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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I\'m an opinionated, snarky, gay academic with a predilection for the history, the Arab world, languages, photography, food, and music. I live in Austin, Texas. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘recipes’



Tea break

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Mint Tea - Moroccan Soup Bar
Creative Commons License photo credit: avlxyz

We’ve discussed my predilection for caffeine addiction before, which is why I find it somewhat amusing that the latest drink that has sucked me in isn’t caffeinated (which means I can drink it at home in the evening, heh heh … )

I still haven’t managed to get through my photos from Morocco yet — Spain is uploaded, but I’m not going to make them that easy for you to find yet — so the photo above isn’t one I shot, but I do have photos from a tea break.  Like the rest of the Arab world, Moroccans drink tea so loaded down with sugar that anyone I know who’s an afficionado of the “delicate” tea drinking cultures like Japan or China turns slightly green with nausea at the thought, but unlike the countries of the mashriq (“east” — in this case the Fertile Crescent or countries of the eastern Mediterranean) the Moroccans got access to Chinese green tea and added whole sprigs of mint.

The result is a delightfully refreshing after-meal concoction that’s sweet and minty and not overly strong, and moreover, it’s decaf, which means you can safely drink it after any meal and not worry about losing sleep, which you definitely can’t do with black tea or Arab/Turkish/Greek coffee.  In fact, I have to stop drinking those around 11 am if I want to get any sleep anymore, as I’m ever so slightly more sensitive to caffeine in my old age.

I bought some green tea at the supermarket last weekend and this morning I remember to put a few bags in my lunchbox and went out to the garden and clipped some fresh mint.  My garden, at the moment, is experiencing the War of the Herbs — I’ve got a gigantic bush of rosemary attempting to take over one end, while the mint guerilla warriors are making serious inroads on the other end.  Eventually they’re going to meet and probably destroy the oleander between them in the process.

It’s ever so simple to make Moroccan Mint Tea.  If you’re inclined, here’s a simple recipe:

1 bag green tea (if you have the choice, choose Chinese instead of Japanese)
1 or 2 sprigs of fresh spearmint (leaves on)
2 cubes of sugar
boiling water

Note that no self-respecting Moroccan would serve tea in anything other than a clear glass.  Boiling water goes in mug, add mint sprigs (whole) and tea bag.  The tea bag only needs to steep for a couple of minutes, and then you leave the mint in while you drink (add the sugar first).  It’s a little weird having to push the mint out of the way at first, but it’s a real conversation starter, just like this conversation that I just started.  (Not to mention it helps you control the mint that’s overrunning your garden … because if you have mint in your garden, it’s overrunning it.  That’s just what mint does.)

I can sit inside and pretend I’m back in Morocco … where it was 75 degrees, instead of the high 90s.  Sigh.

At least it’s Friday!

In search of the perfect maitai

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

I wasn’t such a good blogger this week. Michael IM’ed me at one point to tell me that my blog just wasn’t the same without photos of Hawaii pasted all over it, and I can emphasize. I’ve been trying to get a little more color in these pages, and somehow “work sucks” doesn’t inspire much color. Or commentary.

So…

Ray and the tikis

Ray’s birthday is coming up next month. I had already promised our friends that we would have a tiki party when we got back from Hawaii, and somehow the tiki party and Ray’s birthday got mixed together, so now we’re having a tiki birthday party for him. Planning it has been remarkably fun because there’s so much tiki party crap out there. (Seriously — there are some hard core tikiphiles out there. Check out konakai.com to see what I mean.)

The most important items on the menu for any tiki/Hawaiian themes party, however, are the drinks. You’ve got to have tropical drinks, and the sort of classic beginning for a Hawaiian drink is a maitai.

Looks Hawaiian, don’t it?

The problem, as I have discovered is … well, numerous-fold.

