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Authors: Susan Herrmann Loomis

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Nuts in the Kitchen (18 page)

BOOK: Nuts in the Kitchen
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Spiced Rice with Toasty Nuts

Makes 6 servings

This delicate dish, inspired by a blend of spices commonly used in India, fills the kitchen with its exotic aromas. I serve it as a side dish with grilled fish or as part of a vegetarian meal, along with the Butternut Squash and Arugula Salad (Chapter Salads).

2½ cups (400 g) basmati rice

2 tablespoons clarified butter (Chapter Main Courses)

6 cardamom pods, cracked

One 4-inch (10-cm) cinnamon stick

1 star anise

2 cloves

20 whole black peppercorns

½ teaspoon ground turmeric

1 teaspoon ne sea salt

FOR THE GARNISH:

2 to 3 tablespoons clarified butter (Chapter Main Courses)

3 medium onions, sliced paper-thin

2 teaspoons black mustard seeds

2
/
3
cup cashews or peanuts

Fine sea salt

½ cup (4 g) cilantro leaves, lightly packed

1
/
3
cup (28 g) unsweetened shredded coconut

Note:
Don’t skip soaking and draining the rice; these steps make the rice more tender and light.

To crack the cardamom, roll over them with a rolling pin several times, until their fragrance is released. Then add them whole to the rice.

You can serve the rice with the garnishes passed alongside, though I prefer serving it with the garnish on top for its lovely presentation.

Unsweetened coconut is available at health food and specialty stores.

 

1.
Rinse the rice under cold running water until the water runs clear. Soak the rice in cool water for 30 minutes and then drain it for 30 minutes.

 

2.
Melt the clarified butter in a heatproof medium casserole over medium heat. Add all the whole spices and cook until the air is filled with their aroma and they begin to turn golden, 1 to 2 minutes. Add the turmeric and stir, then add the rice and cook, stirring, until it is nearly translucent, about 3 minutes. Slowly stir in 5 cups (1.25 l) very hot water and the salt. Cover and cook the rice until it is tender, about 20 minutes.

 

3.
While the rice is cooking, prepare the garnish. Melt 2 tablespoons clarified butter in a heavy skillet over
medium heat. Add the onions and mustard seeds and cook, stirring, until the onions are deep golden and crisp and the mustard seeds pop, about 10 minutes. Remove from the pan. Add the remaining tablespoon of butter to the pan if necessary, then add the nuts, sprinkle with salt and cook, stirring, until they are golden, about 7 minutes. Transfer the nuts to a small bowl. Mince the cilantro and add it to the nuts, tossing to mix well. Reserve.

 

4.
Remove the lid from the rice pan and let it sit for 2 to 3 minutes. Remove the whole spices, fluff up the rice with a fork, and either transfer it to a warmed serving dish or leave it in the pan. Top it with the garnishes, one after the other, or serve them separately, immediately, while the rice is very hot and the garnishes are very fresh.

Gaziantep and Food

Gaziantep, Turkey, sits on the western border of the Fertile Crescent of eastern Anatolia, a flat region of rich fields and arid plains ringed by foothills. Crossed by the Tigris and the Euphrates, punctuated by the drama of Ataturk’s dam and Mount Nemrut with its haunting temple ruins and huge stone heads, it is that conundrum of an ancient region in development. Its people practice agrarian and artisan principles honed over centuries; its cities and towns burst with energy, and a common dream is to join the West, in the form of the European Economic Community.

Western-style development in Gaziantep shows in the neighborhoods of stocky, multi-storied apartment buildings surrounded by traffic-choked streets. A lack of aesthetics is made up for by environmental consciousness; each building has a forest of solar panels on its roof, and residents rarely resort to any other type of power.

