(Unless otherwise
noted, these are Doreen's recipes)
Go to Doreen and Eitan's Homepage
PINEAPPLE UPSIDE-DOWN CAKE WITH FRESH PINEAPPLE
Based on www.MelanieCooks.com
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 1hour
Serves: 12
1/2 cup butter, melted
Scant
cup brown sugar
3
1/2 cups fresh pineapple chunks
2
2/3 cups flour
1
3/4 cups sugar
1Tbs baking
powder
1/2 tsp salt
2/3 cup
canola oil
1
1/2 cups milk
2 large
eggs
1 tsp vanilla
Preheat
the oven to 175°.
Pour
melted butter into a non-stick 23x30 cm baking pan and coat the bottom
of the
pan.
Sprinkle
the brown sugar over the melted butter. Add the pineapple chunks to the
pan and
distribute them in an even layer.
Sift
the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt into a bowl and stir to
combine.
Combine
the oil, milk, eggs and vanilla and add to the flour mixture. Mix the
ingredient thoroughly until smooth (either by hand with a spoon or with
an
electric mixer).
Pour
the batter evenly into the pan over the pineapple layer.
Put
the pineapple cake in the oven and bake for 1 hour.
Remove
the cake for the oven and let sit for 10 minutes. Run a knife around
the sides
of the pan to make sure the cake sides are separated from the pan.
Put
a large platter or baking sheet over the cake pan and quickly flip the
cake
over. Carefully lift the baking pan off the inverted cake. Enjoy
NOTE:
If using canned pineapples, drain them before using.
PAPAYA AND YELLOW PEPPER SOUP
Aviv Ron prepared this soup –
he used “secret
ingredients” - peppers picked by Aviv and Danielle at their volunteer
work:
Ingredients:
Papaya
– one big or 2 small ones
Yellow
peppers – 6
Onion
– 1 big or 2 small
Garlic
– 4 cloves
Water
– 750 cc
Olive
oil – 2 Tbs.
Spices:
Vegan
chicken soup powder – 2 Tbs.
Indian
Masala – 2 tsp.
Curry
– 1 tsp.
Cumin
– 1/2 tsp.
Ginger
– 1 tsb
Nutmeg
– ¼ tsp.
Chili
– a little bit to taste (optional, when in doubt – don’t add)
Salt/white
pepper to taste
Instructions:
Roast
peppers in the oven – about 45 minutes in 150 degrees, until
brown in all sides and ready to peel. Take out and leave to sweat
inside a bag
or a tightly closed pot, until a bit cool and ready to peel.
In
the meantime - Dice onion – sauté in olive oil
Peel
the papaya, remove seeds (if you are lucky, Granny and Saba
have seedless papayas!) and cut to cubes
Slice
garlic
Add
garlic and papaya to the pot
Add
spices and mix every couple of minutes for about 15 minutes
When
papaya is very soft – add water and chicken soup powder, bring
to boil and lower heat to simmer.
Peel,
deseed and dice the yellow pepper – add to the pot
Simmer
in low heat for another 15 minutes
Taste
and correct spices. Has to have a bit of an “oomph” but not
too spicy. Ensure enough salt to balance the sweetness.
Grind
with a hand-stick blender until smooth.
Serve
hot or cold, decorate with drops of silan (date syrup) or
balsamic vinaigrette.
Optional garnish in the center of the plate:
Mix of finely chopped parsley,
coriander
(optional), garlic, hot chili peppers in lemon juice, olive oil and
salt!
Easy and delicious
Soup is good food, a
comforting food. Following
the horrendous attack by Hamas on innocent revelers at a music
festival and
the slaughter and kidnapping of civilians, children, women and elderly,
we
needed much comfort. We went to a market of produce brought from the
Gaza Envelope
and came back with a large amount of fennel; obviously I was going to
make
fennel soup for Shabbat dinner at the Rons. When I learnt that Dani
doesn't
like fennel I also made, for the first time, Vichyssoise Soup as we had
also
bought leeks. Dani was delighted. She had spent the day as a volunteer
picking
tomatoes and besides being exhausted had formed an allergy and potato
and leek
soup was exactly what she wanted.
Oil,
olive or canola, to cover the bottom of the pot
3 leeks,
white parts only, sliced into rings
1 onion,
sliced
5 medium potatoes,
peeled and chopped
White pepper
to taste
1
teaspoon mustard powder
1 heaped
tablespoon parave chicken soup powder
5 cups chicken
broth
1 bay leaf
Snipped
chives or parsley for serving
Heat oil in a large pot over
medium heat. Add
leeks and onion and sauté until wilted.
Stir in potatoes; season with
white pepper. Add
bay leaf and stir well; cook for about 10 minutes stirring occasionally.
Pour in chicken broth. Bring to
a boil; reduce
heat, and cover; cook for about 30 minutes. Remove bay leaf.
Cool slightly then puree. It’s
okay to have a
few chunks of potato.
If served hot, sprinkle with
chives or parsley.
Can also be served cool.
Only
make with fresh trout. Traditionally it is supposed to be caught,
knocked on
the head, gutted and left to soak in vinegar a short while. Happily the
trout we buy at the fish shop is
dead and
gutted and still tastes amazing. Try to get pink trout if possible and
don’t
wash skin.
2
trout
1
carrot
1
onion
3
whole cloves
½
cup dry white wine
¼
cup wine vinegar
Bouquet
garni (bay leaves, peppercorns, parsley)
Salt
and pepper
1
liter boiling water or enough to cover fish.
Put
all ingredients, except fish, in a large shallow frying pan and cook
over
medium heat for 20 minutes. Remove vegetables and spices. Gently
immerse the fish
and make sure they are covered with water. Switch off heat. Cover pan
with a
lid and then cover with a towel. Leave for 20 minutes. Carefully remove
from
pan and drain.
Serve
with boiled potatoes and lemon wedges. We like to serve it accompanied
by sauce
tartare – mayonnaise, capers, finely grated onion and lemon juice – or
melted butter
if you wish.
Absolutely
delicious.
See here for a recipe for grilled trout
The
Best, Easiest Focaccia Bread
Recipe
Eitan and I love to entertain.
When we decided to make seafood paella, I just knew that I had to make
focaccia
as part of the appetizers. This recipe is incredibly easy and
unusually, I made
no changes. I made it over three days but it can be made the night
before.
512g all purpose or bread flour
(I used both)
2 teaspoons kosher salt
2 teaspoons instant yeast,
2 cups lukewarm water, made by
combining 1/2 cup boiling water with 1 1/2 cups cold water
4 tablespoons olive oil, divided
Flaky sea salt
1 to 2 tablespoons
fresh rosemary leaves
In a large bowl, whisk
together
the flour, salt, and instant yeast. Add the water. Using a rubber
spatula, mix
until the liquid is absorbed and the ingredients form a sticky dough
ball. (I
needed a little more water to combine all the ingredients.) Rub the
surface of
the dough lightly with olive oil. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and
place in
the refrigerator overnight or for as long as three-four days.
Line a 9×13-inch pan with parchment paper and coat lightly with olive oil.
Pour 2 tablespoons of oil
onto
the pan. Using two forks deflate the dough by releasing it from the
sides of
the bowl and pulling it toward the center. Rotate the bowl in quarter
turns as
you deflate, turning the mass into a rough ball. Place dough into
prepared pan.
Roll the dough ball in the oil to coat it all over, forming a rough
ball. Let
the dough rest for 3 to 4 hours depending on the temperature of your
kitchen.
Because I had used more
than the
2 cups liquid recommended, the dough was really soft and didn’t form a
ball. I
just turned it over and over until it was coated with oil No need to
cover for
this room temperature rise.
Preheat oven to highest setting
220C. Sprinkle the rosemary leaves liberally over the dough. Pour 2
tablespoons
of oil over dough. Rub your fingers with
oil to coat them, then press straight down to create deep dimples all
over. If
necessary, gently stretch the dough as you dimple to allow the dough to
fill
the pan. Sprinkle with flaky sea salt.
Transfer the pan to the
oven and
bake for 25 to 30 minutes, until the underside is golden and crisp.
Remove the
pan from the oven and transfer the focaccia to a cooling rack. Let it
cool for
10 minutes before cutting and serving;
Because the focaccia was
cold by
supper time, I placed the focaccia in a preheated 375C oven, sprayed it
with
water and heated the focaccia for 10 minutes. We cut it into squares
and served
it with small bowls of olive oil and balsamic vinegar. A hit.
The following day it was
fine
heated in the microwave.
Based on https://www.delicious.com.au/
When I got mixed up between Yom Yerushalyim (which we don’t celebrate) and Shavuot, I was up at 3.00am preparing for a festive dinner with Vered and Aviv, Louise, later Caroline and even later Morris – and I had forgotten that our dish washer machine was on the blink. The following week (Shavuot, and with dish washer fixed) we had Vered and family with Gal, and Moran and family over to celebrate Shavuot. The first tarte was prepared first by me and the second by Maayan. The tarte is impressive to look at and very tasty. Good at room temperature
4
small beetroots, with young leaves to serve*
3
sprigs thyme
2
Tbs olive oil
2
Tbs water
Salt
and pepper
40g
grams unsalted butter
2
Tbs soft brown sugar
¼
cup white balsamic vinegar
1
sheet chilled pastry, cut into a disc to easily cover the pie dish
WHIPPED RICOTTA
250g
ricotta, drained
¼ cup thickened cream
2 thyme sprigs, leaves
picked
20g parmesan, finely
grated
Finely grated zest of
½ lemon
METHOD
1. Preheat oven
to 220°C.
2. For whipped
ricotta, place all ingredients into a food processor, season, and blitz
to a
smooth, spreadable consistency. Refrigerate until needed.
3. Place the
beetroot in an ovenproof dish together with the thyme, olive oil, water
and
season with salt and pepper. Cover with aluminum foil and seal but
leave a few
openings in the foil.
Roast 35-40 minutes until tender.
Allow to cool enough to handle, and then peel away skin. Halve each
beetroot,
if really small or slice into 2.5cm pieces.
·In a 20cm
ovenproof non-stick frypan, place butter, sugar and vinegar. Over
medium heat cook 2-3 minutes until sugar has dissolved and syrup
thickened.
·Place
beetroot cut-side down in syrup. Make sure the bottom is covered with
the
beetroot pieces. Top with pastry disc, tucking in the edge of pastry
and
removing any overlapping pieces.* *
·Bake 20-25 minutes or until
golden. Rest 5 minutes, then flip onto serving dish. Place balls of
ricotta and
beetroot leaves strategically around the tarte. . Best to cut it with a
pizza
cutter.
·
NOTE:
*The beetroot we find at the
supermarket are always large and need to be quartered at least before
roasting.
** Roll out left over pastry and
cut into round or squares, top with a sharp grated cheese, a slice of
tomato
and black pepper and bake with tarte.
HERBED GRISSINI
TWISTS
3 cups bread flour
1 Tbs. sugar
1 ½ Tbs.
finely chopped
fresh basil/ 1 tsp. dried basil
1 tsp. dried
oregano
1 ½ Tbs.
chopped parsley
¾ tsp. salt
2 ¼ tsp.
dried
yeast
1 cup warm water
1 Tbs. olive
oil
(I Tbs.
brandy
optional but
adds nice flavor)
1 egg white
1 tsp. water
Place the
first seven
ingredients in a food processor; pulse to blend. With processor
running, add
water, oil and brandy through chute. Process until dough forms a ball
and
leaves the side of the processor, adding a little more water or flour
if
necessary.
Turn dough onto a floured
surface and knead lightly for a few seconds. Place in a large oiled
bowl and
let rise for 40 minutes until doubled in size*
Punch dough down on a
floured surface. Roll dough into a rectangle and with a pizza cutter
and ruler
cut into about 14 strips, about 1 ½ cm wide. Let dough relax 5 minutes.
Lift a
strip and carefully stretch it until doubled in size. If dough doesn’t
stretch
let it rest for a few more minutes. Fold each strip in half and form a
plait by
slightly stretching and twisting each end in opposite directions. Place
on a
baking pan topped with either a silicone
sheet or baking parchment. If plaits start curling, straighten out when
all plaits
are on the baking sheet
Heat oven to 200C.
Cover grissini and let rise for 15
minutes or until puffy. Combine egg white and water and gently brush
over
sticks.
