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Archive for the ‘Entrees’ Category

Kalonjee



This is a dish that the people of Aden (aka as Adenis) learned from the Indian generations that settled in the City of Aden, during the time it was a British protectorate . I think that Kalonjee means “Black Seed” which is one of the ingredients in this dish. If you ever go to Yemen and ask about this dish don’t be surprised if many don’t know  it. It is only CERTAIN people in Aden, who have southeast Asian backgrounds who know it. I am glad I am one of them, because it is ABSOLUTELY delicious and a REAL crowd pleaser.

Okay, you will need:

1) a medium and firm eggplant

2) 2 medium onion finely diced

3) 1 green hot pepper finely minced

4) 2 tblsp cilnatro finely chopped

5) 1 tsp black seed

6) 1 tblsp ground cumin

7) 1 tblsp ground coriander

8) Salt to taste

9) 1 tblsp hot sauce (i use Adeni red chilli mix)

10) 1 tblsp concentrated Tamarind

11) 2 tblsp tomato paste

12) 2 cloves of minced garlic

13) 2 tblsp of Oilive Oil

14) 4 medium patatoes with skin, washed and halved

Place the oil in a big pot and place on medium heat.

Mix the onions, hot green pepper, garlic, cilantro, black seed, hot sauce, cumin, coriander, salt

Take the egg plant and cut the green top off and slice through vertically stopping a little short of the base of the egg plant–do not cut al lthe way through. Continue doing so until it opens up like a flower. Take the onion mixture and, to the best of your ability, stuff it into the egg plant.

Place the stuffed eggplant in the oil in the pot. Sprinkle in the rest of the onion mixture and patatoes as well.

Add the tamarind and tomato sauce and 2 cups of water. Add a little more salt and cover and let boil. Once it starts boiling, turn the heat way down and let cook for about an hour and a half–or until the patatoes are cooked through and the sauce is thickend.

This sounds like a throw-everything-in-the-pot kind of recipe, but it turns out delicious.

Enjoy with rice or bread. It goes really well with fried fish.

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These are scrambled eggs that people from Aden usually eat on Friday mornings with bread fresh from the oven.

It brings such warm memories of my family in Yemen. My mother used to make this on Friday mornings. I remember the aroma permeating our home. I remember my brother rushing to the local baker to bring home hot crispy bread. I can still see us all sitting down to this family breakfast. It is a classic. If you’ve been to any of the gulf states you might know this dish as SHAKSHUKA–which basically means scrambled eggs.

Ingredients:

  1. 2 tblsps of Olive Oil

  2. a diced medium white onion

  3. 2 red or yellow patatoes sliced into small thin pieces (see pic)

  4. 1 diced hot green pepper

  5. 1 tblsp finely chopped cilantro

  6. 1 diced medium sized tomato

  7. salt to taste

  8. 1/2 tsp tumeric


In a frying pan add 2 tblsps of Olive Oil. Sautee a diced medium white onion + 2 red or yellow patatoes sliced into small thin pieces (see pic)+ 1 diced hot green pepper+ 1 tblsp finely chopped cilantro+ 1 diced medium sized tomato. Let them Sautee until the tomato softens. Add 1/2 tsp tumeric to the mix and sprinkle salt to taste.

Cover and leave on low heat until the potatoes are cooked through but still retain their shape.

Uncover and crack in two whole eggs and let cook as desired–i like them well cooked.

Serve with bread–any bread really works with this. Enjoy!  

Saute onions and green chilly pepper in oil

Add tomatoes

Add cilantro

Break eggs on top

Mix and let cook until done

 

 

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