice of 1/2 lemon
Wash and finely slice the leek. Add to the saucepan with a tablespoon of olive oil and cook until soft and sweet, 3-5 minutes. Finely slice the garlic and add with the chili powder and cook 2-3 minutes, until the garlic begins to brown. Add black-eyed peas with their liquid, coriander, cumin and 1 c boiling water from the kettle. Bring to a simmer. Add nutmeg, squeeze in the juice of half the lemon, add the squeezed lemon half to the pan and simmer 10 minutes.
Put all the ingredients for the herb smash into a food processor and blitz until you have a smooth grassy paste. Season well with salt and pepper.
Once the peas are soft and the liquid has reduced to a thick soup-like consistency, stir in the chard leaves, season well with salt and pepper and cook 2-3 minutes. Scoop into deep bowls and spoon over the herb smash.