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Delicious ways to use butternut, acorn squash, kabocha, and more.
Ljit kousa Kolokythokeftédes Mücver: Zucchini fritters Maintanosaláta Dip made from finely chopped parsley mixed with olive oil, vinegar, lemon juice, garlic and a base of either bread or potatoes Muhammara: Cevizli Acılı Ezme (Acuka) A hot pepper dip with ground walnuts, breadcrumbs, garlic, salt, lemon juice, and olive oil Piyaz
Squash blossoms always remind me of Italy. These crispy, delicate summer snacks are the perfect partner to a spritz or an icy cold pilsner. I love to make them for dinner parties or just to enjoy ...
Makes: 4 servings / Prep time: 30 minutes / Total time: 1 hour 30 minutes 2 spaghetti squash. Vegetable oil spray. ½ teaspoon paprika. ½ teaspoon cumin. FILLING. ½ pound ground chicken breast ...
While the ingredients vary from region to region, the essentials (eggplants, tahini, garlic, lemon) are generally the same. [citation needed] In Armenia, the dish is known as mutabal. The essential ingredients in Armenian mutabal are eggplant, tahini, garlic, lemon, and onion; and most Armenians also add cumin. [citation needed]
A bowl of falafel. By far the most dominant style of eating in Jordan, mezze is the small plate, salad, appetizer, community-style eating, aided by dipping, dunking and otherwise scooping with bread. Mezze plates are typically rolled out before larger main dishes. [16] A typical Jordanian mezze might include any combination of the following:
These are bowls of baked spaghetti squash tossed with fragrant minced garlic and chopped fresh cilantro. Easy, low-carb and very satisfying. Get the recipe: Garlic Cilantro Spaghetti Squash Bowls
Kousa mahshi (كوسا محشي)—courgettes baked and stuffed with minced meat and rice in a tomato-based sauce; Malfouf (ملفوف)–rolled cabbage leaves stuffed with rice, meat and spices [9] Jordanian lamb mansaf. Mansaf (منسف)—lamb or chicken cooked in a sauce of fermented dried yogurt and served over rice