Tucked into the center of all this is the ancient quarter of lovely white homes and shops, sinuous and climbing cobbled streets, cafés, and pastry shops. The heart of it is Elmaci Pazari, a cacophonous market of narrow, covered alleys and streetside shops whose wares spill out onto the uneven sidewalks. Between vendors and hagglers, the constant, steady tapping of tin and silversmiths, the cars and scooters, noise issues from everywhere, punctuated by the occasional shout of a particularly vociferous vendor. Money and goods change hands with blurry speed; boys balancing trays piled with delicate etched glasses and pots of mint tea run through the crowds, stopping at a whistle or a call to pour some in exchange for a few pennies before racing off again. Mint tea is offered by merchants to conclude a deal large or small. Thus, everywhere amid the bustle are tranquil, tea-sipping moments.

Markets are rich with the aromas of spices and the overwhelming scent of peppers, which are a signature of Gaziantep cuisine. Strings of them, bright red and sun-dried, hang from shop ceilings and walls; baskets hold the same peppers ground to a rough powder, and wide bowls offer thick, sticky
biber salcasi,
a sweet-to-searing paste made from the peppers.

Second only to peppers in quantity and variety are nuts, displayed in huge jute bags or smaller wildly colored ones that sit right on the floor. The pistachio is queen, for Gaziantep is the center of Turkey’s pistachio-producing region. Her suitors are the walnut, the almond, the pine nut, the hazelnut, and an array of toasted seeds. Women, many dressed in the body-shielding manto and head-covering esarp, and men, often wearing the baggy shalwar pants, nibble constantly on nuts and seeds as they go about their business.

Just outside Gaziantep, spare, dry fields and rolling hills stretch on forever, the soil chunky red and iron-rich. Gnarled pistachio trees are planted alongside olive trees and grapevines so there is always a crop to harvest, no matter the year or atmospheric conditions.

I’m in a tiny car with Kamil Sarpkaya, a research scientist with Gaziantep’s pistachio research station. A solid young man with a mass of deep brown corkscrew hair, he perspires with pistachio passion, particularly the growing and treating of the trees. How to explain this passion? He says he cannot; he’s got it, it consumes his life, it has him taking an afternoon off to share it with me. Fortunately we have a driver, Naci Gulgun, so Kamil’s hands are free to make line drawings in my notebook to illustrate the life cycle of the pistachio tree, the way the trees are planted, the way they are trimmed, the way the nuts develop and grow, and any other fact that comes to his mind.

We see a crew in one of the pistachio orchards lining the road, and Kamil signals Mr. Gulgun to stop. We get out and, defying overloaded trucks careening down the road on their way to the city, run to the other side and hastily clamber over the guardrail.

“The germ plasm of the pistachio is here, right here,” Kamil said, gently stamping his feet in the red soil. “This is where it began.”

Kamil strikes up a conversation with Hussein Turan, the field owner, and his crew. I stand in the shadow of these men whose skin is burnished the color of red oak, their hair abundantly black and thick, their eyes and smiles open and frank. They are curious about what might have caused us to stop and run to their field, yet at ease with our presence.

The trees surrounding us remind me of suffering sculptures, their gnarled limbs reaching out as though starving—for air, for water, for sustenance. Their bark is like skin. Thin and silvery. I know if I touch it, it will be warm. Mr. Turan leads me right up to one and, indeed, when my fingers slide along the bark it is warm, as though sap were coursing just below the surface. It turns out that the pistachio trees look as if they suffer because they do. It takes ten to fifteen years for a tree to produce enough nuts to harvest, in part because the roots must pierce a layer of porous rock below the surface of the red soil. Once the smaller female trees are in production, they produce in a three-year cycle with one productive year, one nonproductive year, and one year that yields a small production. A wild pistachio will have random production cycles; those planted together like the ones in this field self-regulate so their productive years coincide.

According to Kamil, yields could increase substantially, and “off” years could become productive if growers would irrigate. “They use their beliefs to grow pistachio nuts,” he said. “And belief has it that irrigation will kill the pistachio tree.” He shakes his head with frustration. “I tell them it isn’t true, but they don’t trust me yet. I’m from Ankara, and I’ve been here for only two years; it will take time.”

