Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Afghani dumplings and a ring from Kabul



'Ashak' - Afghani dumplings


I was thinking recently what a coincidence it is that three of the world’s most alluring cuisines ... food from Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan ... are from countries currently steeped in seemingly endless conflict.   Aside from the appalling loss of human life, family upheavals and the damage to those countries’ cultural heritage (like the destruction of the Buddhas of Bamiyan by the Taliban in Afghanistan and the more recent bombing by Assad’s forces of Aleppo’s medieval market - a UNESCO World Heritage Site - in Syria), the ongoing insurgencies in these countries have overshadowed the rich heritage of their cuisines developed over centuries.

Regretably I have never had the opportunity to visit these countries; but the closest I have come to experiencing Afghani culture in recent times was stumbling across a tiny shop in an outer suburb of Paris that sold Afghani artefacts, clothing and jewellery.  Aside from incredibly beautiful – and expensive – Pashmina shawls and an impressive collection of Pakols – Afghani woollen hats, the shop had an array of traditional Pashtun jewellery, including this beautiful ring which I bought for Juhee.   The Afghani shop owner told me it was made in Kabul from an old silver coin with the text written in Farsi.
 
Juhee's ring from Afghanistan

My interest in Afghani food was piqued the other evening when I was watching an episode of “Food Safari” on Indian TV; this show is fronted by a former colleague from SBS News, Maeve O’Mara.   Anyway, she was watching an Afghani-Australian woman cooking in her kitchen (in Sydney, I think) and the several dishes she made looked and sounded both unique and delicious.   This inspired me to indulge yet again in one of my only vices here in Hyderabad: buying cookbooks on the ‘net.   And sure enough, Flipkart (India’s Amazon) had a book entitled “Afghan Food & Cookery” by Helen Saberi.

 After doing a background check on this book – including discovering that the author was a researcher and contributor to Alan Davidson’s monumental “The Oxford Companion to Food”- I ordered the book on-line.  
 
Its an impressive volume with chapters on various Afghani breads, street food, Asian-style pasta and noodles, kebabs, rice pilaus, qormas (Afghani stews) and unusual desserts.  The recipes are designed within a distinctly Afghani tradition but combined with a Western sensibility to sourcing ingredients and health conscious alternatives.

One of the recipes demonstrated on the “Food Safari” episode was 'Ashak' ... hand made dumplings stuffed with a leek and chilli filling and served over yogurt sauce with dried mint and an Afghani lamb ‘keema’ or mince curry on the side.

 
Here is my version of this dish which we ate last night; the kids really enjoyed the dumplings.  The recipe is courtesy of “Afghan Food & Cookery” ... maybe it’s Iraqi and Syrian dishes next time? 

'Ashak' served on a platter with the yogurt, mint  & keema dressing
 Recipe:     “Ashak” ... Leek filled Dumplings with Meat Sauce  
                                               From ‘Afghan Food & Cookery’

 Ingredients:

3 ½ cups of plain flour   4 t salt   1 egg   2T veg oil   ½ kilo washed & finely chopped leeks (I used 3 leeks)   ½ t chilli pepper   1 ½ cups of yogurt   3 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped finely   1 t vinegar   1 T dried mint

For the meat sauce:   6 T veg oil   2 red onions, finely chopped   ½ kilo lamb mince   ½ cup tomato paste   salt & pepper

 Method:

 Prepare dough:   sift flour and 1 t salt into bowl, make well in centre and whisk in egg and 1 T oil.   Add ½ cup water slowly and knead thoroughly to form a smooth dough.  (I added 2 T extra water.)  Divide into 2 balls & cover with damp cloth for an hour.

The dough rolled into a ball to rest before rolling

Prepare meat sauce:   Heat oil in pan, add onions and fry until reddish brown, stirring every now and again.   Add meat and stir fry until brown.   Add tomato paste, bring to boil and then add salt & pepper.   Lower heat and simmer until sauce is thick.   (I used less oil and added cumin, turmeric and chilli powder to give it a bit more flavour.)

Mix chopped leeks with salt and chilli powder and drain in colander the mix in T of oil.

The chopped leeks marinated with salt, chilli & oil

Roll out one ball of dough onto lightly floured surface to a thickness of 1/16 “ ... avoid thicker pastry as it will make dumplings tough.   Cut out rounds about 2 ½ “.  Place teaspoon of chopped leeks in each round, fold over one half and seal dumplings by squeezing  or pleating edges.   Place on well floured tray & avoid overlapping as they will stick.  Cover with cloth until ready to cook.   Repeat with remaining ball of dough.
 
The dough rolled out to a thickness of 1/16th"

 
 
 
 
Filling the dumpling skins with the leeks
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The dumplings ready to be boiled
Place yogurt in bowl and mix in garlic & 1 t salt.    Spread half mixture on serving platter or individual plates.

Yogurt beaten with salt, garlic & chopped green chilli
Boil 7 cups of water and add 1 t salt and vinegar.   Put ashok into water and boil gently about 10 minutes.   Remove & drain on mesh.    Place dumplings on plate with yogurt dressing, cover with remaining yogurt, sprinkle on dried mint and a little of the minced meat.

