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GhaniJuicePhoto

GhaniJuicePhoto

QUINCE, POMEGRANATE AND APPLE JUICE

December 30, 2013

Your Comments are appreicated!

by Humaira

Our holiday season was made even more special by a visit from my cousin Ghani, who is on his first trip to the United States. It was really fun to show him around, and see my world from his perspective. He had many insightful questions such as:

- What is the difference between McDonalds and In-N-Out Burger?

- Why did educated, democratically elected American politicians shut their government down?

- What is the difference between a street, court, boulevard and avenue?

Some questions were easy to answer and other not so much.  

We took him to many restaurants, he was game to try new things but felt most foods were too dry and needed more oil.

He shared recipes for a variety of his favorite Afghan dishes which I hope to share with in 2014. In Afghan hospitality the guest is never allowed to enter the kitchen but we finally relented and allowed him to make his favorite juice for the family --- an instant hit.  

I find that most people stay away from whole pomegranates since they are difficult to seed.  In this recipe I have a quick and easy technique to seed pomegranate in less than one minute.

I hope you start your new year with a glass of Ghani's wonderfully refreshing and healthy juice.

Ghani's Quince, Pomegranate and Apple Juice

1 large pomegranate seeded

1 quince cored and cut in slices

3 red apples cored and cut in slices

1/2 cup water

Roll whole pomegranate on a hard surface or kitchen counter while putting pressure with both hands. This loosens the seeds. Cut the pomegranate in half, hold the open side down in the palm of your hand over a deep bowl to avoid the splatter of the juice. Take a heavy spoon or a wooden spatula and hit the back of the pomegranate 3-4 times. Most of the seeds will fall out after a couple of whacks.

Pick out the rest of the seeds by hand and remove any skin before juicing. Put the fruit through your juicer, pouring a little water in between each fruit to clear out the juicer.

Serve with ice.  Makes 4 large glasses.

Quince&PomegranatePhoto

Quince&PomegranatePhoto

Your Comments are appreicated!

Except where otherwise noted, all content on this blog is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.

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HelenSaberi

HelenSaberi

TEA AND HOSPITALITY IN AFGHANISTAN - QAYMAQ CHAI PARTII

October 17, 2013

By Humaira

Eid e Qurban Mubarak to all my Muslim friends. This Eid holiday, also known as Eid al-Adha falls after the annual pilgrimage of Muslims to Mecca. Hajj is the largest gathering of Muslims in the world and it is one of the five pillars of Islam. If an able bodied Muslim has the means, they should perform Hajj once in their lifetime. Going to Hajj is cost prohibitive for most Muslims around the world. I recently discovered that it can cost well over $7,000 to go on the pilgrimage to Mecca from the United States.

I don't consider myself a devout Msulim but I have alway been intrigued by Hajj. The idea of thousands of pilgrims with one belief, one devotion and one identity gathered in one place could be an unfogettable spiritual experience. This year my sister Nabila and I made a pact that we will make a pilgrimage to Hajj in the next few years.  We hope this wish will come true once we win the lottery.

TEA AND HOSPITALITY IN AFGHANISTAN - continued from last week's post.

By guest blogger: Helen Saberi

Tea, whether it is green or black, is not usually drunk with milk in Afghanistan except perhaps at breakfast time. 

Cup-of-green tea

Cup-of-green tea

On formal occasions, however, such as weddings and engagements, a special tea is prepared called qymaq chai. Qymaq is similar to clotted cream or the kaymak of the Middle East.  This tea is prepared with green tea and by the process of aeration and the addition of bicarbonate of soda the tea turns dark red.  Milk is added (and sugar too) and it becomes a purply-pink colour.  It has a strong, rich taste.  Cardamom is added for added flavour. 

TeaforOne

TeaforOne

The qymaq is floated on the top. My husband, who is very poetic, likens the colour of the tea to the rosy-hued glow of the mountains in Afghanistan as the sun rises or sets. The qymaq represents the white snow-capped peaks. He also says that the colour of the tea should be like the purply-pink blossom of the Judas tree which flowers all over in Afghanistan in the spring.

