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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() Not having seen it, I'm not too sure. Both spreads could have olive oil in it. Was it pinkish? If so, probably taramasalata. Still might be good - just stir it up well before eating. Kris On Sep 13, 8:34*pm, bulka > wrote: > On Sep 13, 7:20 pm, Kris > wrote: > > > > > > > On Sep 13, 6:59 pm, bulka > wrote: > > > > On Sep 13, 5:01 pm, rosie > wrote: > > > > > On Sep 13, 1:34 pm, "cybercat" > wrote: > > > > > > Just watched a travel show about Greece that had some interesting but pretty > > > > > vaque fool-related information. The narrator said that there is a Greek > > > > > restaurant tradition of inviting guests into the kitchen to see what is > > > > > cooking and make their choices. > > > > > > I have little experience with Greek food but love lots of the common > > > > > ingredients--feta, olives, tomatoes, seafood. > > > > > > Favorite Greek dishes, anyone? There was one I had regularly that was a kind > > > > > of stew featuring lamb, but I have forgotten the name since we moved away > > > > > from Vienna, where the restaurant was. > > > > > I love Greek food, and as we speak, am fixing Moussaka, and > > > > TzatZaki!! > > > > > Recently returned from Greece and it is ttrue, they will invite you > > > > into the kitchen, maybe pull a bit of meat that is cooking *off ther > > > > spit and offer it to you. > > > > Often give you a little taste of something or other and let you decide > > > > what ever you want. > > > > The two dishes I am fixing are some of my favorite Greek foods, but > > > > they offer many Lamb > > > > dishes that are to die for. > > > > > The Moussaka I make has lamb, eggplant and potatoes in it, with a > > > > bechamel sauce over it Thern is baked in the oven. > > > > > Rosie > > > > I almost forgot that we sometimes talk about food here. > > > > Stuffed grape leaves have a Greek version, though I was intoduced to > > > them by an old Armenian woman. > > > > One of my favorite comfort foods is Taramasalata. *I've seen jars > > > labled this, with some kind of relish-looking stuff inside. *Never > > > tried it. *Next time I see it *I will. *What I've got from varioius > > > recipie sources, and have had in restaurants, is starch based. *Mashed > > > bread and potatoes, garlic, olive oil and, most importantly, tarama - > > > carp roe. *I use it as a condiment/dip sort of thing. *I'm craving it, > > > but can't find the tarama here in white suburbia. *Made it with caviar > > > once, but that was expensivlely wasteful and not as good. > > > > I'm sure that there are people here who will correct me, and I > > > welcome, look foreward to it. *And maybe tell me what that stuff in > > > the jars is. *I'll try yours, and just call my stuff "fishy garlic > > > potato dip". > > > > Bulka- Hide quoted text - > > > > - Show quoted text - > > > I think you may be combining two Greek dips? Taramasala is the fish > > roe dip/spread. Skordalia is the garlicky potato spread. > > > Both are great, regardless. ![]() > > > Kris > > Yeah, I've brought skordalia to pot-lucks. *If my jokes don't separate > the sheep from goats, this is another filter. *I'm left with the > smelly, cynical, laughing folks. *(we are probably the goats) > > My taramasalata recipie is sort of skordalia plus. > > But Kris, or Dimitri - what's that stuff in the jar? *Looks pretty > oily. *From Krinos, or Peliponese(?) > If Searah can point me to a Greek market, I might could figure it > out. *A "recipie"? > > Thanks > > (Michael) Bulka- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - |
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