Archive for the ‘Recipes’ Category

Les Moulins Mahjoub Pickled Lemons

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Ok everyone, this is a gold ticket item! Not only is this the most beautiful jar of preserved lemons you’ve ever seen, but it’s a product with that special homemade touch. Les Moulins Mahjoub Preserved Lemons are salted and then pickled in their own juices, creating the perfect recipe of YUM!!

Hot red peppers rest alongside these bright yellow citrus bulbs, providing the brine with intense flavor and a flare of heat. Les Moulins Mahjoub is a Tunisian line imported by the Rogers Collection, ranking in as one of our favorites. Never used pickled lemons before? Here are some ideas:

Recipe Ideas For Pickled Lemons

Use preserved lemons and herbs to season poultry and fish
Serve over grilled meats
Make white wine, butter and preserved lemon sauces for meat, vegetable or pasta plates
Use leftover juice to create tangy vinaigrettes for salads and pasta dishes
Create your own lemon butter by adding a touch of minced pickled lemons to good quality butter

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Simple Barolo Pasta Recipe

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

I was turned on to wonderful and simple pasta recipe by our importers.

Barolo Pasta with Olive Oil & Fennel Salt
1 package Ciacco Barolo Pasta
1/4 cup trampetti extra virgin olive oil
Fennel & Salt to taste

Fill a large pot with water. Bring water up to a boil and add pasta. Let cook about 5 minutes or until cooked for your taste. Strain pasta, mix in olive oil and add Fennel & Salt to taste. This is an incredibly simple and delicious recipe. The flavor of the pasta is shown off through the simplicity of this dish, good olive oil and fennel salt are key! Serve hot or cold as a side to meats or poultry.

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Greek Lentil Soup Recipe: Fakes

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Fakes, or traditional Greek lentil soup, is a very common dish throughout Greece. Over the past 10 years I’ve spent a lot of time living in the Peloponnese, learning village recipes from my husband’s family. Fakes is a regular Wednesday meal that we would gather around the table to share, usually accompanied by a true Greek salad and fried Gavros fish.

Depending upon how you grow up in Greece, you are used to the “white” or the “red sauce” version of dishes. My mother-in-law is the master at the red sauce version of these dishes. In fact, I didn’t know there was another way, until I tried White Fakes for the first time-it was a surprise!

A couple things to note about the Greek cooking I’ve grown up with before you start: You can never use too much good olive oil, don’t be afraid to use sea salt (of course add gradually, but make sure you have enough to heighten flavor), and overcooking is better than undercooking. These things may all sound strange, but they may be useful in recreating some of the recipes that are posted here. Happy Cooking!

Here is a very simple Lentil Soup Fakes Recipe:

1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 onion, chopped
4 carrots, sliced 1/3 inch thick
3 small Yukon Gold potatoes, cubed
2 cups French lentils or regular lentils
12 cups water for French lentils or 9 cups water for regular lentils
4 bay leaves
5 cloves garlic, whole
2-3 spoonfuls tomato paste
sea salt and pepper to taste

Heat 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil in large soup pot. Add chopped onions and saute for a few minutes. Add carrots and saute 10 minutes, use more olive oil if needed. Toss in potatoes, saute a 5 more minutes.

Mix in lentils, garlic and bay leaves, then cover with water. Bring soup up to boil, let simmer for 45-60 minutes until water is absorbed and lentils are soft. Towards the end of cooking the Fakes, mix in tomato paste with soup. Salt and pepper to taste.

Traditionally this dish is served hot with a huge slice of feta on top and a hefty chunk of fresh bread to accompany. Enloy!

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Greek Yogurt & Attiki Thyme Honey

Monday, December 14th, 2009

The creamy, thick texture of Greek Fage Yogurt can take you right back to the homeland. Keep it simple and drizzle our Greek Attiki Thyme honey over a scoop of deliciousness, or spice it up with a handful of crunchy granola and some toasted walnuts. And if you really want to go over the top, effortlessly, add a pinch of cinnamon and clove. That should make for an extraordinary breakfast, snack, and even dessert!

How To Spice Up Olives

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Whenever we sample olives at the shop people ask us what we do to make them taste so good. Many of them are in a homemade brine which add lots of flavor, but to spice them up for impressing guests is VERY simple!

To add some character to your olives, do the following:

Drizzle extra virgin olive oil over your choice of olives, Trampetti is amazing!

Sprinkle a pinch of your favorite herbs, we use oregano

Sprinkle the tiniest bit of some fine sea salt, I recommend Fiori & Salt

That’s it! Try it next time olives are on the appetizer menu and you’ll taste the difference.

Simple Porcini Pasta Recipe

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

People often come into the store asking how they can use the Il Macchiaiolo Porcini Pasta we carry. It’s a gourmet product by all definitions and is a beautifully made and packaged. I always think back to a one of the first ways I cooked it.

When someone once described herself as a food purist to me, I thought what does that mean? Not to identify with a particular way of eating, I have found that the simpler the dish-often the more profound it turn out to be!

Simple Porcini Pasta Recipe

1 bag Il Macchiaiolo Porcini Pasta

1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil (Tenuta Cocevola recommended)

1/2 tablespoon black truffle oil

1/8 cup fresh parsley, chopped

2 pinches sea salt or truffle salt (always salt to taste)

1/8 cup Pecorino or Parmesan cheese, shredded

Fill large pot with water and add 2 pinches sea salt. Bring water to a boil, add pasta. Cook pasta for 4 minutes, strain. Add pasta back into bowl, mix with olive oil, truffle oil and top with parsley and cheese. Salt pasta dish to taste and serve.