Month: October 2011

Long Day Lentil Soup

Staffing a 6:45am conference on a Monday, preceded by staffing the first night of the conference on Sunday night, is not my idea of a perfect start to the week. That’s not to say I’m not a positive person. However, leaving before the sun rises puts a little bit of a damper on even my positive attitude.

For those who care to know, the conference went well. There were lots of attendees, I helped promote my firm (the one I work for – you know, my day job), and I met some very interesting professionals. As the afternoon came to a close, the only thing I wanted to do was get home, get into my sweats and have warm soup. Once I turned on Bravo and watched 10 minutes of The Real Housewives of New Jersey – don’t judge me, you secretly watch mindless, trashy television too – I was ready to get my soup on. Long Day Lentil Soup, or at least that’s what I’m calling it today. Disclaimer I might not have gotten it 100% right the way she does it, I made a few modifications. The Long Day Lentil Soup, however, hit the spot. It was just what I needed to unwind. I squeezed some lemon juice, and sprinkled some Stacy’s Pita Chips on top. Yum.

 

 

 

Long Day Lentil Soup Recipe 

Ingredients

1 Onion, chopped
2 cups Red Lentils
1-2 teaspoons Cumin
1/4 teaspoons Turmeric
Diced Baby Carrots
Salt to taste
Vegetable Oil
 
 

Directions

Check lentils for stones, removing the stones.
Wash the lentils in water 3-4 times (add water, drain, add water, drain, etc.)
Fry 1 onion in vegetable oil until golden
Add lentils, stir
Add water covering the lentils over an inch
Add 1-2 teaspoons cumin and 1/4 tsp turmeric
Add diced carrots baby and Salt
Once it boils, turn to medium heat- keep stirring. If the mixture is thick, add water.
After simmering for 15 minutes,  remove from heat and puree in blender. To keep the thickness of the soup, only puree for a couple seconds. 
 

Serve with squeezed lemon juice.

Mini Mana’eesh

When I think Mana’eesh, I think long summer vacations in Amman, Jordan. Before my summers became obsolete – starting in college with summer courses and then in the “real world” where PTO means barely a week away from email – there was a time when my family, would leave for Amman at the end of June and return right before Labor Day weekend. We spent endless hours with family and friends, attending lunches, dinners, and weddings, staying out late at the local cafes and best of all waking up late-morning to go to my favorite place for mana’eesh – Kan Zaman.

If you haven’t been to Kan Zaman, you’re in for a treat. It’s a hilltop medieval castle turned restaurant where low tables and chairs are met with traditional Jordanian décor. The whole place feels like you just zapped back into “the old days.” Outside this family-friendly restaurant, an Arabian horse and carriage await – tips are highly recommended. And if you didn’t get enough of the old-time feel, walk toward the back of the restaurant and it’s there that most Jordanian-Americans dress up in traditional Jordanian garb and take photos in a very traditional Arabic setting. I guarantee if you’ve seen those photos hanging at someone’s house, they’re from Kan Zaman. My parents still have those family photos hanging up in their home.

 

If you’re in Jordan and interested in visiting, Kan Zaman is located at Airport Road, about 15kms from 7th circle in Amman

 

Let’s talk Mana’eesh. Traditionally, a breakfast item, you can find two varieties – za’atar and cheese. My personal favorite is the za’atar. It looks like a pizza and consists of flatbread topped with a mixture of olive oil and za’atar, baked to delicious goodness. I’ve been known to eat more than one.

I can’t recreate Kan Zaman’s Mana’eesh, but I can definitely try. While large mana’eesh are easy enough to make, I’ve taken the idea to the next level and found an even easier way to make this nostalgic breakfast item.

 

 

Best Served with Labaneh and Olives

 

 

Mini Mana’eesh Recipe

Ingredients
1  can (16.3 oz) Pillsbury® Grands!® refrigerated biscuits 
3 tablespoons Olive oil
1/4 cup Za’atar
 
 

Directions

Place biscuits on a baking tray
Using your fingers, flatten the biscuits
In a small bowl, mix olive oil and zaatar together (add more oil and zaatar as needed. It should be a runny consistency)
Spoon zaatar mixture onto each biscuit
Bake at 350 degrees for 14-17 minutes