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Aliya LeeKong
  • Home
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Thanksgiving Ideas

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Thanksgiving Ideas

Thanksgiving has to be my favorite holiday!  I love the gathering of friends and family, that crisp fall weather, and, of course, the serious spread of food…I admit I get a little insane for the few days leading up to it with a master recipe list and plan of attack for prepping for the 3 days before (last year it was 14 pages long.  I know, crazy.).  And although I go a bit traditional for the turkey, I like to use the sides, apps and desserts to be creative and incorporate all of the delicious exotic flavors you guys have been reading about here.  SO I thought I’d give everyone some ideas today on how to spice up your Thanksgiving…

Let’s start with appetizers.  I love a big, beautiful cheese plate dressed with some membrillo, a great variety of honey, a rich balsamic vinegar to accompany the blue cheese, and perhaps some concord grapes.  I’m doing that this year along with a bit of Indian street food called pani puri that I’ll have to post soon!  Pani puri are little crispy puffs stuffed with a mixture of chickpeas, red onion, tamarind, yoghurt and cilantro-mint chutney.  I wanted to keep the apps light this year because of how much food I’m making for the main meal, but if you’re going for hot apps, pao de quiejo is always a winner; you really can’t go wrong with Brazilian cheese bread, chewy cheesy goodness.  I also love these harissa cheese-stuffed fried olives, this mushroom pissaladière and lamb meatballs with quince and black olives.

This year I’m doing red wine-braised short ribs to accompany my heritage turkey.  For the sides, I love love macaroni pie, a West Indian version of mac ‘n cheese that has onions, garlic, and habanero and is baked in the oven– you can stick to the traditional one or try the porcini version (which is what I’m making…).  My brain goes straight to casseroles when I think Thanksgiving sides, so smoky spicy corn pudding is always on my list as is South African shepherd’s pie or bobotie as it’s called there, a layered dish with spicy-sweet ground beef or lamb cooked down and topped with a velvety egg custard.  The recipe I have shows how to make individual ones, but you can easily transfer it all to a gratin or casserole dish and just adjust baking time.  I’m also planning for simple roasted, market vegetables and a rice dish.  This pilau makes a beautiful accompaniment.

Ah, and now for dessert.  Definitely, apple pie with star anise brown butter that I’m going to serve with vanilla ice cream and some homemade dulce de leche and some of the Greek-inspired madeleines. This recipe for cape malva pudding, another South African treasure that features a moist cake drenched in a bit of brandy cream works really well and is something I’ve served at previous Thanksgivings OR, if you’re going a bit more elegant, these Arabic coffee panna cottas are also silky and gorgeous.  The easiest by far though would be these amarena cherry and dark chocolate clafoutis – yum…

Whatever you choose to do, I hope everyone has a warm, fun-food-family-friends-filled Thanksgiving!

tags: Thanksgiving ideas, Thanksgiving recipes, spicing up Thanksgiving, entertaining a crowd, holiday recipes
categories: all-2, holiday, lifestyle
Monday 11.21.11
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Arabic Coffee Panna Cotta

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Arabic Coffee Panna Cotta

Panna cotta is one of my all-time favorite desserts to serve when I’m having people over.  It’s incredibly elegant, and, though it sounds fancy, shamefully easy to make (what  your guests don’t know, won’t…).  It’s one of those do-ahead-and-forget-about-it dishes that always comes out rich, creamy, and crowd-pleasing.  I made this a few years ago for a massive Thanksgiving feast we had.  The night before, I was struggling for time and a delicious dessert.  I quickly whipped up the panna cotta mixture, poured it into champagne flutes, and was all set!

If you’ve ever had a cup of Arabic or Turkish coffee, that slightly menthol taste comes from cardamom.  I grew up drinking coffee that was steeped with both cardamom and cinnamon, a tradition that’s found throughout the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia (check out this recipe on the Republic of Brown!).  To me, the combination of cardamom and coffee flavors is distinctively beautiful.  In some versions, saffron and clove are added, but I kept it a bit simple here.  Feel free to experiment.

What’s nice about panna cotta is that it requires zero baking.  Simply heat up the liquid, infuse it with flavors, and use gelatin to work its magic while it cools in the fridge.  Here, the heavy cream takes on the coffee, vanilla bean (the lovely specks!), cardamom, and cinnamon flavors.  I don’t like mine super sweet, so taste and add more sugar if you need.  A quick chill, some chocolate espresso beans (I’ve also used tasty amaretti cookies) for garnish, and that’s it…simple, luscious, decadent.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Serves 4 to 6

2 cups heavy cream

½ cup espresso or very strong coffee

½ vanilla bean, split and scraped

3 cardamom pods, split open w/seeds

1 cinnamon stick

¼ cup sugar

¾ envelope gelatin powder

chocolate-covered espresso beans, crushed (for garnish)

Procedure

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, bring heavy cream, coffee, vanilla bean, cardamom, cinnamon, and sugar up to a boil and immediately turn off the heat.  (Be careful that it doesn’t boil over.)  Cover and let steep for 5 minutes.

In a small bowl, ladle some of the heavy cream mixture.  Add the gelatin powder, and whisk to dissolve completely.  Pour the mixture back into the pot, and whisk to ensure even distribution.  Strain mixture to remove whole spices and any leftover gelatin and pour into ramekins, espresso cups, or little pots de crème .  Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for a minimum of 5 hours.

Serve chilled with crushed espresso beans on top.

tags: Arabic coffee, panna cotta, recipes for entertaining, entertaining a crowd
categories: all-4, recipes, desserts-1
Monday 02.21.11
Posted by Aliya LeeKong