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Miss South2014-12-05 13:03:492014-12-05 13:03:49Brixton Spiced Beef
Slow Cooker Caramel Coconut Jam
Theoretically I have the most fantastic simple slow cooker…
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Miss South2014-11-27 13:06:202014-11-27 13:25:45Health Food
Slow Cooker Thanksgiving Dressing
There are many examples of Britain and America being divided…
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Miss South2014-11-09 00:03:182014-11-09 13:15:56Slow Cooker Carrot Halwa Cake
Slow Cooked and Wrinkled Potatoes
This year, the big date in my diary hasn't been my birthday or…

Shooting ‘Slow Cooked’
Mr North shows some behind-the-scenes photography for the ‘Slow Cooked’ book, and shares the process of bringing these personal, beautiful recipes & exciting flavours to life.
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Miss South2014-10-26 00:07:032014-10-25 15:14:06Slow Cooker Matchmaking
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Miss South2014-10-19 00:19:592014-10-25 15:16:35Creating Slow Cooked
Slow Cooker Pig Cheek Ragu
There is always room in my life for pig on a plate. From bacon,…
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Miss South2014-10-05 00:25:172014-10-24 01:43:18Brixton Boxty
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Miss South2014-09-21 00:13:282015-01-10 20:25:34Pork, Plums and Fodmaps
Do-Re-Mi-So-Fa-ttoush!
/in Favourites, Recipes/by Mister NorthAfter the hale and hearty (but somewhat heavy) dishes of central Europe it’s been good to eat lighter and ostensibly more healthy food back home. Good weather, joint birthdays and football fever (sigh) all created the excuse for a barbecue this weekend. There are certain dishes I tend to fall back on for barbecue fare: for me East Mediterranean / Middle Eastern flavours are so redolent of summer, with their cooling, fresh flavours. In the last year I’ve raided the Leon cookbook for inspiration (their sweet potato falafels and sesame chicken wings have become firm favourites) but deeper in the pantry of culinary influences is another inspirational character, Claudia Roden.
There was always something very exotic and other-worldly about her recipes in the cookbook on our parent’s kitchen shelf: unfamiliar ingredients sat cheek by jowl against old favourites. Later I learned about more about her extensive writings around the Med, but it was the Middle Eastern recipes which captured my imagination the most. Her recipe for fattoush, from her book ‘Tamarind and Saffron‘, can be found on the Waitrose website, and is the template I tend to use when making this stunning salad.
The first time I had fattoush was revelatory: clean, sharp, distinct and delicious flavours jostling for attention. I think it was probably in the Cedar Tree, a Lebanese restaurant in the Northern Quarter in Manchester, and I was intrigued by the banality of the description as a ‘bread salad’. Sounds rather dull, I thought, but my assumption was duly blown out of the water on the first mouthful. The citrus-y notes of the lemon and sumac dressing enhance the cooling qualities of the leaves, cucumber and mint, and the toasted bread provides texture and crispness. Can you tell I like this dish 🙂 ?
Making fattoush isn’t challenging, but it is reasonably time-consuming. I tend to associate it with standing in a sun-drenched kitchen, radio on in the background as I get engrossed in comforting routine of washing, slicing and dicing the ingredients. Wonderfully relaxing. A note though, it really is worth tracking down some real sumac, to give this salad the necessary ‘zing’. You should be able to get it in most shops in cities which cater for Middle Eastern/Persian/Arabic customers, or buy online. I’m lucky enough to be able to buy from the inimitable Alex Med in Todmorden Market, whose imported and home-prepared mixes are quite wonderful. His sumac is Syrian, and perfectly piquant.
Stir it up…