Bake in oven for 20
minutes or until golden. Remove from pan.
*NOTE: I heat
a narrow
glass with water to just boiling in the microwave and then place the
bowl of dough next
to it to rise..
Some twists
will be crunchy,
others soft. If you have any left the next day, dry them out in a very
low oven
until very crisp.
I woke up one morning
earlier this week with
the thought that I wanted to make stuffed calamari. We invited Vered
and Aviv
who were delighted to come. But what to make for the vegan part of
their
family? It also had to be stuffed something. This stuffed rolled
lasagna was a
winner.
First you have to prepare the Vegan Ricotta cheese
Vegan Ricotta Cheese
1 cup cashews soaked overnight (see
Note)
1 block firm tofu
2 Tbs nutritional yeast
1-2 Tbs lemon juice
1 tsp salt
Good grind black pepper
Soak cashews overnight in water
then drain when ready to use.
Wrap paper towels around the tofu
and place a heavy object on top.
Let it sit for at least 30 minutes,
In the food processor first blend
the cashew nuts. Then add
chunked tofu, lemon juice, nutritional yeast, salt and pepper. Process
the
mixture until smooth, scraping the sides of the food processor with a
spatula
as necessary. The final mixture should be creamy and fluffy, with a
slight
texture that melts in your mouth. Adjust seasonings if necessary.
Serve: Enjoy as-is as a dip or use in any
recipe of choice! (Lasagna
rolls below). Store leftovers in an airtight container in the
refrigerator for
up to 7 days or freeze for up to two months.
Notes: Cashews: If you forget to soak your
cashews ahead of time overnight, you can either cover them in boiling
water and
let sit for 20 minutes, or cover them with water and microwave for 3
minutes,
then let sit for 3-5 minutes before draining. If you have a
cashew allergy,
you can also replace the cashews with blanched slivered almonds,
macadamia
nuts, or pine nuts.
Sweet: you can use this ricotta in sweet
applications as well, but reduce
the nutritional yeast to only 1 tablespoon and leave out black pepper
Lasagna rolls with stuffed
Ricotta cheese.
1/2 Tbs oil
1 onion sliced
thinly
2 garlic cloves,
crushed
3-4 fresh mushrooms,
sliced thinly (optional)
1/2 Tbs soy sauce
100 g leaf spinach (fresh or
frozen)
1 1/2 cups (360 g) marinara
sauce (see Notes)
12 small lasagna
noodles (Osem Perfecto
14x9 is ideal)
200 /vegan ricotta cheese
1/2 tsp paprika (optional)
Salt and black pepper to
taste
Grated vegan cheese for topping
Cook the lasagna noodles in a large pot (filled with salted boiling
water) according to package instructions, or until al dente. Remove
lasagna to a bowl of cold water, and then drainthem on dish towels
separating the leaves if necessary.
Ladle
a layer of marinara sauce
in the bottom of a 28x22 cm baking dish Set aside.
While
the lasagna noodles cook,
heat oil in a pan over medium heat and add the sliced onion, garlic and
mushrooms. Sauté for about 4 minutes. Then add soy sauce and spinach.
Cook until
spinach wilted (if fresh) or liquid evaporates (if frozen).
Spread
a heaped teaspoon of
ricotta cheese on each lasagna leaf and squash it down. Top it with the
spinach
mixture. Roll up each lasagna noodle lengthwise and place it seam-side
down in
the baking dish, one roll next to the other.
Ladle
the remaining marinara
sauce over the lasagna noodles.
Top
with grated yellow vegan
cheese. Cover with aluminum foil.
The
lasagna can be made ahead of
time to this point and refrigerated until needed.
Heat
oven to 175C degrees and remove
lasagna pan from fridge
Bake
for 20-25 minutes then uncover,
and bake 10 minutes more.
You
can use your favorite tomato
sauce instead of marinara sauce. We added some vegan cream to smooth
out the
taste
If
you aren't a fan of
mushrooms, simply leave them out.
We
have just returned from two visits to Poland for bridge. Finding
ourselves in
the land of *pierogi" again
conjured up for Eitan memories (that
either his
mother or the cook used to make) of perogen in soup. But what
the Polish
call perogi are more like ravioli and not the crisp baked or
fried perogen
he
remembered. Eventually I googled “South Africa perogen” and found a
recipe on this
site https://mondaymorningcookingclub.com.au/recipe/meat-pies-perogen
which I halved but was
still
too much for us, but the recipe said they can be frozen. If reheated
they should be done in the oven, not in the microwave which makes them
soggy.
1
Tbs olive oil
1
small onion chopped
Sprinkling
of oregano
250
mince meat
¼
cup canned tomatoes
Squeeze
of ketchup
½
Tbs Worcestershire sauce
2
rolls of bought pareve puff pastry
Heat
the oil in a heavy-based frying pan. Saute the onion until soft then
add the
garlic and oregano. Continue to stir over a low heat until fragrant and
soft.
Add
the mincemeat, the canned tomato, ketchup and Worcestershire sauce and
cook for
about 20 minutes, stirring from time to time. The mixture should be
quite dry
(not runny like a sauce). Add more tomato, salt and pepper to taste if
necessary. Let cool.
Blend
in a food processor to an even consistency.
Preheat
oven to 180C. Line a baking tray with a silicone pad and oil lightly
Unroll
pastry and cut into rounds with a diameter of 7-8 cms (a drinking glass
will
probably be suitable) and place on baking tray. Place 1 teaspoon of
mixture to
one side of the circle and fold the other side over to close. Press
edges down
with a fork to seal well.
Very
lightly spray with oil and bake for about 30 minutes until golden.
Serve
with soup and have a discussion whether the perogen should be
in the
soup or eaten with the soup. Enjoy!
Note: For a vegan version boil a potato in a little
water until very
soft. Drain. Fry a small chopped onion
in oil or vegan margarine until golden and mash with potato. Season to
taste. Cut
squares from the pastry and fold over and seal with a kiss, sorry with
a fork.
Oil lightly and bake until golden. The different shape is to
differentiate it
from the meat version.
*Pierogi
are filled dumplings made
by wrapping unleavened dough around
a savoury or sweet filling and
cooking in boiling water. They
are often pan-fried before serving. (Wikipedia)
STEAMED FISH CHINESE STYLE
This was originally a pre-birthday dinner for Eitan’s 82nd birthday. It was so successful that I bought another fish, froze and defrosted it and made it a second time.
1
whole fish with head and tail intact*
6
slices ginger slivered with peeler plus 2 Tbs julienned
2
scallions/garlic leaves julienned, white and green parts separate
8
sprigs cilantro**
¼
cup canola and sesame oil
¼
cup water
¼
cup soy sauce
1 Tbs rice vinegar
Pinch
sugar
Salt
and white pepper
You can
steam the fish whole with or without a few deep slits on
each side. If scoring, combine slivered ginger and white parts of
scallions
with salt and white pepper and stuff inside slits and inside of fish.
Boil
water in a steamer making sure water will not touch fish.
Place fish in steamer, cover and steam for 10 minutes. Remove from
steamer onto
a platter.
Spread ½
julienned ginger, green parts of scallions and cilantro
(parsley, basil) over fish.
Heat oils
and add other half of ginger and heat. Add
the water, soy sauce, rice vinegar and pinch
of sugar and bring to boil. Pour over
fish and serve immediately with rice on the side.
*I used a
red tilapia just under 1 kilo. This is an inexpesive white fleshed
fish without a ‘fishy’ odour that might overwhelm the spices
used.
Any
non-oily
fish is suitable.
** Eitan
doesn’t like cilantro so I used parsley and basil instead
GREEN LENTIL CHOPPED
‘LIVER’ (Vegan)
Chopped liver is traditionally (at least in our family) an important part of the Passover seder meal. To enable the vegans in our family to enjoy chopped liver Doreen prepared a vegan version, which even most of the meat eaters prefer to the real thing!
Yield 3 cups
1 cup dried
green lentils
2 cups
parave chicken
broth
1 cup walnuts,
lightly toasted
2
tablespoons vegetable oil
1-2
green marrows finely sliced
1
medium yellow
onion, sliced
1
tablespoon almond butter
½
teaspoon Wellington’s Worchestershire sauce
Salt
and pepper
1.
Bring
lentils and chicken broth to a boil in large
pan.
2.
Cover
and reduce to simmer.
3.
Stir
occasionally for 30 minutes or until tender.
4.
Leave
lid off to dry lentils.
5.
Lightly
toast walnuts in a dry frying pan. Remove
walnuts from pan.
6.
Saute
marrow in canola oil for a few minutes, then
add sliced onions, stirring from time to time until vegetables soft.
7.
Process
walnuts in food processor, then onions and
marrow and lastly lentils, processing until smooth. Add almond butter
and
Wellington’s.
8.
Add
salt and pepper to taste.
9.
Chill
for 8 hours, unmold onto baby leaf lettuce.
10.
Garnish
with pickled cucumbers and serve with hazeret
(chrain, horseradish) or beetroot relish on
crackers and celery sticks.
When our family comes for Friday
night
supper, salads are always an important beginning to the meal. For a
recent meal
I cut penne pasta into small pieces and added tomato, basil, wine
vinegar and
olive oil for a salad. Another was Eitan’s delicious lettuce salad with
beet
toppings and arugula from our garden. And then the highly successful
cauliflower salad, below.
½
Cauliflower head, cut
into small florets
2 tbs
capers, sliced
3
pickled cucumbers
diced small
½ red
onion diced small
Chopped
parsley
1 tsp
lemon juice
Mayonnaise
** - real or
vegan
Steam
cauliflower until
florets are soft. Drain well and pat dry.
Combine
remaining
vegetables with cauliflower and add about 1/2 cup mayonnaise to
cauliflower
mixture.
NOTE:
You can add a diced boiled potato to the salad
**VEGAN
MAYONNAISE
1
cup vegetable oil
1/2
cup unsweetened soy
milk
1
Tbs apple cider
vinegar
1/2
tsp salt
½ tsp
mustard powder-
optional
Make sure the oil and milk are
at room temperature.
Combine
all the ingredients in a blender cup and place the immersion
blender so that it sits firmly on the bottom of the cup, and pulse
until the
mayo emulsifies. Once most of the vegan mayo has emulsified you can
move the
blender up and down to incorporate any oil that is sitting on the top.
Taste
the mayo and add more salt
if needed. If it’s too thick, add more milk or lemon juice and if it’s
too
watery, add more oil. Pulse again until the mayo has the perfect
consistency.
Use the
mayonnaise immediately
or the leftovers in an airtight
container in the fridge for up to a week.
Serves 6
3-4 Granny
Smith apples, peeled and sliced 1/4-inch thick
2
tsp lemon juice
1 tsp vanilla
⅔ cup brown sugar not packed or ½
cup Brown Truvia
1
tsp ground cinnamon
3 Tbs
all-purpose flour
1 sheet
puff pastry**
1 egg
¼ cup milk
Top with ground cinnamon and 1/8 cup coarse sugar
Preheat
oven to 400°F.
In
a large bowl, combine the apples, lemon juice, vanilla, sugar,
cinnamon, flour.
Stir to coat evenly.
Place
the pastry on a sheet of parchment and roll out slightly
Place
the sheet with the pastry on a baking sheet
Spread
the apple mixture evenly down the center of the pastry, lengthwise.
Slice
the sides of the pastry into strips of about 1 1/2 cm thickness at
about a 45 degree angle.
Starting at the
bottom, fold a strip to the middle and wet the end. Repeat from the
other side
and continue sealing lightly with water each time.
If
you have pastry without apple at the end cut off the pastry and seal
top and
bottom.
Whisk
together the egg and the milk. Lightly brush the top of the pastry with
the egg
wash.
Serve
warm or at room temperature with custard.
Adapted from
https://www.noracooks.com/
During
the Guardians of the Wall campaign, May 2021, when travelling on the
roads
didn’t seem safe, the Rons came for Friday night supper. “Together is
our
favourite place to be” is not only a
cute slogan on our 26th Family Reunion T-shirts
but a reality, strengthening the family ties
and the feeling of togetherness.
