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Message   MICHAEL LOO    DALE SHIPP   594 Berebere   June 27, 2019
 1:38 PM *  

>       Title: Berbere Sauce (moist)
>  Categories: Sauce, Ethiopian, D/g
>       Yield: 24 servings
>  
>       2 ts Cumin seeds
>       4    Whole cloves
>     1/2 ts Cardamom seeds
>     1/2 ts Whole black peppercorns
>     1/4 ts Whole allspice
>       1 ts Whole fenugreek seeds
>     1/2 c  Dried onion flakes
>      10    New Mexican Chiles,
>            - stemmed and seeded
>       3    Dried hot red chiles, seeded
>     1/2 ts Ground ginger
>     1/2 ts Ground nutmeg
>     1/4 ts Ground tumeric
>       1 ts Garlic powder
>       2 ts Salt
>     1/2 c  Salad or peanut oil
>     1/2 c  Dry red wine
>     1/2 ts Cayenne pepper
>   Copied from "The Frugal Gourmet on Our Immigrant Ancestors", Jeff
>   Smith, ISBN 0-688-07590-8.

>       Title: Berbere, Hot spice mixture(dry)
>  Categories: Sauce, Ethiopian, D/g
>       Yield: 8 servings
>  
>       2 ts Cumin seeds
>       4    Cloves
>     3/4 ts Cardamom seeds
>     1/2 ts Black peppercorns
>     1/4 ts Whole allspice
>       1 ts Fenugreek seeds
>     1/2 ts Coriander seeds
>       8    Small dried red chiles
>     1/2 ts Grated fresh gingerroot
>            - 1 teaspoon dried
>     1/4 ts Tumeric
>       1 ts Salt
>   2 1/2 tb Sweet Hungarian paprika
>     1/8 ts Cinnamon
>     1/8 ts Ground cloves

>   Copied from: "Sundays at Moosewood Restaurant", the Mooosewood
>   Collective, ISBN 0-671-67989-9

The similarities are striking. It looks as though
the recipes may have had a common ancestor and been
tweaked to individualize. One notes that the wet
berbere can be prepared and then stored dry, the
wine and oil mixed in as needed.

---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.01

      Title: Morroccan Spiced Olives
 Categories: Moroccan, Hot, Appetizers
      Yield: 6 servings

      1 c  Olives purchased from deli               -(green
           -or Middle Eastern grocery

  Yield: 1 cup

  Olives are often served as part of the Middle Eastern appetizer
assortment
  called mezze or mazza that is brought to your table with your wine, ouzo,
  or arak.  Anything can turn up as part of a mezze selection: octopus
  dressed in olive oil and lemon, chunks of feta cheese or salami on small
  pieces of bread, or a plate of creamy, tart hummus.  Olives, brined,
  salted, or marinated, are almost always on one of the little plates.

  Middle Eastern marketplaces feature huge vats and crocks of differently
  spiced olives in myriad array.  Some are fleshy, some juicy, others
bitter
  and dense, and each is in a subtly different mainade.  The marinade in
this
  recipe is good for almost any type of olive;  it is especially delicious
  with green brined olives or fleshy Greek-style ones (it even improves
  California-style ripe Olives).

  brine-cured, Kalamata, Greek-style, or shriveled black dry-cured) 1/4 cup
  olive oil 4 cloves garlic, chopped 1 tsp fresh rosemary leaves, lightly
  crushed 1 1/2 tsp Aji Harissa, Berbere, or commercial chile-garlic paste
1
  tbsp wine vinegar

  1.  Drain olives of any brine.

  2.  Slowly heat olive oil over low heat. Remove from heat and add garlic,
  rosemary, chile-garlic paste, and vinegar.

  3.  Pour marinade over olives and let stand at least 2 hours (the flavor
  gets hotter the longer it stands).

  ADVANCE PREPRATION:  Lasts almost forever, covered and refrigerated

  VARIATION:  A Mediterranean-inspired hors d'oeuvre.

  4 ounces Montrachet or Leazay goat cheese 1 to 2 cloves garlic, chopped 1
  tsp finely chopped cilantro (optional) 1 tsp medium salsa (or to taste)
1/2
  tsp thyme 1 tsp olive oil Approximately 1/2 a French baguette, cut into
1/2
  to 3/4 inch slices Morroccan Spiced Olives

  1.  Mash goat cheese with a fork.  Add garlic, cilantro, salsa, thyme,
and
  olive oil.

  2.  Spread goat cheese mixture on bread slices; top each with half a
pitted
  marinated olive.

  RECOMMENDED WINE:  Enjoy with a glass of a medium-bodied Cabernet
Sauvignon
  with noticeable character, one from California, Chile, or Spain.

  Source unknown. A little chaotic, but one can catch the drift.

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