First off, there is such a thing as maitai mix on the market. However, I have recently developed something of an issue with drinks that are mostly colored corn syrup. Seriously, the next time you hit the grocery or liquor store, look at those margarita and piña colada mixes and check out the inclusion of “high fructose corn syrup” as one of the ingredients. There are very, very few that use anything else — I like Stirrings, which uses cane sugar, but man, it’s expensive. I recently started making margaritas with fresh limeade from the grocery store. They’re pretty damned good if I do say so myself.

The next issue is that no two people seem to be able to agree on what actually goes in to a maitai. The bartender cheat sheet that we have at home gives the following recipe:

1 part light rum
1 part dark rum
2 parts pineapple juice
splash of grenadine
garnish with cherry, pineapple slice, umbrella, and any other flair floating about the house

I find pineapple juice just a little too bitter on its own, so I’ve been using pineapple/mango juice. It comes out nice and fruity with a little bite to it:

So, while I was perusing the above tiki Web site and its myriad of links, I decided to get some inspiration for other drinks to serve at the party. You’ve got to have Blue Hawaiians, because they’re blue. You can’t go wrong with blue drinks at a tiki party.

However, I was a bit puzzled/alarmed to discover that one site, which claims to be engaging in the search for the definitive maitai recipe, included these words: “the original maitai included only lime juice. For this reason, anything that includes any other kind of fruit juice (orange, pineapple) is not a real maitai.”

Who knew?

Now, speaking blunty, some of the recipes I’ve found are just cheating (you don’t use orange juice, you use orange curaçao or triple sec). But I dutifully tried some of the recipes just to see how they came out … and wound up adding the pineapple juice anyway because they came out so bitter.

The other problem is that the “definitive recipes” include things like orgeat — almond syrup — and something called “rock candy syrup.” I know of a place locally that probably carries them, and I’ll check them out … and the first thing I’m going to do is look at the ingredients to check for high fructose corn syrup. If I want my guests going into diabetic shock, it’ll be from the food, thank you very much.

Otherwise, I’ll just stick with my current recipe, which is:

2 parts dark rum
2 parts light rum
1 part lime juice
1 part orange curaçao
a good helping of pineapple/mango juice (roughly 4 parts)
a splash of grenadine
flair

Shake and serve over ice.

On to testing the next recipe. This is the kind of homework I can get with! :mrgreen:

So — anyone have other tiki drink suggestions?

It’s Salsa Day!!

Sunday, August 5th, 2007

Friday was another one of my use-it-or-lose-it days off from work (actually, I don’t lose them: anything in excess of a pre-set maximum number of vacation hours converts to sick time at the end of the year. The problem is that at this point I could be out sick for seven months — but I need a doctor’s note after the third day. :roll: )

So, I sat around on me’ bum for a while and got slaughtered on the latest level of Ratchet and Clank (sewer monsters … ugh). And then I hauled my fat posterior to the grocery store so that I could fill my prescriptions and pick up items — I do love the wide variety of products our grocery store offers, it’s just impossible to navigate on weekends or evenings. The pharmacist told me that it was going to take at least 30 minutes to fill my prescription, so I grabbed a shopping cart and wandered through produce … and then it happened.

I saw the celestial light beaming down from the heavens onto a display of green, pointy goodness.

Yes, that’s right, my children: the hatch chilies are coming into season!!!

Hatch chilies are one of the New Mexico chile specialties. They’re named for the town around which they are most commonly grown and range from mild to spicy to blow-your-head-off-hot. They come into season around Labor Day (American Labor Day) and our grocery chain usually sells them in massive quantities.

In fact, as I was greedily stuffing the first of what would be four bursting-at-the-seams produce bags with the chilies, a woman came along and picked up an entire box of them and put it in her cart.

Me: “And I thought I was excited that they were in season … ”

After I went to New Mexico and saw all of the practical applications of green-chile based products, I decided that when the hatch chilies came out this year that I would buy in bulk and make salsas and green chile sauce and store it for the rest of the year.