3
cups grated carrots
2
½ cups all purpose flour
Heaped
½ cup brown sugar/brown Truvia
Heaped
½ cup white sugar
2
tsps baking powder
1
tsp baking soda
2
tsps cinnamon
½
tsp ground ginger
Good
grate of nutmeg
1/2
tsp salt
½
cup canola oil
1
cup applesauce/crushed pineapple
¾
cup non-dairy milk
1
Tbs vanilla
Preheat
the oven to 350 degrees F and prepare 2 round 8-inch cake pans by
lining the
bottom with parchment paper and oiling it.
Grate
carrots finely and set aside until ready.
In
a large bowl combine dry ingredients and mix well.
Combine
oil, applesauce, milk and vanilla and whisk to combine. Add liquid to
grated carrots
and mix well, loosening the carrot mixture.
Pour
the wet ingredients into the flour mixture and combine lightly.
Spoon
the cake batter evenly between the prepared pans, then bake for 35-45
minutes,
until a toothpick comes out clean and the tops of the cakes are set.
Remove
from the oven, and allow to cool completely before carefully removing
from the
pans.
Frost with VEGAN VANILLA FROSTING:
3
cups icing sugar, sifted
50
grams of (coconut) margarine
50
grams of Tofutti
A
few drops of hot water, just enough to
combine.
Whip
until light and frost the cake.
When
we lived in Nassau Bahamas our
favorite treat was conch salad made with a good squeeze of a local sour
orange, prepared
by the side of the road, and then taken home in as plastic bag to
enjoy. Local lore attributed certain benefits to conch salad and
no self-respecting Bahamian would go on a date without first
eating conch salad.
This is
my kosher version of that salad.
300g frozen Nile Perch
At
least ½ cup lemon juice
¼
cup orange juice
1
large onion chopped
1
red/green pepper chopped
2
hot peppers chopped finely
3
bay leaves
5
peppercorns
1
tsp salt
Good
grind black pepper
1
tomato chopped
Cut
almost defrosted fish into
bite-size pieces. Add chopped onion. Marinade it in lemon and orange
juice, and
peppers with bay leaves and peppercorns. Add more lemon juice as liquid
is
absorbed. Can be prepared overnight. Before serving add cut tomatoes
and adjust
seasonings.
Rumoured to be good the next day if
you are fortunate to have leftovers.
2
whole trout, cleaned
Olive
oil
Sea
salt
Black
pepper
½
lemon thinly sliced
½
onion thinly sliced
1
clove garlic, crushed
2
sprigs rosemary
2
sprigs thyme
Preheat
an outdoor grill on high heat and oil the grate well.
Sprinkle
inside of trout cavities with black pepper and a little salt. Place the
lemon
and onion slices along with crushed garlic, a sprig of rosemary and
thyme into
cavity of each trout.
Rub
each trout generously with olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt. Tie up
each
trout so stuffing won’t fall out.
Turn
preheated grill down to low and place the trout directly onto the
grill. Cook
until flesh flakes easily and the skins are browned, 6 to 7 minutes per
side,
flipping once.
(Makes about 30 small donuts.)
2 ½ cups (350 grams) self-raising flour
(or all-purpose flour + 2 teaspoons
baking powder)
4 tablespoons sugar1
1 cup plain yogurt (240 ml)2
2 large eggs2
Grated lemon/orange zest
2 teaspoons lemon juice
Combine the flour and sugar in a large bowl.
Whisk together the yoghurt, eggs, zest and lemon juice in
a bowl.
Pour the liquid ingredients onto the
dry ingredients and with your hands mix
until you get a very sticky dough. Continue
mixing with your hands until all the
flour has been integrated. It may seem that there is too much flour,
but slowly
add the flour from the edges of the bowl.
Don’t worry the dough will be sticky.
Place baking paper on a counter top and flour well. Spread the dough
on the paper and pat to a thickness of 1.5 cm. Flour the dough and
cut circles with a floured cake cutter or drinking "shot"
glass.
In a deep frying pan or pot pour vegetable oil to a
height of 4 cm and
heat on high. Carefully place cut dough
into the hot oil and fry for a minute or two. When the edges turn
golden turn
over and fry for another half minute. Remove from the oil, drain, and
place on
absorbent paper on a dish.
Doughnuts can be served dusted with icing sugar, or with
jam, maple
syrup etc.
NOTES:
1.
1. Sugar
free:
Replace the sugar with a sweetener.
2.
2.
Vegan:
Replace
the yogurt with a non-dairy yoghurt, and the eggs with an egg
substitute or
apple sauce or mashed banana etc.
3.
3. Can be reheated
in microwave
4.
4. Recipe can be halved
1½ cups all-purpose
flour
2 tablespoons sugar/sweetener
2 teaspoons baking
powder
1 teaspoon baking
soda
Pinch salt
1
1/4 cup buttermilk
2 large eggs
¼ cup unsweetened
applesauce
1/4 teaspoon ground
cinnamon
1/2 cup shredded
Granny
Smith apple
In a large mixing bowl,
sift
together flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
Whisk milk, eggs,
applesauce and
cinnamon. Stir in shredded apple
Add to flour mixture, and
mix to
combine, adding a little more liquid if it looks too dry.
Preheat a flat griddle
over
medium-low heat.
Scoop ¼ cup of pancake
batter
onto griddle. Let pancakes cook until bubbles form before flipping.
Cook other side until
golden
brown.
adapted from https://thestayathomechef.com/
VEGAN MUSHROOM AND
LEEK PIE (Phyllo Dough)
This is
a combination of two recipes. I wanted to make my vegan
granddaughters something special for Friday night dinner, similar to a
fish pie
I had made the previous day for a brunch for friends.
¼ cup
couscous/1 cup cooked rice/ bulgur
5 Tbs
olive oil
1 tsp
white wine vinegar/ cider vinegar
225 gr
mushrooms, sliced
2 cups
leeks, white and light green parts, cut lengthwise and sliced
into half moons
1 cup
diced fennel
2 tsp
fresh thyme leaves, chopped
2
cloves garlic, crushed
1 tsp
tomato paste
Salt
and pepper
2 Tbs soy sauce/hoisin sauce
½ cup
creamy almond butter
¼ cup
chopped dill/parsley/cilantro
1
packet vegan puff pastry (phyllo), frozen and thawed in fridge.
Melted margarine as needed
Place
couscous in a bowl and just cover with boiling water then, let
sit.
In
large frying pan heat 3 Tbs olive oil over medium high heat and add
mushrooms, stirring occasionally, until softened. Add
an additional 1 Tbs olive oil, leeks and
chopped fennel and cook until fennel soft, turning often. Stir in
thyme,
garlic, tomato paste, herbs, salt and
pepper and cook for a few more minutes.
Add soy
sauce to deglaze, loosening browned bits from bottom of pan.
Remove from stove and let cool.
Add
couscous and almond butter to mushrooms. Mix well and adjust
flavourings if necessary
On a
floured surface place puff pastry and roll out to a 35 cm square.
Then cut it into two rectangles one 16 cm wide, the other 19cm. Melt some margarine. Now pack mushroom mixture
along middle of narrow piece, leaving about 2.5 cm edge all around.
Brush
margarine along the edges.
If you
have a lattice cutter roll it firmly down the middle of the
wider piece. If not just make slits lengthwise along the pastry with a
sharp
knife or scissors. Carefully pick it up and place it on top of the
other piece.
Turn
sides of pastry up and press down with a fork. Brush
everything with melted margarine and
place in oven for about 45 minutes until golden brown. It looks and
tastes
fantastic.
Daughter Vered was coming for lunch and I was planning a
hamburger lunch –
both meat and vegetarian – when Eitan started talking about an onion
loaf. I
seemed to remember that onion bread should be made with dried onions
and spent
a good few hours looking for alternatives. Then Someone began placing
printouts
of Onion Loaf recipes on my desk.
Oh, not a loaf of bread! So a
few more
searches for fried Onion Loaf only to find they all used a pancake mix.
But I
don’t use packaged mixes.
Then I remembered that Limor had
made onion rings. This is her recipe. Great Success and not oily.
Serves 4
3
large onions
1
cup all-purpose flour
At
least 3/4 cup beer / soda water. But beer is best
Salt
and pepper
Oil
for frying.
Peel
the onions, leaving the root in place; it holds the onions together
while slicing.
Then slice thinly. I used the thickest cut on my mandolin. Separate the
rings
and place in a bowl.
In
the meantime heat a large pot with vegetable oil until bubbles appear
around a
wooden spoon when it is placed in the oil.
In
another bowl combine the flour salt and pepper and beer to make a thick
mixture. Then pour it over the onions and mix well. Adjust the
consistency if
necessary, adding more beer or flour so batter just coats onions rings.
With
tongs grab rings and place them in the hot oil. They stick together in
clumps.
Turn over to brown on both sides, brown but slightly soft. Then remove
to a
paper-lined plate. Cover with foil and keep warm until ready to serve.
You can
also put them in a loaf pan and heat in a warm oven for about 8 minutes.
Based on the recipe by https://www.noracooks.com/
With three vegans and
two
vegetarians in the family, Shavuot, when milk products are
traditionally eaten, was a challenging time. This cheesecake, without
cheese, had even the
carnivores calling for more.
INGREDIENTS
FOR THE BASE
1 ½ cups fine oats, almonds,
cornflakes
5 Tablespoons/70g (coconut)
margarine
(¼ cup sugar), if needed
FOR
THE FILLING
2 containers Tofutti vegan cheese
1 container (200 ml) coconut
cream
1 cup sugar
3 Tbs cornflour
1 tsp vanilla essence
2 Tbs lemon juice
INSTRUCTIONS
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F
FOR THE BASE
Butter a pie dish.
Grind oats, almonds cornflakes in
food processor. Add melted margarine, and sugar if necessary.
With a spoon pat down crumbs
evenly in pie pan. Sprinkle with a little orange juice if too dry.
Place in
oven for 10 minutes.
FOR THE FILLING
Place Tofutti in bowl of mix master.
Beat cheese until light and fluffy.
Now add the rest of the filling
ingredients and beat until smooth, scraping down the sides and bottom
of the
bowl as needed. Taste to be sure it is sweet enough
Once it's completely smooth, pour
into prepared pie pan.
TO BAKE
Place in the oven and bake for 50
minutes. Do not open the oven door during this time. The cheese should
be set,
but slightly soft to touch. Turn off the heat, and let it sit in the
oven for
10 more minutes
Remove from the oven, and let it cool before moving
to
the
refrigerator to cool for at least 4 hours, uncovered, preferably
overnight.
To serve bring back to room temperature, slice and
serve
as is
or with strawberry coulis or a berry topping.
STRAWBERRY COULIS
300 g strawberries
1 heaped Tbs sugar/sweetener
Few drops
lemon juice
1 Tbs water
Wash and hull strawberries. Place in saucepan with
other
ingredients and simmer gently for about 10 minutes until strawberries
are
squishy squashed. Add more sugar if not sweet enough. Blend and strain.
Keeps
well in fridge or freezer.
2 cups all purpose flour
1 1/4 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
Pinch salt
1 tsp ground cinnamon
Good grate of nutmeg
2 and 1/3 cups (255g) grated carrot
1 and 1/2 cups (300g) Brown Sugar
2 Flax eggs (2 Tbs ground Flaxseed with 6 Tbs water)
1/2 cup canola oil
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 Tbs apple cider vinegar
(¼ cup finely chopped glazed ginger) optional
Preheat the
oven to 350°F (180°C).
Grease two 7 or
8-inch cake pans and line the bottoms with parchment paper. Oil and
flour
lightly.
Peel and grate
carrots.
Sift the flour,
baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon and nutmeg into a mixmaster
bowl.
Mix with paddle beater.
Prepare the flax
eggs, by mixing 2 Tbs ground flaxseed with 6 Tbs water and let sit for
a minute or two.
Combine the
oil, vanilla, apple cider vinegar (and ginger) then add to the mixing
bowl.
Beat to combine.
Add the flax
eggs and mix again.
Let the batter sit for a
minute or two so that the carrots can release moisture into the batter.
It is much thicker than an ordinary cake
batter.
(*If your batter is still
too dry to mix after letting it sit for a couple of minutes (and only
if
it’s too dry to mix after sitting for a few minutes) then add in a
little
non-dairy milk, only as much as you need to get the batter to a wet
enough
consistency so that it can mix properly).
Divide the mixture between
the two pans and
spread evenly.
Place in the oven and
bake for 30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes
out
clean. Cool completely before removing from pans.
