Muhammara
Adapted from Martha Rose Shulman by Blue Heron Kitchen
This sweet and savory spread from Syria and Lebanon is healthy, vegan and dairy-free. It’s a welcome dip-addition to the usual
suspects: hummus, guacamole and salsa. It’s also a fantastic spread in a pita
sandwich or on any flat bread, flour tortilla, naan or smeared on a baguette, then
covered or enrobed with raw or cooked veggies of your choice.
Muhammara combines roasted red peppers, walnuts and breadcrumbs with a brilliant combination of
spices and sweet and tangy flavor of pomegranate molasses. Serve it at room
temperature with warm pita bread, crackers or vegetables.
Pomegranate
molasses is an essential ingredient. Click on the link for BHK’s easy recipe. Or buy it. I saw it at Fairway. Trader Joe’s has their own brand. Of course, any Middle Eastern market will
carry pom-molasses. I use it on vegetables, in my salads and on yogurt.
Aleppo pepper is milder than red pepper chili flakes (and deeper and rounder). Penzey’s is a good resource.
I learned about toasting and grinding cumin seeds from my friend, Suvir Saran. Once you’ve toasted and ground, you’ll never want to roll your cumin any other way. Saran is a brilliant
chef, cookbook author, restaurateur, teacher, farmer, bon vivant and his recipes are genius. Look him up and consider buying one of his cookbooks. I own and love all three of his books.
Following this fantastic recipe is a basic (illustrated!) guide on how to
roast a pepper over a flame (on your stovetop). If you have an electric stove,
you can roast peppers in the oven on a baking sheet (cover it with foil). I
take it for granted that everyone knows how to roast a pepper, but before I
knew how, I didn’t know how. Whatever you do, don’t go out and buy roasted peppers. It’s so fast and easy and the result is superior
when you roast your own.
Muhammara
Ingredients:
1 ½ pounds
(2-3 large) red bell peppers, roasted, peeled,
and seeded
1 cup
shelled walnuts, toasted and cooled
¼ cup fresh
breadcrumbs
1 tsp.
coarsely ground red Aleppo pepper (or
1/2 to 1 tsp. chili flakes (to taste)
1 tsp.
well-toasted cumin seeds, ground (more, to taste)
¼ to ½ tsp. allspice (allspice is personal .. if you grind it yourself,
you’ll love it more.)
½ teaspoon
sugar (if you have
rose-petal scented sugar .. I do .. use it!)
1 Tbsp.
tomato paste (buy the Italian paste in a tube)
¼ cup extra
virgin olive oil (more to taste)
1½ tablespoons
pomegranate molasses (additional, to taste)
1 Tbsp.
fresh lemon juice, (additional to taste)
Kosher
salt, to taste
Procedure:
Place all
ingredients in the container of a Vitamix or ‘power blender’ (or your food
processor) and pulse, until mixture is uniform, scraping down, if necessary. If
you like a coarser dip, don’t process too much.
Taste and
adjust salt. If desired, thin out with a little more olive oil and lemon juice.
Refrigerate.
Bring to room temperature for serving. To serve, drizzle some olive oil, Aleppo
pepper, pomegranate molasses .. one, a combination or all three.
Muhammara
will keep in the fridge for a week or more. You can freeze muhammara!
Yield:
approx. 2 cups
(Kalustyan's, located in New York City, is a fantastic resource for anything middle eastern or 'exotic'. If you go, try to pay with cash (there's a discount). Or, order from them directly. Click here.)
Roasting Peppers on an
Open Flame
Roast that pepper, turning it often, until it’s completely charred.
Put the
pepper in a paper bag and close the bag.
Let the pepper sweat. Leave it. Walk away. Wait awhile. It’ll be easier to clean it and it’ll ‘roast’ some more while it’s resting in the bag.
Rip open
one side of the bag and using your hand (or a clean paper towel), rub the
charred skin from the pepper. Scrape the seeds from the inside.
DON’T take
the low road and rinse the pepper. This washes away its character, its gorgeous smoky,
roasted flavor. I’ve seen it done – in restaurants. Just don’t.
Voila!
Use
your roasted pepper in Muhammara!
Or: cover it with olive oil and some peeled and slightly smashed cloves
of garlic.throw in a sprig of thyme (yum!). Or, simply cover with some olive oil and they'll be waiting for you.
Slice some into your salad, put some on your sandwich (with hummus or... muhammara!), toss with pasta .. you're the boss Sergeant Pepper.
peace and
love,
jane