Last night by cookbook group did Plenty. Yowza! What a terrific book. My favorite dish was a

traca

Well-known member
surprise to me. Hauntingly delicious and refreshing. I'll post that below. For now, this was our final menu:

- Sweet Potato Cakes

- Green Gazpacho

- Figs w/ Basil, Goat Cheese, and Pomegranate Vinaigrette

- Green Couscous

- Castelluccio Lentils with Tomatoes and Gorgonzola

- Leek fritters

- Stuffed Onions

- Caramelized Garlic Tart

- Stuffed Portobello with Melting Taleggio

I loved everything but I'll probably make the Green Couscous or the Castelluccio Lentil dish first.

 
Green Gazpacho, or summer heaven in a bowl!

Traca's note: Normally, I'm not a cold soup fan, but this one has won me over. So delicious!

Green gazpacho

There are a million recipes around for gazpacho, which is by far my favorite cold soup. This one, a green
variation, is loosely based on tarator, a cold yogurt and cucumber soup from the Balkans. A proper freestanding
blender works best here but an immersion blender could also be used.

Serves 6
Croutons
2 thick slices sourdough bread
4 tbsp olive oil
salt
2 celery stalks (including the leaves)
2 small green bell peppers, seeded
6 mini cucumbers (1 1/4 lbs), peeled
3 slices stale white bread, crusts
removed
1 fresh green chile (or less if you don't want it too hot)
4 garlic cloves
1 tsp sugar
11/2 cups walnuts, lightly toasted
6 cups baby spinach
1 cup basil leaves
2 tbsp chopped parsley
4 tbsp sherry vinegar (I used an aged reserva sherry vinegar)
1 cup olive oil
3 tbsp Greek yogurt
about 2 cups water
9 oz ice cubes
2 tsp salt
white pepper

To make the croutons. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Cut the bread into 3/4-inch cubes and toss them with the oil and a bit of salt. Spread on a baking sheet and bake for about 10 minutes, or until the croutons turn golden and crisp. Remove from the oven and allow to cool down.

Roughly chop the celery, bell peppers, cucumbers, bread, chile and garlic. Place in a blender and add the sugar, walnuts, spinach, basil, parsley, vinegar, oil, yogurt, most of the water, half the ice cubes, the salt and some white pepper. Blitz the soup until smooth. Add more water, if needed, to get your preferred consistency. Taste the soup and adjust the seasoning.

Lastly, add the remaining ice and pulse once or twice, just to crush it a little. Serve at once, with the croutons. (Instead of croutons, I drizzled a little olive oil over the top. Would do that again.)

 
Not ruin, but change the flavor profile slightly. What about an anahiem or poblano instead?

 
Plenty and Jerusalem....gotta have them both! smileys/wink.gif

I've been cooking from Jerusalem lately, and just blogged on a great recipe using yogurt and peas to make a pasta sauce. Simply outstanding!

Your evening sounded spectacular!

 
Speaking of "gotta have" cookbooks? What's on your list? We're looking to pick

another 6 months worth of cookbooks (1 each month). Any suggestions?

So far, we've covered:

Plenty (Yotam Ottolenghi)
How to Eat (Nigella Lawson)*
Hot, Sour, Salty, Sweet (Naomi Duguid)
An Invitation to Indian Cooking (Madhur Jaffrey)
Ancient Grains for Modern Meals (Maria Speck)
Essential Cuisines of Mexico (Diana Kennedy)
The New Book of Middle Eastern Cuisine (Claudia Roden)
All About Braising (Molly Stevens)
Maida Heatter's Cookies (Maida Heatter)
Food of Morocco (Paula Wolfert)
Essentials of Classical Italian Cooking (Marcella Hazan)

* My least favorite

 
A few come to mind....

Sunday Suppers at Lucques (Suzanne Goin) (I ate there a couple of times while we lived in Los Angeles, loved it)

Modern Art of Chinese Cooking (Barbara Tropp)

The New Persian Kitchen (Louisa Shafia)

Jacques Pepin's Fast Food My Way (first volume, not the second, which I did not like at all)

Simple to Spectacular: How to Take One Basic Recipe to Four Levels of Sophistication (Jean-Georges Vongerichten and Mark Bittman) - very nice cookbook, by the way

 
Wonderful recommendations! Thank you. So, you have the Persian Kitchen cookbook?

I have it but haven't had a chance to play with it. The author was here on book tour and I got a chance to see her. She managed to prepare 4 dishes and do a presentation in less than an hour and they were all very good. I'm pretty sure we're going to do her book.

Sunday Suppers at Lucques is on my list too.

I hadn't heard of the Jean-George book. That sounds really interesting, and right up our alley!

Have you cooked from Barbara Tropp's book? I had her China Moon cookbook and never managed to make anything other than the chile oil and an ice cream. It's an excellent reading book so I figured I got my money's worth, but I'm curious about the one you suggested. It appears to be highly regarded as the Julia Child of Chinese cooking.

 
I looked at my library and they have 4 cookbooks called Plenty -

did your group look at the one by the London restaurant? Or was it the Sustainable Kitchen one?

 
Yes I do....

... I blogged on one or her recipes and made a little review of the Persian Kitchen - she is a wonderful person, not all cookbook authors are so communicative and nice. I never met her in person, I am talking exclusively from my exchanges by email when I contacted her to ask permission to publish one of her recipes.

Barbara Tropp book is fantastic - I remember one dish using scallops and oranges that was absolutely amazing in its simplicity. I haven't cook from it in a while. I actually think Modern Art of Chinese Cooking is THE best cookbook in Chinese cuisine ever published. China Moon is nice, but pales in comparison

 
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