ICING SUGAR
200 g icing sugar
Good dollop margarine
Good dollop tofutti
Lemon zest
Enough boiling water to
combine.
Beat well
Add more icing sugar if too
thin.
NOTE
The mixture has
to be just wet enough so you can spread it over the bottom of the cake
pans with a spatula.
I substituted ¼ cup Brown
Truvia for ½ cup of the brown sugar.
I added a grated apple for
moisture.
I would have added
finely chopped glazed ginger but my granddaughters don’t like it.
Adapted from "Little Meals" by Rozanne Gold (Villard
Books, 1993).
8 eggs at room
temperature
1/2
cup
unsweetened cocoa powder
1 cup sugar/sweetener
3 Tbs canola oil
2 Tbs cold coffee
(liquid)
Few drops vanilla
extract
1 grated rind of
small orange
1/2
cup
flaked almonds, toasted and finely ground
*2 Tbs matzo meal
Preheat oven
to
350'F/175C. Oil a spring form cake tin and dust
with matzo meal (see Note*).
Separate 6
eggs.
Beat the egg whites until stiff and set aside.
In Mixmaster
bowl
combine 6 egg yolks and remaining 2 whole eggs with
the cocoa, sugar, oil, coffee, vanilla extract and orange rind. Then
beat this
cocoa mixture until light in color.
Mix the
ground
almonds with matzo meal and then fold into cocoa mixture.
Beat egg
whites
again until stiff. Add some of the cocoa mixture
to stiffly beaten egg whites then with rubber spatula lightly fold egg
whites
into cocoa mixture.
Pour into
prepared
cake tin. Bake for 25 minutes. Be careful not
to overbake.
Remove from
oven
and allow cake to cool. You can sprinkle with
icing sugar,
but
fine without it. Serve with fresh berries and ice
cream.
(I made half
the
quantity and it was a little thin but just fine.)
*NOTE:
Grind 4 Tbs
matzo
meal in a spice grinder/blender to make it fine.
Set aside 2 Tbs of matzo meal for cake. Oil the spring form pan with
vegetable
oil then dust with the remaining matzo meal.
Fry on a medium hot skillet with a
little oil, ¼ cup mixture makes one pancake.
Serve immediately, with maple syrup,
strawberries or whatever.
NOTE: The pancakes are a little
grainy (not unpleasantly so). For a smoother pancake zap matzo meal in
a food
processor for a finer texture.
LAURA’S CURRIED
FISH
Jewish
holidays in Israel have a rhythm of their own. Our best holiday is
Pesach
(usually by me) (chopped liver, gefilte fish and roast turkey) then
comes Rosh
Hashanah (whoever gives in first prepares the dinner). We used to Break
the Yom
Kippur Fast by my uncle Julius and Laura.
We waited in anticipation for milk and soda water with babke
(memories
of my grandmother Mary), then chopped herring and kichel and of course
the
curried fish. Laura prepared hers without raisins because the children
didn’t
like it. The different foods give each
holiday their special flavor and curried fish is the best flavor I can
think
of!
½ k
or so of any firm white fish that will hold its shape is good. Nile
Perch is
excellent for this recipe. Dry fish
well. Dip first in beaten egg and then in flour. I use ground
cornflakes and
fine oats with salt and pepper. Fry fish in canola oil then drain..
Boil
together:
1
1/4 cups vinegar
½ of
3/4 cup water
½ of
3/4 cup sugar (or sugar/stevia mix)
1/2
tsp salt
black
pepper
3 bay
leaves
6 peppercorns
1
tsp coriander
½
tsp turmeric
2
1/2 Tbs mild curry powder
3 sliced
onions
1/2
cup golden raisins
Boil
everything together for a few minutes. Taste after a few minutes to
adjust
amount of sugar, water and curry.
To celebrate our 55th
wedding anniversary we had some friends over for cocktails and a light
buffet.
The evening ended with everyone imbibing Vered’s delicious Mojitis and
enjoying
the prepared banquet (see Menu). Food was
plentiful and delicious but
the
carrot soup was a particular success.
2
Tbs oil (olive/canola)
1
heaped
tsp each ground coriander, ginger and mild curry powder
½
tsp cinnamon
2
sliced
onions
3
cups unpeeled sliced carrots
2
sweet potatoes, peeled and cubed
2
peppers, red/yellow/orange (grilled and skinned)
(See NOTE)
½
tsp black pepper
7-8
cups boiling water
(1
Tbs chicken soup powder)
Chopped
parsley/dill to garnish
Heat oil and fry coriander, ginger,
curry and cinnamon. Add onions and saute until wilted, 3-4 minutes. Add
carrots, sweet potato, peppers, ground black pepper and chicken soup
powder.
Stir. Add water and bring soup to boil. Simmer for 20 minutes. Blend
soup and
strain for extra creaminess. Return to pot and adjust seasonings and
desired
thickness. Serve with yoghurt preferably
infused with saffron for the colour, chopped parsley or dill and
caramelized
pumpkin seeds if you are feeling energetic.
NOTES:
1. The soup tastes much better if
peppers are charred and skinned before adding. They can, however, be
thickly
diced and fried until soft; if not fried until well done and soft they
will
give a raw taste to the soup.
2. I chop and change all ingredients
when I cook, but have found that at least 1 sweet potato in this recipe
is
essential for a great taste.
CARAMELIZED PUMPKIN SEEDS
1
Tbs oil of your
choice
60g pumpkin seeds
1 Tbs maple syrup
½ Tbs soft brown sugar
½ tsp salt
1 pinch ground black pepper
1 big pinch cayenne pepper
Preheat
the oven
to 180C/350F. Line an oven tray with a silicone
liner or baking parchment and brush with oil. Put the pumpkin seeds in
a bowl
with all the other ingredients, spread over the tray so they don’t
clump and
bake for about 15 minutes, stirring a few times, and roast to a nice,
golden colour.
Leave to cool down.
With
many people trying to reduce the amount of wheat they eat, spelt is a
good
alternative. An ancient grain with a nutty taste it is easier to digest
than
wheat flour. Not suitable for celiacs or those with gluten allergies.
1 ¾
cup Spelt flour
2
Tbs sugar or 1 Tbs substitute
1
Tbs baking powder
½
tsp baking soda
Pinch
salt
1
egg
1 ½
cups milk/ non-dairy milk
1
tsp vanilla
3
Tbs canola
Sift
dry ingredients. Combine liquid ingredients and add to flour mixture.
Combine
lightly and let sit for 15 minutes.
NOTE:
Can add fresh or thawed drained blueberries, dotting pancakes as soon
as the
mix is poured into skillet.
A
perennial favorite, simple to prepare and
delicious. Serves 8-10.
(for another recipe, and story, see the recipe from
Doreen's cookbook)
1 turkey breast
2 Tbs soy sauce
2 Tbs balsamic
vinegar
1 Tbs olive oil
3 chopped cloves
garlic
2 bayleaves
3 peppercorns
Grated
ginger/ ½ tsp ginger powder
1 Tbs
silan/pomegranate/grape syrup/even honey
Good shake of 5
Spices powder/ ½ tsp cinnamon in a pinch
Freshly ground
black pepper
Before roasting:
Sliced fresh
pears
Sweet red paprika
Mix marinade
together in a flat-bottomed dish and place turkey breast inside, making
sure
marinade enters all the little pockets in the breast. Cover and
refrigerate for
the day or even overnight.
One hour before
roasting, remove from fridge. Heat oven to 375F/170C. When read,
prepare a
length of aluminum foil big enough to wrap around the turkey breast and
oil the foil liberally with canola oil. Place turkey breast on foil and
tuck pears
in
pockets and under turkey. Pour in marinade. Fold foil over and crimp.
Roast for
30 minutes then open and sprinkle with sweet red paprika for a nice
colour.
Roast for another 10 minutes.
Do not overcook.
If you have a food thermometer, internal temperature should not be more
than
74C/165F.
Slice and serve
with marinade which we will now call gravy and any pears that have
popped out.
1
½ kg sirloin with layer of fat on one side
4
cloves garlic, slivered
Sprigs
of rosemary and thyme
Scant
cup of white flour and dry mustard if available with lots of
freshly ground black pepper
1
onion cut in half
Take
meat out of fridge at least 1 ½ hours before roasting. Make
slits all over meat and insert garlic slivers, rosemary and thyme.
Rub
flour mixture over fat and rest of meat. Place meat fat side
down. Tuck onions underneath.
Preheat
oven to 220 degrees centigrade/430 fahrenheit and roast meat
for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 190 degrees and roast for about another
30
minutes, turning roast over half way through cooking. Remove from oven
and tent
with foil, allowing to rest for at least 15 minutes. Make gravy from
pan juices.
Best
served as medium rare – internal temperature of 57-60
centigrade/
135-140
degrees Fahrenheit.
½ cup chopped green
onions/garlic leaves
¼ cup soy sauce
Scant ¼ cup Balsamic
vinegar
2 Tbs sesame oil
3 Tbs Silan date syrup/molasses
2 Tbs grated ginger/1
Tbs dry powder
2 Tbs Dijon mustard
4 cloves garlic,
crushed
1 tsp hot sauce/ hot
pepper to taste
Good shake 5 Spice
powder
Combine all ingredients in a large container. Add the wings, tossing to coat.
Cover and refrigerate up to
1 day
Best is to barbecue.
Baking is also an option:
Preheat oven to 175 degrees C
Arrange the wings in a
single layer on a baking sheet.
Bake for 15 minutes, turn,
baste, and bake for another 15 minutes.
Increase the temperature to 200
degrees
and bake for another 15 minutes, or until crispy and browned.
from www.noracooks.com 16 servings
When our newly discovered cousin
Devra Hock came to spend the weekend to meet our family, we found out
that it
was her birthday. Faced with preparing dinner for omnivores,
vegetarians and
vegans, I couldn’t manage the prospect of baking two separate cakes.
This
recipe looked good and no-one knew it was vegan. It was moist and light. A success and best of all Zoe could decorate it.
Chocolate Cake
1 cup unsweetened
almond milk
1 tablespoon
apple cider vinegar
2 cups
all purpose flour
1
3/4 cups sugar
3/4 cup
cocoa powder
2 teaspoons baking
powder
1
1/2 teaspoons baking soda
Pinch salt
1/2 cup canola
oil
2/3 cup unsweetened
applesauce*
1 tablespoon pure
vanilla extract
1 cup boiling
water
Chocolate Buttercream Frosting
1/2 cup cocoa
powder
1 ¾
cups margarine
2-3 cups
icing sugar
1 teaspoons pure
vanilla extract
1/8-1/4 cup unsweetened
almond milk*
For the Chocolate Cake
Preheat
oven to 350 degrees F (175C). Line two
8-inch
cake pans* with parchment, grease and flour lightly.
To 1
cup almond milk add the tablespoon of vinegar. Stir slightly and set
aside to
curdle.
In a
large bowl, sift together the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking
powder, baking
soda and salt. With paddle attachment of mixer mix to combine.
Combine
the oil, applesauce, vanilla and milk/vinegar
mixture, then add to flour mixture. Mix on medium speed with a hand
mixer or
with the paddle attachment until well combined.
Lower
the speed and carefully pour in the boiling water, continuing to mix
into the
cake batter until combined. The batter will seem very runny at this
point.
Divide
the batter evenly between the cake pans. Bake for 30-35 minutes, or
until a
toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. When cool carefully
remove
the cakes from the pans and let cool completely before frosting.
For the Chocolate Buttercream Frosting
Sift
the cocoa powder into to a mixer bowl.
Add the softened margarine and mix until creamed, stirring
occasionally
until evenly combined..
Add
half of the powdered sugar and half of the almond milk, and mix until
combined.
Add the rest of the powdered sugar and vanilla extract. Mix starting on
low,
and turn to high. Mix until fluffy and light.
If the
frosting seems too dry, add more milk, a tablespoon or two at a time.
If the
frosting seems too wet and doesn't hold its shape, add more powdered
sugar
until it thickens up.
Frost
the cake and decorate..
* NOTES:
9-inch
pans will also work but the cake won’t be as high.
I used soy
milk because that
is what I had. If you don’t have applesauce just increase the oil to ¾
cup.
I added a clump of Tofutti
spread to the frosting.
