Summer meze
food history, middle eastern cuisine, recipes, summer, Uncategorized, vegetarian

Assorted Meze: Perfect Appetizers/Sides for a Barbecue

This spread is way easier than it looks

Menu: Hummus, Tahini Dip, Tomato Salad, Cucumber Salad, French-Style Lentil Salad, Turkish-Style Chicken with Walnut Sauce (last two recipes in subsequent posts)

            Just as Spain has tapas and Italy has antipasti, Greece and the Middle East have meze. Reading through Mimi Sheraton’s description of the different varieties in 1000 Foods to Eat Before You Die (on pages 498 – 500), it became abundantly clear they would be perfect for entertaining a crowd, particularly during the summer. Most of the common varieties are served cold or at room temperature, and so could be made ahead. Only a few need last minute cooking, and many require no cooking at all. For a barbecue, meze would be ideal to either nibble before the other food comes off the grill or to serve alongside the main dishes.

            Because meze are traditional over such a large area, with diverse landscapes, climates, and traditions, the variety is endless. Common options include olives, vegetable and legume salads, sausages, various dips like hummus or baba ghanoush, fish, stuffed grape leaves, fried items, tabbouleh, and phyllo pastry turnovers, alongside more local specialties. A large proportion of meze are flavored with lemon, garlic, olive oil, or fresh herbs.

            Meze usually serve as a leisurely meal on their own, so having a variety with some substantial dishes is important. So is plenty of pita bread. For a representative summer/early fall selection, I chose hummus (a classic and always a favorite), tahini dip (interesting on its own), tomato, cucumber, and lentil salads, and Cerkez tavugu (Turkish chicken with walnut sauce). As long as you have a food processor, this entire menu is easy to put together. It’s a good idea to make the hummus, tahini dip, lentil salad, and chicken dish a day ahead to allow time for flavors to meld.

To make hummus:

            Across the Middle East, hummus is frequently eaten as a main dish with pita bread. The idea makes perfect sense. Historically, people got much more protein from legumes like chickpeas than from meat. Comparatively speaking, the chickpeas and flavorings were relatively affordable staples. True connoisseurs say that the best hummus is made with a mortar and pestle, with dried chickpeas, but to save time, canned chickpeas and a food processor make a delicious, protein and vitamin-packed snack or meal.

            Ingredients:

  • 1 can chickpeas/garbanzo beans (about 15.5 ounces), drained
  • 4 cloves garlic (peeled, crushed with the side of a knife, and roughly chopped
  • ½ cup tahini (sesame seed paste)
  • Juice of ½ to 1 lemon
  • ¼ cup olive oil, plus more to drizzle if desired
  • Chopped parsley to garnish, if desired
  • Pita bread and/or vegetables, for serving

            Directions:

  1. Combine the chickpeas, garlic, tahini, and juice of ½ lemon in the bowl of a food processor with a pinch of salt. Process to make a thick, slightly gritty paste, scraping bowl as necessary.
  2. With the motor running, slowly add the olive oil through the feed tube. Once the oil is incorporated, taste for salt and lemon, adding more if necessary.
  3. Add water to thin hummus to the desired consistency. ¼ cup produces a thick paste, for a thinner paste, use ½ cup.
  4. Spoon hummus into a bowl. If desired, drizzle with olive oil and garnish with parsley, olives, roasted peppers, etc. (In the Middle East, pomegranate seeds are a popular garnish).
  5. Serve with pita bread and/or vegetables for dipping.

To make tahini dip:

            Tahini actually makes a fascinating, although distinctly bitter, dip on its own. Personally I prefer it sweetened for halva or used for hummus, but the bittersweet flavor is beloved across the Middle East. Here its flavor is further enhanced with garlic, salt, and lemon juice. All you have to do is crush 1 garlic clove with ¼ teaspoon salt in a mortar and pestle until it becomes a sticky paste. Stir the garlic paste into ½ cup of tahini, and mix in 2 teaspoons lemon juice and 2 tablespoons water. The paste will appear to “seize,” just keep stirring to smooth it out. Don’t add more water, which will make the oil separate out. Place in a bowl and serve with pita bread and/or vegetables (during the late summer and early fall, fresh carrots are particularly tasty).

To make tomato salad:

            First, make sure you have fresh seasonal tomatoes. If so, cut them into chunks or thin slices, place on a plate, drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper to taste, and garnish with chopped parsley for a beautiful red and green effect. (If tomatoes aren’t in season, choose a different meze dish for the best flavor.)

To make cucumber salad:

            Cucumbers, with their mild flavor and high water content, are quite refreshing, which reminds me of a story I heard recently. During the early centuries AD, Christian ascetics competed with each other, seeing who could eat the least food, go the longest without sleep, and so on. This was particularly common in the deserts of Egypt and Syria. In one instance, an ascetic tested his resolve by sitting in the hot sun with a cucumber and seeing how long he could go without eating it. He lasted for several days (presumably he had some water), at which point I shudder to think of the condition of the cucumber.

            For a better-tasting salad, use 2 large or 4 small cucumbers. Peel them if desired, and slice thinly. Toss with ¼ red onion, also thinly sliced, 2 tbsp olive oil, 1 tbsp red or white wine vinegar, and a few finely chopped mint leaves. If desired, add a few crumbles of feta cheese.

            Another common way to prepare cucumbers for meze is to combine with yogurt. Next time, I’ll have a recipe for green lentil salad, so be sure to subscribe.