Qaymaq Chai

 Afghan Milk Tea

For the qymaq:

2 cups  (450 ml) whole milk

½ tbs

cornflour

6 tbs (75 ml)

double cream

Add the milk to a pan and bring to the boil. Reduce heat and stir in the cream. Sieve in the cornflour, stir to mix, then whisk until frothy. Leave on a low heat. A thick skin will form on the top of the milk. This should be removed from time to time and collected in another pan until there is only a small amount of milk left. Place the pan with all the collected qymaq again on a low heat and leave for a couple of hours more. Then keep the qymaq in a cool place until it is needed.

For the tea:

3 cups (680ml) water

6 tsp green tea

¼ tsp bicarbonate of soda

1¼ cups (280ml) milk

4 to 8 tsp sugar, according to taste

1 to 2 tsp ground cardamom

8 tsp qymaq

ice cubes

Put the water in a pan and bring to the boil. Add the green tea and boil for about 5 minutes until the leaves have opened up. Add the bicarbonate of soda and continue to boil for a couple of minutes more. The tea will rise to the top of the pan whilst boiling. Each time it does add an ice cube to reduce the temperature. Remove the pan from the heat and allow the tea leaves to settle. Strain off and discard the tea leaves. Put an ice cube into another pan and pour the tea into it from a height in order to aerate the tea. (A ladle could also be used to do the aeration (see the illustration below). Repeat, pouring from a height from pan to pan, several times, adding an ice cube each time until the tea becomes a dark red colour. 

Put the pan back on the heat and add the milk. The colour of the tea will now be a purply-pink colour. Slowly heat it to just below boiling point, then stir in the sugar and cardamom according to taste. Pour the tea into teacups and float two teaspoons of qymaq on top.

Recipes come from Afghan Food and Cookery by Helen Saberi published by Hippocrene in the United States.  The illustrations are by Abdullah Breshna who illustrated the book.

Except where otherwise noted, all content on this blog is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.

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HelenSaberi

HelenSaberi

TEA AND HOSPITALITY IN AFGHANISTAN PART I

October 10, 2013

Helen Saberi

By guest blogger: Helen Saberi

As the small aeroplane from Peshawar came into land bumpily at Kabul airport on 4 March 1971 little did I know that I was to marry an Afghan and spend the next nine years happily living in Afghanistan. My first impressions from the air were of the snow-capped mountains circling what seemed like a huge dust bowl. However, after these first rather daunting impressions I grew to love Afghanistan – its stark and stunning scenery, the brilliant blue skies, snow-clad mountains, lush green valleys, the colourful and bustling bazaars; but most of all I loved it for the wonderful hospitable people.

TeaforTwo

TeaforTwo

Hospitality and tea play a very important part in the lives of the Afghan people. Tea is drunk copiously throughout the day. The warmth and generosity of Afghan hospitality can be almost overwhelming at times. During the time I lived in Afghanistan I was lucky enough to travel around the country visiting places and towns such as Herat, Mazar-e-Sharif, Kunduz, Bamian, Bandimeer, Kandahar, Jalalabad and many other places. I was also fortunate enough to be a guest in many households. A guest is always made to feel welcome and special. He or she will be invited to sit in the place of honour at the head of the room and made comfortable on colourful cushions called tushak with a pillow (bolesht) placed behind to lean back on before being offered tea.

Tea (chai) will be served. It may be green tea or black. 

Meanwhile the host’s family will be preparing the best possible food. The tea is sometimes served in small glasses called istakhan or small porcelain handle-less bowls, similar to the Chinese tea bowl, called piala. 