Serve with rest of meat in a separate bowl.



 

Tony saab, Hyderabad July 2013





 

 

 



 


















Sunday, May 26, 2013

London Calling









Just got back from the UK where we spent a couple of weeks with the kids … travelling between Brighton (where we were staying with friends) and London, where we did some sightseeing and shopping.   
 
Sussex countryside
 
 
The family in Trafalgar Square
 
London calling ...
 

 
 
Natural History Museum
The Natural History Museum was amazing … especially their dinosaur collection; plus I got to see a Sebastiao Salgado exhibition called “Genesis”, based on his latest book of photography.   Salgado is a Brazilian documentary photographer who specializes in shooting various aspects of the biodiversity of the planet as well as traditional communities around the world.    There were more than 80 works in the exhibition … many of them truly breathtaking.

 


I also saw the Man Ray exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery which was particularly meaningful for me as I had just finished reading an extraordinary book, “Lee Miller: A Life”, about one of Man Ray’s lovers and professional assistants.    Lee Miller was an American woman born in the early 1900s who at various stages of her life was an actress, Vogue model and photographer …. or as the book cover describes her “ a model, photographer, muse and reporter, sexual adventurer and domestic goddess”! 
 
Lee Miller in the 1930s




'Solarised' portrait of Lee Miller by Man Ray
 
Lee Miller in Hitler's bathtub after the fall
of Munich, 1945
 
She assisted Man Ray in his experiments with early Surrealist photography, was a close confidant of Picasso and during the Second World War became a war correspondent for Vogue magazine covering the horrors of the German concentration camps and the liberation of Paris and Berlin.  
 
The lifestyle of her clique surrounding the Surrealist and Modernist painters and writers of the pre-WW2 years make the Swinging 60s sound very conservative!   And in the latter part of her life she was also a gourmet cook.

 


London was very relaxed and friendly … though maybe because we have being living in India for some time … I was surprised how pasty-faced and unhealthy many of the Brits looked … and also how many people still smoked furiously at all times of the day!








 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
We had some great food and attended Brighton’s annual food festival on the beachfront; reminded me of the St Kilda festivals we used to go to every year in Melbourne.    Lots of beer and stout, and tents selling food from around the world!

Tamasin Day-Lewis's Classic Chicken Pie recipe
 
When we got back I cooked this chicken pie to remind us of Britain.   The recipe is from Irish food writer Tamasin Day Lewis (sister of Daniel) and it requires you to make the savoury shortcrust pastry as well as the delicious filling.   Great taste and a recipe I am going to make again very soon.


Making the pie crust
 
The chicken, leek & vegetable filling
The covered pie ready for baking
 
Classic Chicken Pie from Tamasin Day Lewis's cookbook "Tarts with Tops On "
 
Ingredients:
 
1.5 kg chicken   mix of carrots, celery, onions & herbs   2 carrots sliced into medium dice   2 stalks of celery, chopped   2 leeks, washed and sliced   2 red onions, peeled & quartered   55g butter   55g plain flour   150 ml milk   150 ml chicken stock (use the poaching liquid from chicken)   150 ml cream   sprig of parsley & coriander, chopped   salt & pepper   quantity of short crust pastry (use a favourite or familiar recipe)   1 beaten egg for glaze
 
Method:
     
Put chicken in pot with various loose vegetables for adding flavour.   Cover with water & bring to boil, scimming off scum on surface.   Poach covered for 45 - 60 minutes, turning chicken over half way.  
 
Make pastry according to recipe, shape into ball and leave in fridge covered for at least 30 minutes.
Steam vegetables in order of cooking time ... first carrots, then celery, onions & leeks ... steam for 5 mins.   Heat oven to 180C.  
 
Remove chicken from pot & after cooling remove skin & bones and tear meat into long strips.  (Use the skin & bones to put into stock.)
 
Make a roux with the butter & flour, gently heating and stirring. then add hot milk & hot chicken stock, stirring until you have a thick satiny sauce.   Cook long enough to get rid of flour taste & then stir in cream.   Remove from  heat and when cool add fresh herbs, chicken and vegetables.
 
Line a tart tin with 2/3rds of the pastry and spoon in the filling.   Cover with remaining 1/3rd of pastry and crimp the edges to seal pie.   Brush the top with the beaten egg.   Cut a cross in middle of pie to allow steam to escape.  
 
Bake about 1 hour until pastry is golden brown, then cover the top with greaseproof paper and cook a further 15 mins.   After removing from oven leave to rest for 15 mins before cutting & serving.
 
Only needs a fresh salad to accompany!
 
Sign in "Taj the Grocer" food shop, Brighton
                                      
Tony saab/Hyderabad   May 2012
 
 
 

Monday, February 11, 2013

A Fabulous Falaknuma Feast

Hyderabad's Falaknuma Palace ... built in the 1890s
I haven’t posted for some months due to a hectic Christmas period ... holidays and lots of overseas visitors!    But this first post for 2013 is to celebrate a fabulous dinner we had a few weekends ago at the Falaknuma Palace in Hyderabad.

