Posted on 03/19/2015 5:48:34 PM PDT by Jamestown1630
This week, we have Savory, with Fruit! (Heads-up, pugmama!)
I've never been a very fancy cook, though I do enjoy making food pretty and presentable and will go to some lengths for that. Otherwise, I'm into 'comfort' foods.
But I greatly enjoy having something very different and unusual from time to time; and some of my favorites have been dishes that are savory, but include a sweet element, usually fruit.
I once vacationed with friends who came from a restaurant background, and eating with them was always a great experience - always something unexpected and never before encountered.
About 25 years ago, at the beach, the lady accompanied her meat with a carrot recipe that I loved. She wrote it down for me, and I've made it ever since - but I've always been a little suspicious of the accuracy of the recipe because it used so many carrots! When I've made it, I use about half the carrots.
When I decided to post it here, I thought I'd look and see if it was online anywhere, and whether my recipe was accurate.
Lo and Behold, here it is, at a very interesting website; and Yes, it uses a whole 2-1/2 pounds of carrots. I should have just trusted a gal who grew up in her family's restaurants ;-)
Carrots Sauteed withToasted Walnuts and Figs: (Don't substitute any other kind of fig, in this recipe)
http://www.laurengroveman.com/recipes/vegetables/the-carrots-sauteed-with-toasted-walnuts-and-sliced-calimyrna-figs/
Second, is another one that I think I saw in the Washington Post almost 20 years ago; the raisin/caper sauce was a revelation, and this is still on the menu at Restaurant Jean-Georges in NYC:
Scallops with Cauliflower and Raisin/Caper sauce:
http://www.globalgourmet.com/food/special/jeangeorges/raisin.html#axzz3UCJovrc2
And Lastly: Green Apple Gado Gado
I'm confused about the Indonesian dish Gado Gado. The first recipe that I encountered some years ago, and still make frequently, seems very different from what I now read about the dish, as it has become more popular. I guess you can make it many different ways; or many different dishes carry the name.
Here's the Wiki on it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gado-gado
And here's the one that I make, which doesn't seem at all like the Wiki description, but was called Gado Gado in the newspaper where I found it - and it's wonderful in Summer:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A59917-2004Jun22.html
It is delicious; but just as with Latkes, forego the food processor, and grate the carrots by hand. The one time I made it with a food processor it was too liquid and mushy.
(And, again as with Latkes, a little knuckle meat in the recipe is ‘de rigueur’ ;-)
-JT
I agree. There are some preparations that require the old-fashioned way. :)
It’s a beautiful little country, and very successful. My association with South Korean-Americans has engendered great respect for them.
I especially enjoy learning about the Heanyeo, the female divers on Jeju:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7Kn4nYdZbQ
I’m also (perhaps perversely) fond of all the photos that show North and South Korea by night:
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=83182
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/02/140226-north-korea-satellite-photos-darkness-energy/
I guess some ideologies ‘get it’, and some don’t.
(Any Questions?)
-JT
THAT looks divine. The berries make it pop!
Stumbled across this site for Civil War cooking. Still reading thru it. Love finding these sites about cooking thru history.
http://www.civilwarinteractive.com/cookbook.htm
We have always stopped in SK, in transit to another SE Asian country. I think we should spend some time in the country next time we plan a trip. We love that part of the world. We considered Chiang Mai in Thailand for retirement, but it did not work out for us in the end. Thanks for the info.
There are lots of good reasons to take a vacation on Jeju; including Loveland, which is....um...’interesting’ ;-)
http://travel.cnn.com/explorations/play/10-things-do-jeju-island-045157
-JT
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