TeawithAghanNationalPolice

TeawithAghanNationalPolice

Western style cups may be used, especially in the cities. The first cup of tea is usually served with an enormous amount of sugar – the more sugar, the more honour. Another Afghan custom is to have the first cup of tea sweet, chai shireen, followed by another cup without sugar, called chai talkh.  Many people dip sugar lumps or cubes, called qand, in their tea which they then hold in their mouths as they sip the tea.  Sometimes, especially if it is winter, ghur, which is a kind of lump sugar made from sugar cane, is served with tea because of its warming properties.  Chai is often flavoured with green or white cardamom – the pod is opened and the seeds crushed and sprinkled over the tea.  Sometimes a whole pod is lightly crushed and put into the teapot before boiling water is poured over. 

Noqul

Noqul

Noqul, sugar covered almonds with a hint of cardamom Your glass or cup is constantly refilled by your host. You must remember to turn your glass or cup over when you have had enough otherwise the refilling will continue! Sometimes tea is served in individual teapots allowing the guest to pour out as much or as little tea he needs or requires. Very often you will be provided with a small bowl for the dregs. 

Sweets called shirnee often accompany the tea, especially for guests.  These can be ‘chocolate’ (not what we know as chocolate but actually locally-made toffees).  

Noql are particularly popular. These are almonds, pistachios or chickpeas coated in sugar.  Noql-e-badomi (sugared almonds) are the most popular but my favourite were the noql-e-nakhod (with chickpeas) which were tasty and very moreish.   

Humaira in a Kabul pastry shop In the afternoon biscuits (kulcha) may also be served with tea. Although cakes, biscuits and desserts are a luxury in Afghanistan they are often served to guests. I remember very well when unexpected guests arrived in the afternoon we would send a young member of the family or the servant to go and buy biscuits from the bazaar. 

Kabul pastry and sweet shop

Kabul pastry and sweet shop

Many different types were available. My favourite ones were ab-e-dandon which means ‘melt in the mouth’ and they really did!  If it was Nauroz (the Afghan New Year) then kulcha-e-Naurozee (also known as kulcha-e-birinji – rice biscuits) were popular. If one knew guests were coming biscuits or pastries might be made at home. For special occasions delicious light and crispy goash-e-feel (literally ‘elephant’s ear’) pastries might be made.

I have vivid memories of the time I visited my husband’s relatives in Kunduz and being shown how to make fritter-like biscuits called kulcha-e-panjerei (meaning ‘window biscuits’) by my husband’s cousin Mahgul. There were, of course, other sweetmeats for us to enjoy but this has remained in my memory for all these years. 

I remember the batter being made, the wok-like pan containing oil being heated up over a fire and the fritter iron being used. I remember the sweet crispness of the biscuits.  Kulcha-e-panjerei are light and delicate and best eaten when they have cooled down but still fresh and crisp dusted with a little icing sugar just as I ate them in Kunduz many years ago. Here is the recipe. 

Kulcha-e-Panjerei

You will need a fritter iron like the one shown in the drawing below, although the patterns do vary considerably. I have one in the shape of a butterfly and one in the shape of a flower.

2 medium eggs

1 tsp sugar

¼ tsp salt

4 oz (110 g) plain flour

1 cup (225 ml) milk

2 tsp melted butter

oil for frying

icing sugar for dusting

Beat the eggs in a bowl until well blended. Add and mix in well the sugar and salt then gradually stir in the flour alternately with the milk and the melted butter. Beat well. Heat about 4” (10 cm) oil in a deep pan or fryer to 200o C (400o F).   Immerse the fritter iron in the hot oil to season. Then dip it in the batter, making sure the batter does not cover the top of the iron. Immerse quickly in the hot oil for about 20 to 30 seconds, until the bubbles disappear and the biscuit is golden brown. Remove the fritter carefully from the iron, if necessary with a fork, and drain. Repeat until all the batter is used up. When cool, dust with icing sugar. These are best served immediately and do not store well in a tin.

*Next week, Helen's post will continue with the recipe for Qaymaq Chai. A  special milk tea made for celebrations or hosting guests.

Recipes come from Afghan

Food and Cookeryby Helen Saberi published by Hippocrene in the United

States.  

Except where otherwise noted, all content on this blog is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.

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