The Kitchen Chronicles

Adventures in City Cooking

Tag: Turkish (page 1 of 2)

Turkish Manti with Yogurt and and Brown Butter Tomato Sauce

I was in high school the first time I tasted manti. A friend’s Turkish grandmother whipped them up for us for dinner, and I remember being totally smitten by the little meat-filled pockets swimming in a tangy yogurt sauce. The memory of standing in the kitchen holding a bowl of manti has stuck with me for more than 15 years, and it’s a funny thing to think about why we carry around rather mundane memories of some things and manage to forget really important stuff from the past. I’m not sure what it was about the manti. Maybe because it’s sort of a familiar idea (like a cross between tortellini and dumplings?) presented in a totally new way? Or maybe because it was just that delicious.

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Turkish Stuffed Grape Leaves with Olive Oil (Yaprak Sarma)

One of my favorite reasons to make stuffed grape leaves is that people consistently find them to be extremely impressive. Yes, obviously the main reason I make them is because they taste delicious, but if they didn’t elicit such shock and awe I’d probably be less into serving them. People just really seem to love foods that are stuffed inside of other foods, and grape leaves are no exception.

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Bulgur with Black-Eyed Peas and Purple Basil

Like literally anything else in the food world – from milks to leafy green vegetables (looking at you, kale) – there is a grain hierarchy and a grain du jour. In case you didn’t know, white rice is out (jasmine, basmati, American long grain- doesn’t matter). I think this fixation on “alternative grains” all started with quinoa a few years ago, when people everywhere started pretending they loved the weird, nutty grain in an effort to fit in (can you tell I’m not really a fan?) Pearled barley and farro were having a real moment last year and incorporated into just about every soup and grain salad I came across. Right now, freekeh (young cracked wheat) is in the spotlight. But the real underdog of grains, one that hasn’t seen its 15 minutes of fame, is bulgur.

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Turkish Bell Peppers Stuffed with Rice, Raisins and Pine Nuts

Turkish stuffed pepper with a mezze spread

 

Sometimes the difference between me ordering a completely unnecessary meal from Seamless on a weekday, or pretending that bread, cheese and other refrigerator condiments equals a dinner, is the answer to the question: “Do I need to heat this up?”

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