“Too cold, too soon,” say green tomatoes!
Posted: 12 October 2012 Filed under: Uncategorized, YARD, for gardening Leave a commentYep, the cold weather is here, too cold for the unripe tomatoes that is.
Story of my life. I plant the sidling sometime late May and wait some two months for them to grow tall enough to give our daily share of “home-grown love“. But then, when the cold weather arrives just now, the plants are still full of unripe green tomatoes. Sometimes I have to pick them, and let them ripe indoors – they do mostly if they are left unwashed in a cool place with lots of light. Will keep you posted on how they do. Read the rest of this entry »
Moment photography25
Posted: 11 October 2012 Filed under: Photography, Uncategorized | Tags: moment_photography Leave a commentMeatballs & oven-baked fall vegetables
Posted: 8 October 2012 Filed under: Meatballs & oven-baked fall vegetables, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, food_photography, meat_bowls Leave a commentToday is Thanksgiving Day in Canada you know, and for a couple of weeks now we have had lots of cranberries and all sort of squash in our vegetable markets, winking fall and a promise of colorful dishes. Here is the result of my inspiration.

Ingredients: (serving 3): Ground beef or veal 400 gr. Onion, 1 medium, grated. Potatoes, 2 medium, sliced (for fries). Tomatoes, 2 medium, chopped. Turmeric, ½ tea spoon. Chickpea flour, ½ tbsp. Olive oil, 3-4 tbsp. Salt and powdered black pepper, to taste. V8 (or any vegetable juice mix), half a cup. Chopped parsley, 1 tbsp. Side vegetables: I used fresh patty pan squash, cranberries, and asparagus. Use what is in season and what you fancy most.
Lentil soup and meat, blended
Posted: 30 September 2012 Filed under: Lentil soup and meat, blended, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, food_photography, Lentil, Persian_cuisine, soup 2 CommentsRemember I mention how healthy lentil is and how much use we have for lentil in Persian cuisine? Here!
Well, with the fall already settled in, this delicious and nutritious lentil soup is all I felt having this weekend. I know lentil vegetable soup is probably one of the most diverse soup verities, yet this blended version with meat broth is different in many ways. You’ll see what I mean.
Ingredients:
- Veal, or beef, 150 gr. defatted.
- Bone, 1 medium.
- Brown lentil, 200 gr.
- Onion, 1 large, thinly sliced.
- Turmeric, ½ tea spoon.
- salt and black powder pepper, to taste.
- Water, 1 ½ liters.
- Oil, 1 tbsp.
- Whipping cream, 2 tbsp.
- Chopped parsley, 2 tbsp.
Method: In a medium pot sauté onions in hot oil. Add meat and bone and turmeric and fry for a few more minutes over medium heat, just as you would for any type of Iranian style stew. Add salt, pepper and six cups of water (bout 1 ½ liters). Cook covered, for about 45 minutes. Remove the bone from the broth and let it cool; Extract the bone marrow and pick the meat off the bone, if any, and transfer them back to the pot. Rinse lentil and add it to the broth and cook until tender.
Blend the pot’s contents, in two or more steps if necessary, until smooth. Pour it back to the pot and simmer for another 10 minutes, just in case you need to adjust the soup’s thickness (either by adding more warm water, or by letting it simmer to thicken a bit).
Once the look is to your liking, pour into a serving bowl and garnish with a sprinkling of whipping cream and chopped parsley.
Kookoo sabzi, the many faces of it!
Posted: 13 September 2012 Filed under: Kookoo sabzi, the many faces of it!, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, food_photography, kookoo_sabzi, Persian_cuisine, side_dish Leave a commentDo you remember my version of kookoo sabzi, or herb-omelette? Here it is if you don’t.
There are many versions, of course- and this video and article posted at Radio Free Europe and the references that the article makes are among my favorites. Read the rest of this entry »
Kashk-bademjaan, exquisite style!
Posted: 7 September 2012 Filed under: Kashk-bademjaan, exquisite style!, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, food_photography, garnish, kashk, Persian_cuisine Leave a commentBack in Shiraz, when I was much younger, whenever we had a visitor who my mom wanted to impress, she would take over in the kitchen and make one of her mouth-watering and visually artistic dishes.
Kashk-bademjoon (made of eggplants and Iranian whey) with ground meat on the side was one of those memorable dishes. Remember Aash-e reshteh (“noodle-soup”)? Well, this dish shares some of major and unique ingredients with the aash, namely kashk, and fried mint, and crispy onion and garlic for garnish. If you don’t know what kashk is, please visit that post anyway to find out!
Ingredients: (serving 4)
Introducing my book and its website
Posted: 31 August 2012 Filed under: Memories & Events, Uncategorized 4 Comments
I am thrilled and excited to inform you that my self-published eBook, a culinary memoir entitled “A Sip, a Bite, a Mouthful: A memoir of food and growing up in Shiraz” is finally out, just before the long weekend (in North America) to ensure that you have a fun read for the holidays! 🙂
Please visit my book’s website to read the synopsis, background info, the first two chapters, and to find links to purchase the eBook – for $2.99 – from Amazon and Smashwords in lots of different formats.
For those of you who do not know me outside this virtual world, I must reiterate that “booteh” was, is and will remain my pen name !
“Kotlet, the greasy companion”
Posted: 29 August 2012 Filed under: Kotlet, the greasy companion, Uncategorized | Tags: booteh_recipes, food_photography, Persian_cuisine Leave a comment[This post contains excerpts from my culinary memoir]
Kotlet, an Iranian version of cutlet, is a perfect candidate for supper which also falls somewhere between an elaborate, home-made food and a delicious fast food for people of all walks of life, and is-always linked to community, intimacy and fun. It is the food one always chooses as a companion to a family picnic, as an on-the-road meal, and the food of choice on back-breaking days (Pizza just would not measure up!) Indeed kotlet has a great cultural significance- in my eyes anyway. Read the rest of this entry »








