Country Kitchen Pantry - Herbs, Spices, Cooking, Recipes

I opened the journal that I keep in my country kitchen's pantry, and this is what I wrote:


Thursday, June 28, 2007

Halva

My introduction to halva came in the seventies while I was living in San Francisco. One great thing about living in a big city is access to wonderful international treats. San Francisco provided the opportunity to find and enjoy excellent halva.

Halva is a middle eastern treat that can be made with many different flavors, depending on what you put in it. Cardamom, coffee, saffron, and vanilla are popular additives as well as nuts, seeds, vegetables and fruit. The halva that I’ve tried most often was dry and crumbly - this type is called ’sesame halva’. There’s another type that is gelatinous, called ’semolina halva’.

Here’s a simple recipe for semolina halva:

Combine two cups of sugar, eight cups of water, and a teaspoon full of saffron. Leave this sitting, uncooked, for half an hour. Put 12 ounces of unsalted butter in a large pot and melt on very low heat. Slowly add 2 cups of wheat flour, stirring constantly. Continue until the color of the flour is caramel colored.

Then slowly pour the water/sugar/saffron mixture into the pot, stirring constantly until the entire mixture is like a sauce, then add a tablespoon of rose water and stir again. (If you have no rose water, try vanilla.)

Pour the mixture into a flat serving dish and let it cool. When cool, you can sprinkle cinnamon on top.

And now for a recipe for sesame halva:

Boil one and one-half cups of sugar with one-half cup of water, and the juice of half a lemon. Add flavoring which could be saffron, chocolate, vanilla, or whatever you like. When the mixture gets to the ’soft ball’ stage, let the syrup cool for a few minutes. Do not stir; instead, warm the tahini to about 120 degrees fahrenheit, stir it well, then add it to the sugar syrup, stirring vigorously. Next knead the concoction until it begins to set to help form sugar crystals. Then place it in an oiled rectangular baking pan, and cool. Cover, and refrigerate overnight.

Filed under: Halva, Sweets — Linda @ 2:55 pm



Sunday, April 15, 2007

Site Review: All Recipes

My favorite recipe site is allrecipes.com - I’ve been going there for help with finding recipes for years. I like how people can contribute their own recipes, rate recipes, and find almost anything. You can print out your recipes in several sizes. Sometimes there’s almost too many choices!

I put in the search term, ‘blueberry muffins’ and it came up with ‘Lemon Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Health Nut Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Blueberry Muffins 1′, ‘Diabetic Friendly Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Banana Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Streusel Topped Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Blueberry Muffins 2′, ‘Alienated Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Applesauce Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Applesauce Wheat Blueberry Muffins’, ‘To Die For Blueberry Muffins - Lighter Version’, ‘Best Lactose Free Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Oatmeal Blueberry Muffins’, ‘Black and Blueberry Muffins’, and lots more.

You get the idea. This reader-contributed recipe listing service is hosting tons of recipes and if you can’t find what you’re looking for there, I’d be surprised.

Filed under: Berries, Muffins — Linda @ 9:16 am



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Hi, my name is Linda. This is my personal home and hearth journal.

I am a self-trained herbal practitioner. I became a vegetarian when I was a teenager in the 1960s. I was a San Francisco Bay Area hippie in the 60s and early 70s. Then I became a mom - the most important job I've ever had.

Now I live in a very small mountain community. The nearest fast food restaurant is more than forty miles during summer, and more than seventy miles in winter when the pass is snowed under. I've never owned a cell phone, but I talked on one once.




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