I learn from these men that the nuts they’ve just finished harvesting by hand, one bunch at a time, are destined for the snack market. One of the workers gives me a handful, and I open one—it is fat, pale yellow, and slightly crisp with an exquisite, browned butter flavor.

It is October, and the harvest has been going on since June. At that early date, the pistachios are embryonic, with all of their adult savor and color concentrated in a kernel that is a fraction of its adult size. Called “green gold,” these small, electric green kernels that are covered with a fine, grayish white film are prized for Gaziantep’s famed pastries, which include buttery-crisp baklava,
katmer
—also called the “whirling dervish pancake” because of the way the dough is thrown and twirled into the air to get its paper-thin texture and pizza-round shape—and jellied
loukoum
. Each tree yields about 100 pounds of the immature nut and about 50 pounds of the larger, more mature nut.

The pistachio has three hulls to protect the meat inside. The first is very hard, and according to Kamil, the growers spread them out and drive a truck over them to crack it off. Underneath is a wrinkled rosy sheath, which either drops off or is removed by machine in small factories set up in and around Gaziantep. Under that is the ivory shell we know, most of which pop open in the fields, within their protective coverings. Any nuts that haven’t opened naturally are sent out into the countryside, where women crack them open by hand, using tiny, etched nutcrackers destined for that purpose.

The workers’ day is finished. They politely say good-bye with smiles and nodding heads, then take themselves to a large old wagon piled with nut-filled crates and climb in, sitting wherever they can balance. The owner steps up into the aging tractor to pull them home. We all wave good-bye as the tractor lurches out of sight amid the trees.

Kamil, Mr. Gulgun, and I clamber back over the guardrail, run across the death-defying highway, and settle back into our sleek little car as two worlds separate.

 

 

Desserts

T
here are no gray areas when it comes to dessert—everyone loves it. Well, almost everyone. I have a very close friend who eschews sweets of every kind, and occasionally I find myself searching for the flaw that has caused this particular peccadillo. He’s a wonderful guy; but for his problem with sweets I’d think him perfect.

Prevailing wisdom tells us perfection is impossible. But prevailing wisdom is only just about to become aware of the desserts in this collection, and I am certain it will change its mind. For whether it be the Walnut Coffee Tourte, the incredible Nougat Glacé, or the Almond Blancmange, or any other dessert in this collection, perfection is evident in every bite.

So delve in, forget that flawed world out there, and revel in these perfect nut desserts!

 

 

Lemon Poppy Seed Ice Cream

Makes 1 quart (1 liter)

What’s even better than the dusky rich poppy seed flavor and the tang of lemon here is the crisp “pop!” the seeds make when you bite into them—it makes every mouthful a noisy little adventure. Because this isn’t a cooked custard ice cream, it takes minutes to put together, so keep the ingredients on hand. If the half-and-half and the lemons are chilled (store your lemons in the refrigerator; they’ll keep longer), this can be a very impromptu dessert, as the mixture will need virtually no time to chill.

Zest of 2 lemons

1½ cups (300 g) sugar

1
/
3
cup (80 ml) freshly squeezed lemon juice 1 quart (1 liter) half-and-half

¼ cup (35 g) poppy seeds

Note:
Pulverizing the lemon zest with the sugar brings out the oils in the zest, to intensify the lemony flavor of the ice cream.

 

1.
Place the lemon zest and sugar in a food processor. Process until the sugar and zest are thoroughly combined, and the sugar is a bit damp from the oil in the zest. Add the lemon juice and process to blend.

 

2.
Scrape the sugar and lemon mixture into a large nonreactive bowl. Whisk in the half-and-half until combined, then whisk in the poppy seeds. To allow the flavors to meld, refrigerate for at least 1 hour and up to 1 day.

 

3.
Before freezing, whisk the mixture so it is combined thoroughly, then freeze it in an ice cream maker following the manufacturer’s instructions.

BOOK: Nuts in the Kitchen
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