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Tarator - Balkan cucumber walnut dip or soup
food history, recipes, summer, vegetarian

Walnuts, Two Ways, Version 1: Tarator (Balkan walnut/cucumber soup)

Tarator, a cucumber-walnut “soup” from the Balkans

            The Balkans, or the southeastern corner of Europe south of the Danube and west of the Black Sea, has a fascinating and often tumultuous history. Fertile valleys and plains, broken up by various hills and mountains, were home to numerous ancient civilizations – Greeks, Illyrians, Dacians, Scythians, and Sarmatians. The Persian Achaemenids tried to expand their empire here just before and after 500 BC. During the 3rd Century BC, there was even a brief Celtic incursion.

            The Romans were the first outside power to conquer and hold the Balkans. From the 2nd Century BC to the 5th Century AD, they both absorbed and influenced local cultures. Wealthy Romans were fascinated by Greek civilization, and many of the non-Greeks began to speak Latin. Anyone who spoke Latin or Greek and adopted Greco-Roman customs (which fused together somewhat during this time) could become a citizen, and many of the local people did. During the later Roman Empire, two of the most influential emperors, Diocletian and Constantine the Great, came from the Balkans, probably around modern-day Serbia.

            From the 3rd Century AD onward, new waves of invaders entered the Balkans. The first were the Germanic Goths, who were eventually pushed back, but not before killing Emperor Decius in battle in 251 (Decius was also from the region, by the way). After abandoning the province of Dacia in modern-day Romania, the Romans secured the Danube frontier for another century, when various Germanic confederations pushed into the Balkans again, fleeing from the Huns. The Goths were back, accompanied by the Vandals and others.

            What happened next was complicated, but basically went as follows. The leader of the Goths, named Fritigern, asked the Romans if his people could settle in the Empire in exchange for military service. The Romans, facing manpower shortages, agreed, but then broke their word and mistreated the Goths, which led them to revolt. After they killed another emperor, named Valens, in battle in 378, the Romans eventually honored their agreement. Over the next decades, Germanic troops made up more and more of the army.

            After the Empire was divided for good in 395 AD, most of the Balkans became part of the Eastern Roman Empire. Through a combination of better leadership, greater wealth, and a shorter frontier, the Eastern Empire was able to force/bribe the Germanic groups to leave. These Goths, Vandals, etc. then headed west and dismantled the Western Roman Empire. After the Eastern Empire teamed up with the Western Empire and the Goths against the Huns in the 450s, the last “barbarian” group in the Balkans was the Ostrogoths, or Eastern Goths. The emperors sponsored sending them to Italy in the 490s to drive out the Visigoths, or Western Goths, and no Germanic confederations tried to invade the Balkans again. But that did not mean the region was safe, as I will explain in the next post.

            With so many diverse cultures coming and going, along with a favorable climate with plenty of sunshine and rain, the food in the Balkans became just as diverse. Records indicate that the Dacians grew wine grapes. The Romans, who valued fresh produce, either introduced or improved a variety of fruits and vegetables. They were known to enjoy cucumbers, which make up the base of tarator.

            In 1,000 Foods to Eat Before You Die on page 381, Mimi Sheraton suggests 3 ways to prepare walnuts, which have grown in the Balkans for millennia. One of those methods is an egg salad called aselila. Even with a walnut-based dressing replacing mayonnaise, the hard-boiled eggs are a non-starter for me. The walnut and cucumber mix sounds a little like tzatziki sauce, with cucumbers, yogurt, garlic, and dill. It is finished with a bit of sunflower oil and chopped walnuts. The whole idea seems a bit odd as a soup, but pretty good as a dip, so I made my recipe thicker.

            Preparation is simple. There are two tricks to get the best results. First, toss the diced or grated cucumbers with salt and let drain for an hour to remove excess moisture that might otherwise make the dip watery. Second, the garlic needs to be crushed with salt, but there is not enough of it to do so in a food processor. A mortar and pestle work best. Once this is done, combine with the yogurt and dill and let sit until the cucumbers are finished draining, so the flavors can infuse.

            Ingredients:

  • 2 large or 4 small cucumbers, peeled, seeded, and diced or grated (I like diced for more texture)
  • 1 ¼ teaspoons coarse salt
  • 2 garlic cloves, peeled, crushed with the side of a knife, and coarsely chopped
  • 1 cup whole milk plain yogurt (doesn’t have to be Greek yogurt, just make sure not to use low-fat or fat-free)
  • A few sprigs dill, minced after removing any tough stems, or ½ teaspoon dried
  • Sunflower oil, to drizzle
  • Coarsely chopped walnuts, to garnish

            Directions:

  1. Toss the cucumbers with one teaspoon of the salt and place in a colander to drain for an hour.
  2. Place the garlic and remaining salt in the bowl of a mortar. Work with the pestle until a sticky, mostly smooth paste forms. A few lumps of garlic are fine.
  3. Combine the yogurt, garlic paste, and dill in a bowl and allow to sit until the cucumbers are finished draining. Add the cucumbers to the yogurt mixture and discard the liquid.
  4. Place the cucumber-yogurt mixture in a serving bowl. Drizzle with the sunflower oil and sprinkle liberally with the chopped walnuts.
  5. Serve the dip with pitas, other bread, or crackers.

            Tarator seems odd as a soup, but as a dip, it’s fantastic. It sort of tastes like non-sour dill pickles, but creamy. Considering that tarator uses the same flavorings of salt, garlic, and dill, it makes perfect sense. The yogurt, sunflower oil, and chopped walnuts make it more substantial, so it could almost be a hot-weather meal on its own with pitas.

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