The Oz Fest finale held in the Palace's Durbar Hall




The dinner was organised by the Australian Government to mark the end of the Oz Fest initiative  ... a 4 month festival showcasing aspects of Australian culture held in a number of major cities across India.    Juhee and I had met David Holly, the ebullient Consul-General for South India, the previous evening and he had very generously invited us to the dinner which was prepared by visiting Australian chef Christine Manfield.

Juhee & I at the reception

John Zubrzycki & his daughter Adele outside the Palace














The event was also an opportunity to celebrate the literary output of our friend – writer, journalist and Indophile John Zubrzycki, author of the best selling book “The Last Nizam” - which profiles the rule of the Nizams of Hyderabad and, in particular, the last Nizam Mukarram Jah's life in Australia , and his more recent work “The Mysterious Mr Jacob” - about a charismatic and mysterious diamond merchant who tried to sell the Sixth Nizam the famous Imperial Diamond in the 1890s. John was at the end of a book tour of India, accompanied by his daughter Adele.   He read excerpts from both books during the dinner.


John reading from "The Last Nizam"

The Falaknuma Palace was the residence of the Sixth Nizam of Hyderabad Mahboob Ali Khan at the end of the 19th Century.  Also known as the ‘Mirror of the Sky’, its an architectural menagerie of Tudor, Italian and French baroque styles and counts amongst its past guests King George the Fifth and the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas the Second.  

After falling on hard times in the 1950s and lying empty for decades, the palace was leased by the Taj Hotels group and opened as a '7 star' luxury hotel in 2010 following 10 years of extensive and meticulous restorations!   It looked truly breathtaking in the evening light as we were ferried up the cobblestone drive in a golf buggy.

The dinner – a fusion of Indian and Australian ingredients - was described as a “Feast on Literature at the Durbar Hall” and featured several dishes including Masala spiced prawns and green mango salad, Yogurt baked snapper with walnut crumble, brown rice, fennel and pomegranante and Sichuan spiced chicken with chilli orange eggpplant.

Sichuan spiced chicken with chilli orange eggpplant

The food was indeed fabulous – and so were the wines – especially for us Aussies surviving in Hyderabad on beer, dark rum and the occasional bottle of locally made vino; mostly bottled in Maharashtra and still improving, so to speak!   We tried the Leo Buring Riesling, Jim Barry Lodge Hill Shiraz, Penfolds Grenache Shiraz and a brilliant Brown Brothers Orange Muscat.   (For a while I thought I was back in Dan Murphy’s wine shop in Melbourne!!)


Also present at the dinner was Dr Lachlan Strahan from the Australian High Commison in Delhi and the Victorian Governor Alex Chernov and his wife.   We spent some time chatting with ex-The Australian newspaper photographer Graham Crouch, who is now based in Delhi working as a freelancer along with his partner who is the South Asia correspondent for the same publication.  It  was great to catch up on Australian media gossip and share a few laughs during the dinner!   Graham very kindly allowed me to use some of his pictures in this post.

Christine Manfield ... from Sydney to the City of the Nizams!

I was impressed by the way Christine Manfield had managed to pull off such a superb dinner after having arrived in Hyderabad only a few days earlier with a very small retinue of staff from her restaurant in Sydney, the Universal and reportedly some 45 kilos of food.  Christine herself is also a huge India buff and recently released a large coffee table- sized book on Indian food, “Tasting India”.  Its part travelogue memoir, part cookbook with recipes collected from a number of chefs and home cooks across a large swathe of the subcontinent.

Our hosts very generously gave each guest a copy of her book along with John’s two publications and I couldn’t wait to try some of the recipes.

Here is dish that I cooked the next day “Spiced Prawn & Kokum Curry”, which was given to Christine by a chef at the Taj Malabar in Kochi, Kerala.

Spiced prawns simmering in a coconut- tomato broth
with kokum added as a souring agent

“Spiced Prawn & Kokum Curry” 
from Christine Manfield’s “Tasting India”

Ingredients:  

½ t turmeric, ¼ t salt, 2 t lime juice, 500gms green prawns, 2 T coconut oil (I used sunflower oil) , 1 t brown mustard seeds, 1 t fenugreek seeds, 4 T red onions – finely chopped, 1 T ginger-garlic paste, 2 T chilli paste, 200ml coconut milk, 12 curry leaves, 2 tomatoes pureed, and 2 T kokum water (soak a couple of pieces of kokum in hot water for 20 mins).

Method:

Combine turmeric, salt & lime juice and then rub into prawns and keep aside.

Heat coconut oil in pan & fry mustard and fenugreek seeds over medium heat until they splutter. (Careful they don’t burn!)   Add red onions & cook until it changes colour, then add ginger garlic paste and cook until brown.   Stir in chilli paste & coconut milk and simmer for 10 minutes’ stirring occasionally to avoid mixture catching on pan.

Add curry leaves & tomato puree and simmer for 2 mins.   Add prawns - toss through sauce – then add kokum water (I also added the whole kokum pieces).   Simmer for a further 5 mins and serve.

The finished dish

 
Tony saab/Hyderabad   Feb 2013
 
(*   All photos were taken by Graham Crouch except the food shots and the picture of Christine Manfield.)