(Doreen)
When preparing a family
feast to celebrate granddaughter Ilai’s 12th birthday and
son Moran’s 47th birthday, I went out of my way to make special things,
like gravlax. Because this is less
salty than smoked salmon we prefer it.
1
kg
salmon, filleted
and boned
1/4
cup
sugar
1/4
cup
coarse salt
2
Tbs
cracked white
pepper preferable, or black
1
bunch
dill
Scale and de-bone salmon, leaving skin intact.
Tweezers are useful for taking out bones! Cut broadside in two equal
pieces.
Wipe dry with a paper towel. Combine sugar, salt and peppercorns. Line
a deep
glass dish with a little of the mixture and some dill. Place salmon
skin side
down in dish. Sprinkle mixture and dill
thickly over salmon. Cover with second piece of salmon, matching thin
side to
thick and spread any remaining ingredients over top. Cover with plastic
wrap
and place a light brick on top. Place in cool place for 5 hours. Drain
off
liquid, and return brick in place. Refrigerate for about another 48
hours,
turning fish around at least twice during that period, draining any
liquid..
Taste.
If too salty,
scrape off the top layer. Slice thinly. Decorate with lemon slices and
fresh
dill. Keeps for up to 2 weeks.
MUSTARD SAUCE FOR GRAVLAX
1/4
cup
Dijon mustard
1
teaspoon ground dry mustard
2
tablespoons sugar or 1 Tbs honey
2
tablespoons white wine or cider vinegar
1/3
cup
olive oil
3
tablespoons chopped fresh dill
Combine
the mustards, sugar, and vinegar in a small bowl. Slowly
whisk in the oil and stir in the chopped dill. Serve with the gravlax.
2 Tbsp red-wine vinegar
1 Tomato, cubed (no need to skin)
1 Cup vegetable/chicken
stock
1 Tbs capers, drained and chopped
2 Tbs (about 5 pitted) calamata olives, pitted and chopped
A few fronds of chopped thyme leaves
1 tsp sugar
Juice of 1 orange as needed
Wash and dry
fennel.Cut off
flat bottom and the tops (reserve any
leafy fronds for garnish). Cut each fennel from top to bottom into four
slices
about 2.5cm wide, in half if fennel are thin.
In a large frying pan heat two and a half tablespoons of oil on a
medium high
heat. Add fennel with some black pepper. Cook for five or six minutes,
turning
once, to brown nicely on both sides. Some of the pieces may fall apart.
Don’t
worry; cook them with the rest of the fennel. Add more oil if
necessary.
Pour in the remaining oil, add the garlic and fry for a few minutes,
being
careful not to let it burn. Lower the heat to medium, and add lemon
juice and
red wine vinegar. Add the tomato, ½ cup of the stock, the capers,
olives, thyme
and sugar. Cover the pan cook for at
least 15 minutes, adding remaining stock as necessary. Turn fennel over
at
least once and cook until fennel is soft and the sauce
has
thickened. (You may need to remove the lid and increase the heat for
the last
two or three minutes to reduce liquid.) Taste. If too acidic add some
fresh
orange juice to smooth out flavor; it may need a little salt.
Fennel can be served warm or refrigerated for up to three days at this
point.
To serve, bring to room temperature and serve with crusty bread.
Serves four.
When Grandson Itamar was hospitalized at Shneider
Children’s Hospital with myocarditis
his two sisters Ilai and Amit and two cousins Maayan and Lotem came up
to Netanya with us.
They all wanted to cook with me, and I opened up my Cooking School. Ilai made Spatchcock Chicken and Lotem made
Gravlax, Beetroot Cured Salmon while Maayan, who loves complicated
recipes made Chicken
Marbella, from the Silver Palate Cookbook. It was a challenge having
three
children doing different things in our tiny kitchen. But all the food
was
delicious
The chicken needs marinating for at least a day,
preferably two,
to soften and flavour properly.
5 thighs+ 9 legs or 2 chickens with skin or
just
plenty of legs
5 garlic cloves, crushed
1 tsp fresh oregano, torn, plus extra for garnish/good sprinkling of
summer
savory/herbs de provence
1/3 cup red wine
vinegar
1/3 cup olive oil
1 cup pitted green olives
1/3 cup capers, plus 2 Tbsp of the juice
1 cup pitted prunes/Medjoul dates pitted and
quartered
lengthways
6 bay leaves
Good grind of black pepper
1 cup dry white wine/ 1Tbs cider vinegar +1 Tbs lemon juice topped with
water
to make 1 cup
Sprinkling of brown sugar/silan
Salt and black pepper
What to do
with a surfeit of strawberries? Well after you have eaten Strawberry
and
Spinach Salad (in Recipes, below), after
eating delicious strawberries
sprinkled with the best Balsamic Vinegar and after you have dipped firm
strawberries in melted chocolate, you can make Strawberry Pancakes. And
if any are
left over, fresh or frozen, make Strawberry Sauce,
1 cup
all-purpose flour
2 Tablespoons
brown sugar
2 teaspoons
baking powder
Pinch salt
1 egg
1 cup milk
2 Tablespoons
canola oil
2 Tablespoons
vanilla extract
1 cup chopped
strawberries
In a medium bowl, stir together the
flour, brown sugar, baking powder and salt. Pour in the milk, oil, egg
and
vanilla, and mix until well blended. Stir in the strawberries.
Heat a large
griddle
over low-medium
heat, and coat lightly with oil. Pour ¼
cup batter per pancake. Cook over medium low heat so strawberries will
come out
nice and mushy. Flip with a spatula when bubbles appear in the center.
Cook
until golden brown on the other side.
Makes 12
2 cups
strawberries,
hulled and quartered
¼ cup
sugar/sweetener
Squeeze lemon
juice
1 tsp
cornstarch mixed with a little water
Sprinkling of
cinnamon
Combine all
ingredients in a pot with a
thick base. Bring to boil, stirring until thickened. Adjust taste if
necessary
and cook until strawberries are soft. Let mixture cool slightly then
mash a
little with a potato masher. Serve cool over any pancakes, cheese cakes
and
also yoghurt.
Click here for a recipe for Spelt Pancakes
After Eitan was
hospitalized for a bleeding ulcer that included a blood
transfusion, raising his iron level became a challenge. The
iron tablets he took restricted having
milk products and whole wheat flour
(which is a staple for us) and the need to cut down on fats. This bread recipe taken and adapted from
Bernard Clayton’s New Complete Book of Breads is a winner – even my
maid who
refuses to taste anything I make loved this bread.
6 Cups bread or
all-purpose flour
4 ½ tsp dry
yeast
1 Tbs salt
2 Tbs sugar
2 cups hot
water
(120-130F)
Place 4 cups
flour
in a mixmaster bowl; add yeast, salt and sugar and
blend with flat paddle. Pour in hot water and beat for 3 minutes.
Add remaining
flour,
½ cup a time until dough takes shape and is no
longer sticky.
Change to dough
hook
and beat for 8 minutes until smooth and elastic.
Cover with
plastic
wrap and leave to rise 15 minutes. In winter I heat
a glass of water in the microwave then place the bowl inside together
with the
hot water.
Punch down
dough and
on work surface cut into 2 pieces, shaping each
one into a round. Cut an “X” with scissors or sharp knife.
Place dough on baking sheet spread with
cornmeal. Place in a cold oven. Place a large pan of boiling water
underneath
and switch on oven to 200C. Check after 40-50 minutes and bake until the loaves are a deep golden brown and sound
hollow when thumped on bottom.
Note: There was
no
bread flour in my cupboard and only a limited amount
of all purpose flour. After searching for something not whole wheat, I
substituted 1 cup semolina flour for all purpose flour. The bread was
delicious, soft inside with a delicious crispy crust. Since there is no
fat,
the bread stales quickly but freezes well.
Make
the marinade (see below) and
pour it over and inside the chicken.
Take chicken out of fridge about 2
hours before roasting. Line a roasting pan with aluminum foil and place
a
roasting rack on top of it. Then place the chicken splayed out on the
rack so
that the thigh and legs point inwards and the breast is pushed high.
Tuck the
wing under the breast.
Heat the oven to highest heat and
then place chicken in oven and roast for 35-40 minutes. When the breast
meat
reaches 65C/150F take the chicken out. Cool slightly and carve.
Pour
the remaining marinade from the
roasting pan into a small pot, add any leftover marinade and heat, boil
for 10
minutes, adjust seasoning and serve with chicken and rice.
1
red pepper
3
Tbs
olive
oil
1
small chilli
1
tsp sweet
paprika
3
cloves of garlic
(1
tsp hot
pepper
flakes, optional)
1
lemon, juiced
2
cloves
crushed garlic
5
tablespoons olive oil
Juice
and
zest of 1 lemon
1
tablespoon sweet paprika
1 Tbs
finely
chopped herbs (parsley, rosemary, thyme)
1
tablespoon silan or molasses
Salt
and good
grind of pepper
½
teasoon salt and a good grind of black pepper
(Char
the
pepper and chilli until blackened all over.
Place in a covered bowl to steam for 10
minutes,
then remove the skin and deseed. ).
Peel
the
garlic then add to a food processor with the other ingredients and
process
until fairly smooth.
Spread
over
and inside chicken, leaving uncovered overnight in fridge. Take out and
bring
to room temperature. Pat dry before putting in hot 220C/425F oven for
about 40
minutes until thermometer inserted in breast shows 65C/150F
Having a lemon tree can be quite a burden. After handing our lemons
to family, friends and neighbours – people on the street were
suspicious of my
offer – what do you do? Lemon curd, lemon chicken, lemon pie and then
of course
there is lemon mousse. This one has a
lot of steps but is delicious, light and airy.
Serves 10.
½ cup fresh lemon juice and zest from 1 lemon
5 Tbs cold water
15g powdered gelatine
1 container non-dairy whip
Large handful toasted almonds
In a mixmaster
beat egg yolks, sugar/sweeteners, lemon zest and juice until the
sugar/sweeteners have dissolved and
the mixture has thickened a little.
Place the cold
water in a small heavy based saucepan and sprinkle the gelatine over
it.
Let
stand to soften, about 10 minutes. Heat, without stirring, over low
heat until
gelatine has dissolved. Remove from the heat and leave to cool slightly.
In a separate
bowl, lightly whip the cream until soft peaks form when the beater is
removed.
Stir the dissolved gelatine into the whipped cream and fold it into the
egg yolk
mixture.
Beat the egg
whites in a separate bowl until soft peaks form when the beater is
removed.
Place the bowl
with the egg yolks inside a bigger bowl filled with ice cold water.
Gently
fold the whipped egg whites into the egg yolk mixture with a metal
spoon. Stir
the mixture until it begins to thicken, then pour into a glass bowl and
refrigerate for two hours, or until set.
Sprinkle the
toasted almonds over the top of the mousse and serve.
Any remaining
mousse (most unlikely!) can be stored in the fridge for 2-3 days.
Vered invited us to join her family together with
Moran’s family to light the first Channukah
candle.
She had seen a suitable recipe on the internet* and the kids were going
to help her prepare the doughnuts. Since both her daughters are vegan
the thought of vegan doughnuts was
not
appealing. How wrong we were. They were arguably the best sufganiyot
we have ever tasted – light and tasty. This recipe makes 20
medium
sufganiyot (jelly doughnuts).
INGREDIENTS
1 kilo white flour
2 Tbs
instant yeast
1/3 cup sugar
1 tsp grated orange zest
½ cup canola oil
3 cups soy, rice or almond
milk (or
real milk if not vegan)
2 Tbs
brandy/Grand
Marnier/ Drambuie
1 tsp salt
FOR
FRYING
1 deep and wide pan
2 liters canola oil
TO
SERVE
Icing sugar
Jam
Chopstick, knife, teaspoon
In a mix master combine flour,
yeast and sugar.
Combine grated orange peel, oil and milk and add to flour, mixing on
lowest speed
until mixture comes together. Add salt
and brandy and mix for 10 minutes more until dough is pliable and
slightly
sticky. Transfer to a large oiled bowl and cover with nylon wrap or a
slightly
damp towel. Let rise for 1 hour or until doubled in size.
Heat canola oil in large round
pot
to 150C
degrees or when a wooden spoon is placed in the oil small bubbles
appear by the
shaft of the spoon. If the bubbles are large the oil is too hot so
reduce flame
and wait two minutes.
