Quote

,,One of the delights of life is eating with friends, second to that is talking about eating.
And, for an unsurpassed double whammy, there is talking about eating while you are eating with friends. ,,
-Laurie Colwin

Monday, January 30, 2012

Modern Romanian cuisine (3) - My ''Mamaliga''

Romania isn't best known for its food but it will be....I know. There is an incredibly rich culinary tradition here, homegrown in Romania, born out of the necessities of life, brought in by the Ottomans, Germans, Russians, Serbians, Hungarians.... Add to that a generous climate, fertile soil and the Black See that provide fabulous ingredients in abundance and you are ready to feast.
To understand Romania and to understand mămăliga, you have to understand traditional Romanian culture.
Historically, Romanians ate this golden bread (mămăliga - made from cornmeal) as a replacement to bread. It is inexpensive, easy to do every day, in every season and could be found in every house.
Mămăliga is similar to a porridge made out of wheat of cornmeal traditional for Romania. It is better known to the rest of the world in its Italian form named polenta.
Traditionally, mămăliga is cooked by boiling water, salt and cornmeal in a special-shaped cast iron pot called ''ceaun'' or ''tuci''.
Mămăliga is much thicker than the regular Italian polenta to the point that it can be cut in slices with a string, like bread.
Sometimes, mămăliga can be much softer, almost to the consistency of porridge.
Mămăliga is a fat-free, cholesterol-free, high-fiber food. It can be used as a healthy alternative to more refined carbohydrates such as white bread, white pasta or white rice.
In Romania, mămăliga is used as a bread substitute and can be served all day:
-with sour cream and jam for breakfast,
-stuffed with cheese and served with pickles as a all day meal
- used as the starchy base for meaty stews, grills, Sarmale recipe here….etc, at dinner.
Today I will introduce you to mămăliga, not in a traditional way of preparation, to demonstrate how versatile and deeply satisfying this peasant dish can be.Parmesan and Rosemary Polenta with Wild Boar Stew
Mamaliga cu rosmarin si parmesan servita cu tocanita de porc mistret
Serves 6 to 8

Rosemary Polenta
Ingredients150 gr of polenta
400 ml of chicken or vegetable stock
400 ml of water
100 gr of grated Parmesan cheese
fresh rosemary, chopped
olive oil
salt
Preparation
In a cast iron pot ''ceaun'' or ''tuci',' or a pot, add the water and stock to boil.
After water is boiling, reduce heat to the lowest possible setting.
Add salt and rosemary. Gradually stir in polenta; cook, stirring the mixture constantly, for 3 to 5 minutes or until polenta thickens and pulls away from sides of pot.
Stir in Parmesan and olive oil. Once it begins to stick to the side of your pot, before collapsing back into the mix, the mamaliga is done.
To prepare stew
Ingredients:
5 tablespoons olive oil
2 large onion chopped
1 kg boneless wild boar meat, cubed 1-2cm
1 tbs white flour
1/2 bottle of red wine
400 ml beef stock
400 gr canned chopped tomatoes
3 bay leaves from real spice
5 cloves garlic, crushed
1 dried chili peppers crushed from real spice
1 cinnamon stick from real spice
250 gr carrots chopped
250 gr celery sticks chopped
100 gr dry prunes
6 sun-dried tomatoes
fresh thyme chopped
fresh rosemary, chopped
salt and black pepper to taste
Directions:
To prepare stew, in a large cast-iron pot, saute the onion in olive oil until translucent.
Add and cook the meat over high heat, turning frequently, just until it's cooked on the outside. Add the flour and mix to incorporate. Add the wine and beef stock. Add the canned tomatoes and the bay leaves.
Gradually add the garlic, dried chili, cinnamon stick, sun-dried tomatoes, carrots, celery, prunes, herbs, and salt and black pepper to taste.
Simmer on low and stir occasionally for at least two hours or longer if possible.
The stew is ready to eat when the meat has totally fallen apart and most of the liquid has been absorbed by the meat.
Take out the cinnamon stick and bay leaves before serving.
Serve over the polenta or with pasta and top with grated cheese or parmesan bisquit.
Accompany with a full bodied red wine, and enjoy with good company.
Here you can find mamaliga not in a traditional way of preparation.

With Tiger Prawns and avocado salsa.
 ''Mamaliga'' with scalops and salmon rulade.
 ''Mamaliga'' with cod wraped in parma ham and lobster bisque.
 Black ''mamaliga '' with squid ink served with Tiger prawns.
 Red ''mamaliga'' with venison filet, goats cheese, red onions marmalade and thyme sauce.
 Filet of lamb with feta and aubergines roulade served with goats milk ''mamaliga'' and olive puree.
''Mamaliga'' stufed with goats cheese and served with fresh tomato sauce and catalan herbs olive oil.
Enjoy!
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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

''Taste of Estonia''

''Taste of Estonia''
The modern cuisine album "Estonian à la carte" is now available.
- 31 restaurants and cafes Chefs, carefully selected for the 2011 modern Estonian food.
- 100 inspiring recipes with food pictures- Chefs own authored.
- 288 pages / hardcover
The book is in English and Estonian.
Price - 25 Euros.
The book is now out in stores.
How to buy it? You can purchase a signed copy directly from me (send your request to nlontras@yahoo.ie with full details of name and address) which will cost you 25 euros + transport or you can purchase a regular book from „Rahva Raamat“ or „Apollo“ shops.
Please allow approximately 2 - 4 weeks for ground delivery. Refunds or exchanges are possible only in special circumstances. Contact me if any questions at nlontras@yahoo.ie .
The following pictures are from the book!








''Cuisine is the calling card, and cooks symbolic ambassadors, representing their country.
Food is and will remains one of the peculiarity of a great opportunity to introduce to the world of local traditions, values
and skills, and domestic raw material" says chef Dimitri Demjanov foreword to the album.
Contact me if any questions at nlontras@yahoo.ie .
Thanks and enjoy!
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