So, eight pounds of chilies, four pounds of tomatillos, two pounds of tomatoes, four cloves of garlic, and a bunch of cilantro later I left the store with my new weekend project.

And so, Saturday was Salsa Day.

Hatch Green Chile Salsa

And here’s how I did it.

Step 1: Remove the gay basil plant from my work area:

Moving Gay Basil Plant

As you can see, he’s getting pretty big. He also enjoys being outside more often, but still screams loud and clear whenever he wants to come inside or if he’s not getting enough water. He is such a drama queen.

Step 2: Prep the grill for chile roasting:

Get the Grill Ready

OK, so you’ll notice that I’ve lined the grill with aluminum foil. The temperature on our grill is hard to control, and the first batch of chilies that I roasted burned so badly that in several cases not only did the skin blister (which is good) but the flesh underneath charred (which is bad). This actually worked out better for me.

Step 3: Load up the chilies:

Start Charrin’

OK, so this is how I did it. New Mexican roast chile enthusiasts will probably have a heart attack reading this bit, but WAH.

Hot chilies on the right, mild on the left. Grill on hot, indirect heat, for about ten minutes. At this point, the parts of the chilies that were in contact with the foil were black and blistery (I didn’t take pictures – my hands got a little messy for camera holding). I turned them over, let them roast another couple of minutes and then turned the grill off without opening the cover. I let them sit for another five minutes, then unloaded all of the chilies into a stock pot and covered it with plastic wrap:

Steamin Chilies

The trick here, children, is to wait until the chilies are completely cooled down. This may take a while, but if you’re patient, the skins will slide off like a jacket. Trust me on this one: no matter how easy you think the skins are coming off while they’re still warm, it’s nothing compared to how easy it will be once they’ve completely cooled.

If there are any chilies that are being a bit resistant or their skins haven’t loosened enough, you can steam them for a couple of minutes and let them cool.

Step 4: Peel the Tomatillos

Peel the Tomatillos

Despite their name, tomatillos aren’t actually green tomatoes, nor are they related to tomatoes at all. They’re actually relatives of the gooseberry. Bet you didn’t know that, did ya?

Anyway, when you get a batch of fresh tomatillos, you’ve got to remove the husks and wash off the sticky stuff underneath.

Tomatillo-ey Goodness

For salsa, you really want to roast the garlic (not pictured: wrap a head of garlic in aluminum foil and put it in the oven or grill for 30 minutes), tomatoes and tomatillos.

I prefer to start out on indirect heat — if they need to be blackened, I’ll move them over to direct heat at the end. On indirect heat, let them sit for at least half an hour. The skins on the tomatoes should be splitting and the tomatillos should have ‘muddied’ their color a little bit – they’re the color of ripe green apples raw, they should look a little more like spoiled green apples (in color only!) when roasted:

Roastin’ ‘maters

Step 5: Time to make the salsa!

All the ingredients, lined up in a row

OK, here’s how you do it:

  • 8 green chilies (hatch are preferable, otherwise generic New Mexico green chilies. If those aren’t available you can use eight anaheim chilies plus two jalapeños, roasted as above.) The chilies should be roasted, peeled, and have the stems, seeds, and ribs removed.
  • 4 tomatoes, roasted, with the skins removed.
  • 5 tomatillos (about half a pound), roasted.
  • 1-2 cloves roasted garlic (to taste – I love garlic)
  • 1/2 white onion, peeled, quartered, and roasted in a dry pan
  • 2 tablespoons (i.e., a decent sized sprig) cilantro
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp cumin

Stick it all in a blender and puree until nice and smooth.

Step 6: Chill and enjoy!

Final Product

I always find that the salsa needs time for the flavors to mingle – plus, a good number of the ingredients are likely still warm. Put the salsa in the fridge until cool or overnight before serving.

Step 7: Realize that you’ve spent so much time making salsa that you forgot to get anything ready for dinner. Order a pizza.

And I hope your weekends were salsa-riffic!

 

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