Carefully place sufganiyot
in oil, making sure that the side that was upmost on the tray is placed
down into
the oil. Let the sufganiyot fry for two
minutes, making sure they don’t turn over. When there are no more
bubbles
by the dough carefully turn them over and continue frying until the
bubbles
again disappear.
Remove from oil with a slotted
spoon and place
on paper towels.
If you need to fry the sufganiyot
in two rounds make sure to heat the oil again before placing the second
round
in the oil.
When ready to serve dust
lightly by
passing
icing sugar through a sieve. Let guests
make their own holes in the sufganiyot and
fill with
jam of their choice – strawberry or red fruits are best.
(For another Chanuka recipe see Doreen's potato
zucchini latkes.
ROAST
DUCK and APPLE SAUCE
(Doreen:)
My grandson Maayan recently remarked that
he has
never eaten roast duck at home. That was the impetus for me to finally
prepare
the 2 ducks sitting in my freezer. It was rated “Restaurant
quality” by Vered and had the approval of Maayan
and the rest of the family. What else could I want?
Serves 4- 5 people per duck.
Apple sauce is a must. You can buy the stuff, but homemade sauce is
great. Take
3-4 GrannySmith green apples. Pare and
chop into
small cubes or grate on a large grater. Place apples in a thick
bottomed
saucepan; add ¼ cup concentrated apple juice and an equal amount of
water to
the pan, ½ tsp ground ginger and 2 grinds of cinnamon. Cook over low
until
apples are really tender and then mash a little with a potato masher.
Add
a little sugar if still not sweet enough. Cool.
BANANA
FLAMBE
Some
recipes have a season. This is a recipe I recently revived from my
cookbook
under the title Guavee Flambee.
Serves about 10 people
1 -1 ½ ripe but firm bananas per person
3 Tbs butter
¾ cup orange juice (1 Tbs concentrated OJ
intensifies
the flavor)
½ cup Contreau/ Rum
Good grate of cinnamon
(Ladle of brandy)
Slice
bananas. Heat butter and sugar, stirring until
mixture
turns light brown. Add Cointreau and ignite (at table if possible).
Return to
stove and add orange juice and mix well. Add bananas and cinnamon and
cook
until bananas just turn soft. (At table) add brandy and cook for 1
minute then
light. Serve flaming.
Good
with vanilla ice cream.
NOTE:
VERY
MOIST CHOCOLATE CAKE
¾ cup cocoa powder
2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
1 cup milk
1 cup boiling water
Oil and flour two round tins. The original recipe calls for 23cm
but I
had just bought 20cm pans and the cakes rose
high, each pan a cake in itself.
Sift dry ingredients together. In another bowl beat eggs, add milk and
then
oil. Add to dry ingredients and mix well. Add really boiling water and
mix and
lastly add the vanilla. The mixture is
like a
thick cream.
Pour into prepared pans and bake for 35-40 minutes or until an inserted
knife
comes out clean.
½ k icing sugar
75 g (1/3 cup) or less butter at room temperature
A few drops of Cointreau or brandy
Scant teaspoon of instant coffee
Adapted
from https://www.bbc.co.uk/
For
the choux pastry
200ml
cold water
4
tsp caster
sugar*
85g
unsalted butter,
plus extra
for greasing
115g
all purpose flour
pinch salt
3
medium eggs,
beaten
For
the chocolate sauce
100ml
water
80g
caster
sugar
200g
good-quality dark
chocolate,
broken into
pieces
*If
you don’t have caster sugar, just grind sugar in a food processor, and
then
measure.
Choux
pastry
Preheat
the oven to 200C/400F. Place a small roasting tin in the bottom of the
oven to
heat.
For
the choux pastry: Place the water, sugar and butter into a large
saucepan. Heat
gently until the butter has melted.
Turn
up the heat, then quickly pour in the flour and salt all in one go.
Remove
from the heat and beat the mixture vigorously until a smooth paste is
formed.
Once the mixture comes away from the side of the pan, transfer to a
large bowl
and leave to cool for 10-15 minutes.
Beat
in the eggs, a little at a time, until the mixture is smooth and glossy
and has
a soft dropping consistency - you may not need all the egg.
Line
a large baking sheet with a silpat and grease. Using a piping bag and
plain
1cm/½in nozzle, pipe the mixture into small high balls in lines across
the
baking sheet. Gently rub the top of each ball with a wet finger to
smooth. This
also helps to make a crisper top.
Place
the baking sheet into the oven. Before closing the oven door, pour half
a cup
of water into the roasting tin at the bottom of the oven, then quickly
shut the
door. This helps to create more steam in the oven and make the pastry
rise
better.
Bake
for 25-30 minutes, or until golden-brown - if the profiteroles are too
pale
they will become soggy when cool.
Remove
from the oven and turn the oven off. Prick the base of each profiterole
with a
skewer. Place back onto the baking sheet with the hole in the base
facing
upwards and return to the oven for five minutes. The warm air from the
oven
helps to dry out the middle of the profiteroles..
Chocolate
sauce
Place
the water and sugar into a small saucepan and bring to the boil to make
a
syrup. Reduce the heat to a simmer and place the chocolate into a
heatproof
bowl set over the pan. Heat, stirring occasionally, until melted. Take
the pan
off the heat, pour the syrup mixture into the chocolate and stir until
smooth
and well combined.
To
serve:
Slice
the profiteroles almost through and fill with ice cream, Creme
Patisserie or
whipped cream. Pile high on a plate and pour chocolate sauce over it.
It’s a
nice thing to let guests do this last minute preparation with you. .
CRÈME
PATISSERIE
3
large egg yolks
Scant
1/3 cup sugar
2
Tbs Cornstarch
325ml
Whole milk
1 Vanilla bean or 1 tsp vanilla bean paste
1/2
tsp Salt
Whip
egg yolks,
sugar and cornstarch until light. Wet inside of a saucepan then pour in
milk.
Cut a vanilla bean in half and scrape out inside, or add vanilla paste
at this
stage. Heat milk to just below boiling. Temper the yolks and milk:
While
constantly beating, gradually add some hot milk to the eggs, until half
milk
has been added. Return mixture to saucepan and cook on medium low heat
stirring
all the time until mixture is thick and creamy and will coat the back
of a
spoon. Strain into a container and cover with plastic wrap. Cool and
then
refrigerate.
This
can be stored in the fridge for 3 to 4 days.
in
MELKTERT - MOM’S LEMON CUSTARD PIE - Doreen
In May 2015, some energetic
members
of kibbutz Tzora, including |Les Oshry,
Benzie Segal
and Mike Levine, initiated and organized a 50-year Reunion of Habonim. This generated tremendous
interest and over
200 ex- Habonimites from all over the
world came to
celebrate.
Pre-reunion excitement was high, with little gatherings everywhere. We were delighted to attend an intimate dinner at the house of Louise and Colin Kessel. Aura and Hilton Greenberg were staying with us so of course they came – as well as some 30 other people. It was an exceptional evening – some people we see regularly, others we hadn’t seen for years, even decades.
Asked to make a dessert, I thought something melktert-ish would be appropriate.
Adapted from www.tasteofhome.com/recipes/mom-s-lemon-custard-pie
1
partially
baked pie pastry
2
teaspoons grated lemon zest
1/4
cup lemon juice
1
cup sugar
1
tablespoon butter, softened
2
eggs, separated
1
cup milk
3
tablespoons all-purpose flour
1/8
teaspoon salt
Grated
cinnamon (optional)
Lemon
and mint, to decorate
Preheat oven to 325°. Soak zest of lemon in lemon juice. In a
large bowl,
beat sugar and butter until well blended. Add egg yolks, one at a time,
beating
well after each addition. Add milk, flour and salt; mix well. Strain
lemon
juice then stir lemon juice into milk mixture; set aside. In a small
bowl, beat
egg whites until stiff peaks form.
Pour some milk mixture into egg whites to lighten, and then gently fold
into
lemon mixture.
See also the recipe for Sugar-free Lemon Meringue Pie
WHOLE
WHEAT CHALLAH -
Doreen
Adapted from All Recipes
When Eitan worked in St Thomas in the early ‘90’s, my dear friend Nina
Schafer
suggested that I volunteer to work with Mina Orenstein who had just
opened an
artisan bakery. Even though it meant working through the night without
pay (I
am definitely a morning person), I loved it. I enjoyed working with
dough, the
feel and the miracle of a beautifully baked loaf smelling like heaven
as it is
taken from the oven. A great byproduct was that Mina and I became firm
friends.
Mina, who is a vegetarian – even her dogs are vegetarian! - tried
introducing
whole wheat challah to the local community, without too much success,
we had to
admit. Initially I was shocked, after all challah should be white and
fluffy.
Today when for health reasons we eat only whole grain products,
experimenting
to find a fluffy, tasty whole wheat challah became a challenge. Below
is the
result.
2 ½ tsp active dry yeast
1 cup warm water
½ cup agave/ low sugar honey/ honey
4 cups whole wheat flour
¾ cup spelt flour/finely ground quick oats
1 tsp salt
½ cup canola oil /light olive oil
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla essence
Combine yeast, water and honey and set aside until frothy. Combine 3 ½
cups of
the whole wheat flour, spelt (or oats) and salt in bowl of Mixmaster.
Lightly
beat the eggs together with the oil; combine with yeast mixture and add
to
mixing bowl. Beat with flat beater. When combined let rest for 15
minutes. Add
vanilla essence, change to dough hook and beat for another 7 minutes,
occasionally stopping the machine to check the consistency of the
dough. The
dough should come away from the sides of the bowl, and although very
soft,
should not be tacky. Add more flour if necessary, or if too dry
add a
little water.
Place in a well-oiled bowl and cover with a clean cloth. Let rise until
doubled
in size, about 1 hour or longer. On a very lightly floured surface,
punch dough
down and form into a ball. Divide the ball into 2 pieces and then each
piece
into three. Cover and let rest for about ten minutes.
Roll three pieces into long strips about 30 cm long and braid. I
usually
lightly pinch the three strands together when I start and after
braiding open
the beginning and re-braid it for an even effect. Place on an oiled
baking pan
and cover.
Prepare the other braid and cover. Let stand until light and puffy,
about
another hour – when you depress the dough with your finger, the indent
should
remain.
Preheat oven to 175C. When oven hot, paint challah with an egg wash and
sprinkle with sesame or poppy seeds. Bake for 20 minutes then rotate
pan and
bake for another 20 minutes or until nicely browned and sounds hollow
when
tapped on the bottom.
NOTE: Children love making challah, so be creative if working with them
around.
FENNEL SOUP - Doreen
When I prepared this soup
this week the supermarkets didn’t have any Jerusalem artichokes so I
had to use
potatoes. And yes, there were pockets of swelling under my ankles
the
next morning!
Enough oil to cover bottom of pan (and a blob of butter)
1 medium onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed
2 Fennel bulbs, cleaned and chopped
Handful of Jerusalem artichokes, peeled, chunked and placed in water
with a
little vinegar to prevent browning. (Use potatoes if Jerusalem
artichokes
unavailable.)
Finely chopped fennel fronds or parsley to decorate
White or black pepper and Chicken soup powder to taste.
Other fennel recipes: Braised Fennel.;
Fennel and Orange Salad
Want to grow your own fennel? Read this how to do it guide.
JACKIE'S
CHEESECAKE * -
Doreen
Shavuot is cheesecake time. No need to agonize over recipes - this is the best cheesecake. It must be made in a blender or food processor and works best with Israeli-style cream cheese. It should be baked in a square or rectangular dish to remove portions with a spatula. It is the best cheesecake to adapt into a low/no-sugar recipe (see continuation)
Biscuit
Base:
50 g (4 Tbs) melted
butter/margarine
1½ cups biscuit crumbs (Marie or tea biscuits)
1 tsp
cinnamon
½ tsp ginger
Grated rind of 1 orange
Orange juice, as needed
Cheese
Mixture:
3
eggs
400 g (14 oz.)
nonfat
cream cheese
110
g (8 Tbs)
butter
3/4 cup sugar
1
tsp vanilla
essence
400
g (14 oz.)
yoghurt/sour cream
In
a
food processor place eggs, cream cheese, butter, sugar, and vanilla;
blend
until creamy. Pour carefully over crumb mixture. Place dish in a bath
of hot
water and bake in a preheated moderate oven (170°C/325°F),
until set, about 40 minutes. Switch off oven and
remove cake and bain marie. Combine yoghurt with vanilla and
pour very
gently over cheese. Return cake to oven for 20 minutes.
