Tag: onion

  • Vintage Recipes

    Vintage Recipes

    The city of Fagaras played host recently to an event occasioned by the discovery of a 17th century cookbook sponsored by a Hungarian noblewoman who ruled Transylvania between 1663 and 1688. The festival called Medieval Cuisine is dedicated to cooking old fashioned dishes. The book is one of several published in the 18th and 19th centuries, allowing us to have a glimpse of what was served at feasts held by noble families.



    One such book is structured in four sections, dedicated to the four seasons of the year. In this edition of the Cooking Show we present a menu for a party of ten, as presented in that book. We start with pork soup with egg yolk and sour cream. You need a kilogram of pork, a few onions and a few carrots, a few parsnips and a bunch of parsley, two eggs, sour cream, lemon juice, salt and pepper. Cube the meat, boil it with the chopped vegetables, then add salt to taste. Mix well the egg yolks with the sour cream, then gradually mix in the broth to avoid curdling. Add the resulting mixture to the soup, then use lemon juice or vinegar as a souring agent.



    The main dish is beef cooked venison style. Take about twenty boneless beef steaks, half a liter of vinegar and one liter of water, three or four onions, about 30 peppercorns and about 15 allspice berries, 5 bay leaves, a few tablespoons of sour cream, and a few tablespoons of flour. Bring to a boil the water and vinegar, with the sliced onion, and the spices. After cooling, use the liquid to cover the beef.



    Leave for three days, turning the meat over once or twice a day. On the third day, fry the steaks in lard, then cover with beef broth. Simmer for about two hours. In the meantime, in a separate, smaller saucepan make a sauce out of melted lard and flour, to which you then add a few tablespoons of broth and a tablespoon of sugar. Put in a bit of sour cream, then pour over the steaks. Use plain boiled peas and carrots as a side dish.

  • Cooking Show – eggplant dishes

    Cooking Show – eggplant dishes

    The simplest of recipes is eggplant puree, which, for reasons unknown, is called ‘eggplant salad’ in Romanian. Pick a few medium sized eggplants and get ready a thin metal plate to set over the fire. Roast the eggplants, turning regularly to cook evenly.



    When they are cooked through, leave to drain to get rid of the bitter, dark juice. Carefully take out the pulp and mash into a paste. Be careful to use either a wooden instrument or a stainless steel knife, because the eggplant makes a chemical reaction with non-stainless steel, which ruins the dish. Mix in a bit of oil, salt to taste and a finely chopped onion.



    It is usually spread on bread, but you can also use carrot or celery sticks, as well as breadsticks. The recipe came to Romania from the Middle East via the Ottoman Empire, but in the original Turkish recipe, garlic is used instead of onion. One variation, which is considered to be North African in origin, is to mix in slices of roasted red or bell pepper.



    That recipe also goes well with roasted and crushed cumin, and if you prefer hotter food, you can also mix in fresh or dried hot pepper. It is usually served with slices of tomato. One typical Middle Eastern dish based on eggplant puree is baba ganoush, in which humus is mixed into the paste, humus being the chickpea puree that is eaten at almost every meal from North Africa to India.




  • Potato dishes

    Potato dishes

    During winter, sauerkraut, dried beans and potatoes
    figure more prominently on Romanian tables, which dates back to a time when all
    produce was seasonal. Potatoes are a part of many dishes.






    They can be baked, boiled, mashed, or fried. A popular
    dish using potatoes during the cold season is a version of moussaka.






    One of the simplest dishes using potatoes is potato
    stew. You need a kilo of potatoes, two or three onions, fresh parsley, tomato
    paste, oil, and salt to taste. Peel the potatoes, wash well and cut into medium
    sized chunks. Slice the onion and sweat in oil. Add the potatoes and water to
    cover, then boil on medium heat.






    At the end add a tablespoon or two of tomato paste, the
    fresh parsley, finely chopped, and salt to taste. Allow sufficient water into
    the dish, since the potatoes will soak up a lot of liquid.






    Another recipe that is popular is used mostly as a side
    dish, and is known in Romanian as peasant-style potatoes. If you have guests,
    you can make as much as 10 portions of this dish by using 2 kilos of potatoes,
    two or three large onions, 200 grams of cured sheep cheese or cheddar style
    cheese, milk or sour cream, and two eggs.




    Boil the potatoes in their skin in salt water. Take them
    out, let them cool a bit, then peel them and slice them thinly. Chop the onion
    and sweat in oil. You can add bacon to the recipe, about 200 grams, chopped
    finely, then browned in the oil with the onion.




    Next, take a deep oven tray, laying in it successive
    layers of potatoes and onion with bacon. In between layers put in crumbled
    cheese or grated cheddar. Beat the eggs with the milk or sour cream, then pour
    it on top. Put in the oven for 30 minutes. You can also add to the recipe
    garlic and dill. Enjoy.



  • Crawfish in Garlic Sauce

    Crawfish in Garlic Sauce

    It may come as a surprise that Romanians love crawfish. It is not exactly a wildly popular dish, but it is a delicacy prized by connoisseurs, especially people who dabble in fishing, professionally or otherwise. As such, lately in Romania some passionate souls have set up crawfish farms, making crawfish tails available even in supermarkets.



    Crawfish is not a complicated dish to make, you simply boil them and then dip them in a simple garlic sauce. You should discard dead crawfish before cooking them. They also should be thoroughly washed of the mud they dwell in. Bring to a rolling boil a pot of fresh water to which you add a couple of tablespoons of salt. Boil the crawfish five to ten minutes, until they turn lobster red. Turn off the heat and let them cool in the water they boiled in. After shelling them, mash some garlic with salt into a paste, then add oil, as if making mayonnaise. You can also add some vinegar if you like it. The best part of the crawfish is the tail, and also the meat of the pinchers. Any kind of seafood sauce goes with it, obviously, making for a delicious meal rich in protein, with little fat to speak of.



    A good indication of ways to prepare crawfish are recipes for cooking shrimp. One variation is stuffed crawfish. Set aside a few shells, then proceed to mince finely the meat, mixing with rice, finely chopped onion and finely chopped fresh parsley. Add salt and pepper to taste, stuff the shells, then boil on medium heat, serving hot. Enjoy!