2007 eFood: CookBook! GeoAlaska: Theatre & Film : days 'til the year 2005! Work!
books.filmplus.org: bks & links theory.filmplus.org: PM analysis classes.filmplus.org: what I teach spectator.filmplus.org: The Book sellassie.filmplus.org: Ethiopian Pages him.filmplus.org: hyper-bio pov.filmplus.org: Point of View self.filmplus.org: nonfiction Summarysellassie.comQuestionsNotesThe traditional Ethiopian menu is heavy with beef, lamb and chicken. Yet, because the country is made up mostly of Christians and Muslims who observe many meatless days, it also has a wonderful and extensive vegetarian selection, centered on lentils, split peas, cabbage, beans and greens like collards and kale. Seasonings are crucial, with mountain-grown chili peppers combining with ginger, garlic, onions, spices, basil and a host of less familiar flavorings like bishop's weed, which resembles thyme, and false banana powder, which comes from a source that looks like a banana tree but bears no fruit. The flavorings are usually cooked slowly in kibe, a clarified butter similar to the Indian ghee. One thing almost never found in Ethiopian food is sugar. To say that Ethiopian food can be spicy enough to set a rosy glow to the sinuses and mouth is like noting that French chefs use sauces, yet as with most things Ethiopian, it's not nearly that simple. Hot berbere paste and its spicy relatives awaze and mitmitta are integral to many recipes, yet different dishes have carefully calibrated degrees of fire, and some dishes, made without hot sauce and called alecha, are mild enough for the most sensitive palates. Pulling all the disparate elements together is the injera, the spongy fermented bread imprinted with bubbles that tastes faintly of sourdough and resembles huge crepes. Almost every Ethiopian restaurant offers combination plates, perfect for first-timers and preferred by some veterans for tasting a spectrum of meat and vegetable dishes, from atikilt wot, a spicy stew of green beans, carrots and cabbage, to yebeg alecha, a mild lamb stew. It's helpful to remember that the word wot, which rhymes with hot, indicates that a dish is just that, while alecha means that a dish is mild. Ethiopian food is served on centerpiece platters over injera, accompanied by plates of more injera, rolled up like so many dish towels. To eat, you simply tear off pieces of injera and scoop up bites of food. With practice comes deftness, and eventually you can strip the meat off a drumstick, bite by bite, using injera.
|
ethiopian
New directory and new page!... Ethiopian food is eaten with the hands with the assistance of a soft flat bread called injera - you tear off little pieces of the bread and use it to pick up the food. The food is somewhat similar in consistency to Indian food - ground or chopped food in sauces. As with Indian food, the sauces are often spicy, although the spices are a lot different. (Not all the dishes are spicy - some are extremely mild, so you shouldn’t have any problem there if you don’t like spicy food. Just avoid things the menu tells you are spicy.)Ethio Food Upenn *
New: Russian Fast Food!
From Esther Sellassie Antohin (right):
Experience:
Ethiopian (Royal Family Dinners)
Russian (husband & 1992-1993 RAC)
American: McDonald's manager
Summer 2003, Fairbanks Alaska, USA
Ethiopian (samples):
KITFO Ethiopian Tartar Steak Yield: 8 portionsChopped beef should be freshly ground just before serving. It is served raw.
In a 9-inch skillet: Melt 2 oz. BUTTER. Add: 1/4 tsp. CAYENNE PEPPER 1/4 tsp. CHILI PEPPER 1 tsp. SALT and stir through thoroughly. Add 1 1/2 Ibs. LEAN ROUND STEAK, freshly ground,Mix thoroughly. Serve immediately. Do not cook.
If your guests prefer the Kitfo cooked, saute it over low heat for about 5 minutes, stirring constantly.
Chef Linsi serves this salad when he prepares an Ethiopian dinner, as he feels that a salad is lacking in the Ethiopian presentation. It's pretty hot too, so be careful with the hot-pepper sauce and hot chilies.
In a 1-quart bowl:
Combine: 1 1/2 Ibs. FIRM TOMATOES, cut in tiny wedges with seeds removed
1/2 cup SWEET ONIONS, finely chopped 1 clove GARLIC, finely chopped 1 HOT CHILI PEPPER, finely chopped 1/2 cup PEPPERONI, thinly sliced (optional).
1/4 cup VlNEGAR 1/2 cup OIL 1/2 cup SWEET WHITE WINE (Muscatel or Madeira) 1 tsp. WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE 1 tsp. SALT 1/4 tsp. BLACK PEPPER few drops TABASCO SAUCE.Marinate the tomato mixture in the sauce. Serve in sauce dishes without lettuce or drain well and place in the center of the Injera.
In a 1-quart bowl:
Mix: 2 cups ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR
1/2 tsp. SALT 2 Tbs. SUGAR 1/2 tsp. CAYENNE PEPPER 1/4 cup OIL.Knead together and add WATER, spoonful by spoonful, to form a stiff dough. Knead dough for 5 minutes longer.
Tear off a piece the size of a golf ball.
Roll it out with palms of hands on a lightly floured board into a long strip 1/2 inch thick.
Snip into 1/2-inch pieces with scissors.
Spread about a handful of the pieces on an ungreased 9-inch frying pan (or enough to cover bottom of pan). Cook over heat until uniformly light brown on all sides, stirring up once in a while as you go along.
Continue until all are light brown.
Film-North subscribers may copy or download the texts from the network, but its distribution or publication shall constitute an infringement of the Author's copyright. The original contents of this site may not be reproduced, republished, reused, or retransmitted without the express written consent of Anatoly Antohin.