Either make the biscuit base above,
substituting
sugarless biscuits for ordinary biscuits, or just thickly butter the
pie dish
and sprinkle with a few crumbed sugarless biscuits. Shake the pan to
remove any
crumbs that haven’t stuck.
*
This recipe appears in my cookbook. When we first moved to Hofit we met Morris and the late Jackie Kahn who
lived
close by in Beit Yannai. Jackie was
breathtakingly
beautiful, inviting comparisons with Elizabeth Taylor at her best. Our
friendship survived Eitan working for Morris and now our son Aviv is
working
for their son Benjie. The members of both families remain friends as
families
expand and change.
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DOREEN and
EITAN'S HOMEPAGE
ROAST TURKEY BREAST
WITH PEAR SLICES - Doreen
Either one turkey breast or two depending on size. For a really moist turkey, soak in brine for a few hours, drain and then then roast.
Brine: Place enough water in a bowl to cover the turkey breast. The proportion of water to salt is 1 1/2 Tablespoons coarse (kosher) salt to 4 cups water. To this add a clove of garlic, 1 tsp natural silan (date syrup)/honey/brown sugar, black pepper, lemon slices, mustard seeds, a few bayleaves and peppercorns and anything else you fancy. Cover and leave in fridge for a few hours. Drain, rinse and either leave covered in fridge or roast.
Heat oven to 180 Degree C/ 180 F or Mark 5.. Line a roasting pan with aluminum foil and oil with olive oil. Make a mixture of olive oil, balsamic, soy sauce, black pepper, ginger and five spices if you have and rub it over the turkey breast.
Peel and thickly slice pears and push them into openings of turkey breast. Any pear left over can be placed on top of breast. Close foil loosely and place in oven for 30 minutes. Open foil, sprinkle with sweet paprika and raise oven temperature to brown top for another 10 minutes or until internal temperature is 74C or 165F.
Slice and serve with reheated sauce that collects in the foil.
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DOREEN and
EITAN'S HOMEPAGE
STRAWBERRIES
AND SPINACH SALAD - Doreen
When we moved to Netanya one of our big worries was how were we
(Eitan)
going to coninue growing salad greens. I
vetoed
Anthony's idea of ripping up the back terrace and bringing in
truckloads of
sand. Instead he grows his peppers, tomatoes, mangold and spinach in a
chest-high trough which means no bending down involved.
This week we picked our first crop of spinach. The strawberries we
picked from
a tray of a roadside vendor.
Wash spinach and dry. Wash and dehull
strawberries.
Cut strawberries into halves or quarters depending on size.
Slice a cucumber and some green onions. Combine all ingredients
together.
Pour over some Balsamic vinegar and olive oil. Delicious.
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EITAN'S
HOMEPAGE
BEETS - Doreen
Beets have of late become increasingly popular. High in fiber, folate,
magnesium and calcium they are considered a super food, even for
diabetics.
FRESH BEET SALAD
3 Firm medium beets, peeled and grated thickly
Juice and rind of 1 orange
1 Stick celery, thinly sliced
½
Combine beets and orange juice and marinate until ready to serve. Add
apple,
celery, orange, and French dressing. Keeps for
days.
ROASTED BEETROOT
6 Firm smallish beetroots
2 Tbs olive oil
2 Tbs balsamic vinegar
2 Tbs lemon juice
2 Cloves garlic
Generous sprinkling of freshly ground black pepper
Rosemary and thyme sprigs
(1 Tbs butter – optional)
Preheat oven to
Peel beets and either halve, quarter or cut into sixths depending on
size
– they shrink a little. Place in ovenproof dish. Scatter sprigs of
thyme and
rosemary on top.
Combine olive oil, balsamic vinegar, lemon juice, garlic and black
pepper and
pour over beets, turning to coat. Seal with aluminum foil.
They can be served as a hot side dish, or at room temperature in a
salad.
Serve over a bed of greens and broken walnuts. Add a sprinkle of
additional balsamic vinegar and salt to taste if necessary. If you have
fresh
(buffalo) Mozzarella, slice it and it’s even better.
For another recipe for beets, see Aviv Ron's Orange
and
Beetroot Soup
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DOREEN and
EITAN'S HOMEPAGE
SUGAR
FREE LEMON MERINGUE PIE -
Doreen
When
we moved to our new apartment in Netanya it had a tree full of
misshapen lemons
that had horns and spikes and peculiar shapes. But the taste of the
lemons was
wonderful. So after freezing lemon cubes, endless cups of tea with
lemon,
giving bags of lemons to neighbors and insisting Anthony pickle some,
we were
still faced of the problem of abundance. The recipe below,
although
requiring a few stages has been a hit with everybody,
and most people don’t even notice it’s with artificial
sweeteners.
If you want, just substitute sugar for the sweeteners– but leave the
apricot
jam in the meringue. You’ll wow everybody! (
Based
on a recipefrom www.cdkitchen.com.)
INGREDIENTS
LEMON FILLING:
1
cup sweetener (2-3 Tbs sugar + blend of
Splenda/Maltitol/Stevia)
1/4heaped cup cornstarch
Pinch salt
2 egg yolks
2 cups hot water
1/3 cup lemon juice
1 tablespoon butter
1/3 cup sugar free apricot jam
3 tablespoons water
1 tablespoon Splenda sugar substitute
1 tablespoon cornstarch
4 egg whites, at room temperature
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
Prepare
and bake your favorite pie crust
FILLING:
In saucepan, combine sugars, cornstarch and salt;
stir in egg yolks. Gradually stir in hot water; cook over medium heat,
stirring, until boiling and thickened. Remove from heat. Stir in lemon
juice
and butter. Cool and pour over baked crust. This can be done the day
before and
refrigerated.
MERINGUE: In a coffee grinder or blender, blend apricot spread and
water until
smooth. In small saucepan, combine apricot mixture, artificial
sweetener
and cornstarch; bring to boil. Set aside to cool. In a bowl, beat egg
whites
until frothy; add cream of tartar and beat 1 minute. Add apricot
mixture; beat
until stiff peaks form. The jam mixture tends to splash above meringue.
Stop
machine and re-incorporate.
Pour filling over crust. Spread meringue over filling, sealing well to
pastry
rim. Make it full of horns to look pretty. Bake in 350 degrees F (175
degrees C) oven for 15 minutes or
until nicely browned. If
possible leave in oven to cool. Is good the
following
day as well. Enjoy
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CHICKEN
IN THE OVEN WITH
LOTS OF GRAVY - Doreen
Last Yom HaAtzmaut (Independence Day) our
granddaughter Danielle succumbed to kebab on the mangal
(barbecue) after years of being vegetarian. On Friday night when they
came for
dinner she asked for chicken in the oven with lots of gravy, but not
Cranberry
Chicken. How much is “lots of gravy?” I looked for a recipe that
mentioned 2 cups of liquid and adapted it. The chicken was a great
success and
it seems that 2 cups was just enough.
Ingredients
2 Large chickens, washed dried with fat removed.
1 Lemon
Salt and pepper
A sprig of Rosemary or celery leaves
Sliced carrots, onions, celery, fennel – anything veggie and handy
Olive oil
2 cups chicken stock
100g Butter-flavored margarine
Parsley, chopped finely
Grated lemon rind
Herbs de Provence or oregano, thyme, etc
Preparation:
Heat oven to Mark 6 or 370 degrees F (290 C). These chickens weighed 2
kilos
each and took nearly 2 hours. Smaller chickens will need less time, 1 ½
hours
usually and perhaps a slightly lower oven temperature.
Remove margarine from fridge and let it soften. Mash with fork and add
chopped
parsley, grated lemon rind, a good sprinkle of Herbs de Provence,
finely
chopped celery if you have, and freshly ground pepper.
Take a roasting pan, oil the bottom and place sliced carrots, onions, etc on the bottom. Make sure they are cut into thickish slices but remember a roasting rack
must go on top
of it.
Take the chickens and rub lemon inside and place the rosemary, celery, etc and the remains of the squeezed lemon. From
the leg
side, carefully insert your fingers under the skin, separating it from
the
breast flesh, one side and then the other. Turn the chickens over and
do the
thigh-side as well. Take 1/8 of the margarine mixture and push it
inside each
space. Massage it into the flesh as you spread it under the skin. Rub
the skin
with olive oil and salt and pepper. Place on roasting rack.
Roast in oven for ½ hour. Pour 1 cup of chicken stock over both
chickens and
return to oven. After another half hour do this again and turn chickens
over.
After another half hour baste chicken with pan juices. When beautifully
crisp
turn over and crisp the other side as well.
Switch off oven and open the door and let rest while you prepare the
gravy.
Pour juices into a thick-bottomed saucepan, skim of oil and taste,
adjusting
seasonings if necessary. Thicken; I like arrowroot, but a little flour
and
water will also do well.
Delicious and picture perfect!
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DOREEN and
EITAN'S HOMEPAGE
January 2009
FENNEL
AND ORANGE SALAD - Doreen
During a break from work, I decided to have
a luncheon
with ex-Eilati friends only. Our Eilat
period was a defining experience for forming lasting friendships. We
have all
since left Eilat and moved to the north.
But those
hot years in small, far away Eilat where
life was
quite hard, only we were too young to know it, is a bond between us all.
See This Week's Picture (Jan. 10, 2009)
Large beautiful (and healthy*) fennel bulbs are at their best now. Here
is a
delicious fresh salad, best served in a glass bowl as the colours
are inviting.
Ingredients
2 large fennel bulbs
Bunch arugula (rocket) or baby salad greens
2 large navel oranges, peel and white pith removed, cut into segments
1 red onion, sliced paper thin
Handful of wine-brined black olives, pits removed
2 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
2 Tbsp. orange juice
Zest of 1/2 orange
1 Tbsp. salad vinegar
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Preparation:
Cut away round stalks of fennel, reserving feathery tops. Cut off outer
layer
and bottom. Cut in half and then in half again. Slice each quarter into
thinish slices.
Add olives, oranges, onion, chopped fennel leaves.
Make a salad dressing with olive oil, orange juice, salad vinegar
(Salt) and
pepper and orange zest. Combine with salad. Add arugula/baby
greens when
ready to serve.
*Health
Benefits:
For the
health and nutrient benefits of fennel (including anti-inflammatory and
anti-cancer effects), see
this
site.
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ORANGE AND
BEETROOT SOUP with Iced Yoghurt Cubes -
Aviv Ron
For the second Holiday of Sukkoth we had Granny and Saba for
dinner. I felt
like making an international meal with flavors of the European
kitchen.
The problem was that it turned out to be an extremely hot evening so to
compensate for the heavy dishes I opted for a cold soup.
Leftovers from
beetroot salad – both the roots and the liquid it was boiled in - were the natural choice and for it I came
across this
recipe. This is an opportunity to recommend the site
“Recipe Zaar”. I use it often
to look
for recipes by ingredients because its searching capabilities are
superb.
Below is the recipe as it
appears on
the site . At the end I have added some editorial comments and
variations. Enjoy.
Orange
and
Beetroot Soup With Iced Yoghurt Cubes.
Ingredients:
200 g plain yogurt
1/4 cup chopped chives
500 g small beetroots, scrubbed and trimmed
6 tablespoons olive oil
1 onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, chopped
1 tablespoon thyme, chopped
1/2 teaspoon salt and pepper
1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar
1/2 orange
1 tablespoon orange zest
1 liter vegetable stock
3 tablespoons single cream
Preparation:
1, Mix yoghurt and half the chives. Spoon into an
ice cube
tray and freeze until solid.
2. Place beetroot on a pan, cover with water and boil for 45 mins or
until easy
to pierce with a knife.
3. When cool remove skins and chop.
4. Heat olive oil and add onion, garlic, thyme, salt and pepper. Sauté
for 10
mins then add beetroot, vinegar, zest and stock.
5. Simmer for 10 mins then puree. Stir in cream and season if needed.
6. Transfer to bowls/cups and drop a yoghurt cube in each one and
sprinkle with
the remaining chives.
My
Comments:
1. Like in many cold soups,
coriander (Cusbara) is a wonderful
addition. In this case, you
can certainly replace the chives in the yoghurt with chopped fresh
coriander,
and in addition have enough to sprinkle on top. Of course, you should
be aware
that people are never indifferent to coriander -
those
who don’t love it, can’t stand it – so keep it optional!
2. Add intense spices to augment the
naturally
mild flavor of the beetroot. In addition to chicken stock powder
use
black pepper, curry, nutmeg and saffron if you happen to have
some.
3. Be
generous with the
cream. I used much more than the three spoons that are
recommended in the
recipe.
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September
2008
RUM
RAISIN
BREAD - Doreen
RUM
RAISIN BREAD MIXED IN BREAD MACHINE FOR ROSH HASHANAH AND OTHER HAPPY
OCCASIONS
2/3
Cup Raisins /Craisins
3 Tbsp Rum, preferably dark
1 1/8 Cup Buttermilk + about 1 Tbs if
necessary to
make soft pliable dough
1 Tsp Salt
1 Whole Egg
3 Tbsp Butter, softened
2 Tbsp Brown Sugar
3 Cup White Flour
½ Cup Whole Wheat Flour
1 Tsp Cinnamon
¼ Tsp Ginger
2 Tsp Active Dry Yeast
Either soak raisins in rum overnight or microwave for one minute. Drain raisins well, reserving liquid in a measuring cup. Scatter about half of the raisins in the bread pan.
To rum liquid add buttermilk to 1 1/8 cup mark. Pour liquid into bread pan and then remaining ingredients in order listed. Select Light Crust, Raisin Bread cycle. I use the dough cycle only. At beep, when mixing finished, add remaining raisins.
I
never actually bake the bread in the bread pan and use the machine only
for
mixing and rising. (The paddle never came out so I was left with an
ugly hole
in the bottom of the bread. In addition I don’t like the texture of
machine
baked bread.)
Oil a 12 Cup Bundt pan or a large loaf pan. Heat
oven to Mark
5.
On a floured surface, remove dough from pan and incorporate raisins
that have
fallen out. Punch down, cover and let rest for 10 minutes. Roll bread
out into
long rectangle. Working from the long side, roll the dough over,
lightly
pinching the crease with each roll over. Carefully pick up roll and
place in
Bundt pan. Cover and let rise for about 30 minutes. Brush with a little
buttermilk and oil.
Bake in oven for 35-40 minutes until nicely brown and bread slightly
separates
from the sides. A few minutes before removing from
oven brush
again with buttermilk and oil again for a nice shine.
Remove pan and turn pan over. The bread should just fall out. The round
loaf
looks most attractive.
Delicious with or without butter. Just
the thing to enjoy at Louise’s Annual Rosh Hashanah Luncheon and quiz.
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PASSOVER
MUFFINS - Doreen
Our grandchildren Maayan 4 1/4
and Lotem 2 1/2 stayed to spend hol hamoed
Pesach
with us after Moran and Mikhal returned to Sde
Boqer. Keeping them occupied was a full
time job. One of
the ways was to cook. After they had helped me make matzo cake, matzo brei and French Toast
styled matzo
I'd run out of recipes. So when Mayan asked when were we going to make
muffins
– a traditional breakfast dish that he always helps make – I said I
would try
and find a suitable recipe. After additions
and
alterations this was the surprisingly tasty outcome. It also led to a
discussion between Anthony and I about the difference in keeping kosher
l'pesach
and
keeping to the spirit of Pesach He remembers his late mother
Queenie
railing against drinking Coco Cola when ?… years ago it had
been
made kosher lepesach for the
first time.
What would she say today at my making muffins with baking soda?
Almost 1/2 cup canola oil
Less than 1/2 cup sugar
2 eggs
3/4 cup combination of ground almonds and matzo meal – finely ground in
a
coffee grinder
1 tsp cream of tartar
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 cup potato starch/flour
1 large mashed banana
1 pear, peeled and grated
1 apple, peeled and grated
1/8 cup raisins
Soda water to thin, if necessary
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F, Mark 5. Get grandson to lightly oil
muffin tin.
Beat oil with sugar in mixmaster. Get
grandson to
sift dry ingredients three times. Let grandaughter
break eggs, then (after removing egg shells) add eggs one at a time to
oil
mixture and beat. Add fruit mixture and beat. Add matzo
mixture and
beat lightly. Add raisins and stir until all just mixed. If mixture too
thick,
add about 1/8 cup soda water. Pour mixture into suitable container so
grandchild can pour batter into muffin tins. Pour into prepared
muffins
tins and bake for 20 minutes.
Of course you can do this by yourself without help – much quicker and
far fewer
dishes to wash at the end, but not quite as much fun.
Delicious.
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TSHOLENT
-
Vered and Lior
Ron
(Eitan: "Jewish
cooking" is something of a misnomer, for the Jews living in the various
countries adopted the cooking styles of the surrounding population,
with
modifications demanded by kashrut rules. If there is one
Jewish dish it
is tsholent, the slow cooking meat
and beans
dish prepared before the onset of the sabbath
and kept warm until eaten lunchtime on Saturday. During the Spanish
Inquisition, one of the signs by which Jewish conversos
(marranos) could be recognised
was "cooking on Fridays such food as is required for the Saturday, and
on
the latter eating the meat thus cooked on the Friday, as is the manner
of the
Jews." (read article on tsholent)
There are many family versions of tsholent,
depending on the family origins. To the best of our recollection,
Doreen's and
my family never prepared tsholent
after they left Eastern Europe so we have no family tradition. Vered and Lior have
given us a
start for a new family tsholent.)
Vered
writes:
Lior Makes Tsholent
Lior
loves cooking. She enjoys cooking with Aviv or me, and
lately she
has
begun cooking on her own, needing only
occasional
help. She can make cakes, salads, pancakes and more. Her
favorite
TV channel (yes, even more than the Cartoon Network) is the Cooking
Channel…
So, enjoy!
Chickpeas
– 250 grams
Kidney Beans – 250 grams
Lima Beans – 250 grams
Soak beans in water for 24-48 hours. Change the water every 12
hours
You can buy canned Chickpeas and then there's no need to soak
Barley
Wheat
Fry 4 large onions in a generous portion of oil with 4 garlic cloves
until very
dark
Once ready, layer on top:
Beef for stewing, about 200 grams per person, cut into very large
pieces
A large bone (like Osobucco)
Potatoes (1-2 per person)
The beans
Barley and wheat
Salt and pepper between the layers as desired
On top, put 1 onion (unpeeled)
Optional additions: pour on top honey or date honey (Silan)
and/or several prunes
Fill with water until the food line and boil for 2 hours on the stove
top
Skim the froth ….
After 2 hours, removed from stove top and add fresh eggs (1 per person
at
least)
Put into heated oven with a tightly closed lid (or use foil)
150 degrees C overnight
100 in the morning
Depending on how many hours it will be in the oven, can speed it up by
higher
heat, or slow it with lower heat (not lower than 100 deg
C)
Check that there's still water before you go to bed
And also a bit of water in the morning when you wake up
Should put into oven around
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DOREEN and
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January 2008 - A
bonus recipe - Makluba
(Doreen had a couple of very interesting tours in mid-January - writers
from
overseas food magazines. Here is her account of one of those tours,
followed by
a recipe.)
Doreen writes -
Since I usually work on buses, I jumped at the opportunity to be the
guide for
a food writer and a photographer of an important overseas magazine.
They were
guests of the Ministry of Tourism and Amutat
Tel
Aviv. After they 'did' all the important sights and ate at some of Tel
Aviv's
best restaurants and met with Tel Aviv's most prominent chefs, I was to
guide
them around Tel Aviv for two mornings. My initial reaction was panic
since
there seemed nothing left to show.
Many people say that music is an international language – how much more
so is
food. Food breaks ethnic and language barriers; taste, colour
and smell reach out and beckon and who can explain the feeling of
contentment
after a good meal. I do know that the Levy family is happiest when
eating.
Jewish lore says that fragrance goes straight to the soul. Here I had a
chance
to put all this together and show our guests food for the soul.
Among the places we visited was Cardinal, a tiny chocolate shop on Ibn Gvirol run by Eli Trab.
His very
shyness and passion for creating a good chocolate captured our hearts.
Visiting Lilith Restaurant in Bet Asia was as inspiring experience.
Behind the
successful kosher meat restaurant that caters to business people in the
area,
is a human interest story. Together with the chefs and manager are a
group of
some 15 young people from Amutat Elem.
Elem embraces
youth at high risk and besides giving them a safe house and comfort,
enables
some to learn to be cooks and waiters at Lilith. Not an easy task.
While the
young people learn responsibility and the kitchen, the chefs have to
learn how
to deal with distressed youth as well as teach them to be cooks.
We also visited Jaffa, a tiny coffee and book shop in Yaffo.
It is jointly run by Dina and Michel, and represents a unique
Jewish-Arab
enterprise. Here you will meet regulars and passersby, Arabs and Jews
who not
only come for coffee or food like Makluba, but perhaps for a book, but
even
more so to express solidarity in the idea that Jew and Arab can live
and work
side by side.
Makluba: a Palestinian dish that can be prepared vegetarian,
with
chicken, lamb or beef. Makluba means to turn over.
1/4 cup oil
1 chicken or equivalent cut into at least 12 pieces if possible
3 eggplants, sliced
3 carrots, peeled and chunked
1 small cauliflower, broken into flowerets
3 onions, peeled and sliced thickly
1 tsp Baharat or 1 Tbs chicken soup powder
Salt and pepper
2 cups rice
2 cups water
1/2 cup lightly fried pine nuts
In a large frying pan fry each ingredient separately in order stated,
adding
more oil if necessary. Take a large pot with a thick base and wipe
bottom with
oil. Lay slices of eggplant over bottom. Then add chicken, carrots,
potatoes,
onions, rice and enough water to cover. Add salt and pepper and
Baharat. Cover
and bring to boil. Lower heat and simmer for 30 minutes. Switch of gas
and let
stand 10 minutes. Remove lid and place large platter over pot.
Carefully turn
pot over and lift it up. Makluba. The
ingredients
should be piled up like a cake. Sprinkle with pine nuts and serve.
Added in November
2015: Since our
granddaughters Dani
and Lior are strict vegans, makluba by us
became
vegan.
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January 2008
LETTUCE
SOUP -- Doreen Levy
At a
dinner party for Mike and Lorna Belman,
friends from
4
Tbs butter
1 onion, sliced
3 cups lettuce (hard outer leaves are fine), sliced
1 cup Chinese cabbage, sliced
1 cup cabbage/ arugala (rocket) mixture
2 carrots, grated
1 red pepper, julienned
1 kohlrabi/ turnip/parsnip, fat julienned
6 cups (parave) chicken soup
Pepper and a little salt
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December
2007 - Channukah
POTATO
ZUCCHINI LATKES -- Doreen Levy
This year we celebrated Channukah
at our house with some of our family for candle-lighting and food. The
soup,
pies, lasagna were not a problem, but it's
years since
I made latkes and agonized over how to prepare them. The
thought of all
that potato and oil was a deterrent until I found that in the recipe
book I
wrote A Potpourri of Memories,
was a forgotten recipe for Potato Zucchini latkes.
6 Large potatoes
6 Zucchini-like squash
Salt
6 Eggs
1/2 cup self raising flour
Grate zucchini on coarse grater in food processor. Place zucchini and 1/2 teaspoon salt in sieve over bowl and let drain 20 minutes. Grate potatoes on medium grater and dry with paper towel. In the meantime heat oil to hot.
Squeeze
drained zucchini to remove as much moisture as possible. Combine with
potato
and pat dry with paper towel. Beat eggs and add to mixture with flour.
You may
need to adjust the flour and eggs. Scoop up less than 1/4 cup of
mixture and
carefully place in hot oil; flatten latkes if they are too
high.
Fry until browned on both sides. Drain on a paper towel.
(I fried the latkes
in deep oil but noticed that other recipes call for
a thin
generous layer of oil.)
Before putting in the next batch, reheat oil and
with sieve
scoop out the bits that fell off the latkes.
You can add 1 finely grated onion to the recipe but as I wanted to serve it with cinnamon and apple sauce (which I didn't have in the end) I left out the onion.
There
was a frightening amount of mixture in my large bowl, but in the end I
didn't
even get to taste a latke as they went well - like hot cakes!
Serves 25. You can vary quantities. However
you make
them they taste just fine.