Grilled haloumi and eggplant salad
This is my first of hopefully MANY guest posts. This recipe was done by Winnie. Winnie and I grew up together. Our mother’s have been friends since their college days and they had a chama (womens group) that would meet monthly i think. They were great fun with lots of food and mischief. So here goes:
When I was asked to be a guest writer on Foodieinthedesert, I was ecstatic and quite honestly beside myself. Not only did someone like my ideas on food but they actually rated them highly. I have a passion for food but not just any food GOOD food. Appealing food. Food that has been prepared with attention to detail. Now I am not asking for gourmet nor I am looking for molecular gastronomy but simply food prepared from the heart. Apparently there’s a French joke that goes something like this ‘A good cook is like a doctor, you trust them’. It’s a lot funnier spoken than written but what it simply means is that when you are in the kitchen, you are in a position of authority and the people are reliant on the work of your hands.
I am fascinated at how 10 people can start off with the same ingredients that result in totally different final products or how the same ingredient can be transformed into several different things dependent on cuisine. I am amazed at how a tomato looks like in the market and what it looks like in a bowl of fresh Greek salad. Food is about texture (paw paw is tender apples are crunchy depending on what side of the divide you are on this can be a turnoff), colour (kachumbari made with only brown onion and tomatoes is less enticing than kachumbari made with Spanish onions, ripe tomatoes, coriander and capsicum), contrast (beetroot, rhubarb and tomato on the same plate lack appeal), smell (always use fresh ingredients and remember to complement ingredients, a good diane sauce can lift a steak, but a good steak cannot lift a poor diane sauce), visual appeal (people eat with their eyes), height (a Caesar salad in a bowl is more appealing than a Caesar on a dinner plate).
The Gordon Ramsay recipe that I have attached came in quite handy as I was devoid of ideas of what to cook my vegetarian friends. Foodie in the desert asked for a simple recipe that can be prepared with readily available ingredients. I went ahead with this recipe to show case what one can do with ingredients that may/ may not be on your supermarket shelves. As you walk the aisles and are wondering what would I do with those olives? Why would I buy cheese that doesn’t fit into the ham and cheese sandwich? Well here are some ideas of how haloumi and olives can be used to entice friends and family. Here’s a reason to buy these ingredients. I love the texture of haloumi which gives me the illusion that I am eating meat (sad but true I love my meat and this cheese meets me in my comfort zone).
Parting words, remember one thing oil isn’t a one size fits all. Elianto for cooking shouldn’t be used for salad dressing (in a day when we are all health conscious choose your fat intake appropriately- use the right oil for the right job). Don’t cook with wine that you would otherwise not drink (you can taste poor quality wine through the food).
Whatever you do remember to cook from the heart.
Ingredients
- 1 large eggplant
- Sea salt and black pepper
- 6 ripe plum tomatoes
- 40 g kalamata olives
- Small bunch of mint leaves shredded (mint has a strong flavor adjust to taste)
- Olive oil for brushing
- 500 g haloumi (find this in the cheese section, some companies call it Kaloumi)
- 2-3 tbsp plain flour
- 75 g pitted kalamata olives
- 3 tbsp red wine vinegar (balsamic may be used)
- 1 tbsp dried oregano 75 ml olive oil
- 75 ml peanut oil
Instructions
Cut eggplant into thin slices. Place in a colander sprinkle with salt and allow standing for 20 minutes. (The salt draws out moisture from eggplant). Pat dry with kitchen towel.
Cut tomatoes into wedges and put in a large bowl with olives and mint. Set aside while you make dressing.
For dressing- tip pitted olives, wine vinegar and dried oregano in a blender and blitz into a smooth paste. With motor running gradually pour in the olive and groundnut oil and season well with salt and pepper. Transfer to a jar and set aside.
About 15 minutes before serving put a griddle pan over high heat. Brush eggplant with oil (must brush as eggplant soaks in oil very easily) and cook on pan for about 2 minutes until softened and slightly charred.
Add to the bowl of tomatoes pour over some dressing and toss to coat.
Thinly slice the haloumi (type of cheese that can be cooked) and lightly coat with flour. Griddle the slices until they turn golden brown around the edges and just starting to melt.
To serve arrange the griddled eggplant on a large platter and top with haloumi. Spoon the tomato and olive salad and drizzle over a little more olive dressing.
Serve at once while the haloumi is still hot.
The grills used for roasting meat can be used in place of the griddle pan
KUNDE
I have always said that I am not a fun of greens. Growing up I only liked cabbages and I later got to enjoy sukuma wiki (Kales) but of late I have a certain fascination of trying new leafy greens that I ordinarily would not have done a few years or even months ago.
Maybe it’s growing up; I’m now a woman of a certain age you know. And I am more open to trying things that I hated as a child.
Or maybe, it’s the influence of hearing people talk about vegetables that they enjoy to eat.
Or maybe, and I think this is it, it’s because I grew some in my kitchen garden. There is a certain satisfaction I get when I walk out of my house and go pick fresh herbs and veggies to cook. I can’t even explain it but I just smile, my heart smiles.
Anyway I digress. My friend Judith told me how to make this dish. She told me to boil the Kunde in Magadi which I think is Bicarbonate of Soda. She, however, stated that traditionally or at home they use a special salt that they make from burning dried maize cobs or dried peel from green cooking bananas or dried bean husks. The ash that comes out from this burning is then put in a container with holes and hot water is put through it. The water that is gotten from this is then used to boil the vegetables. This process softens the Kunde and the ash water helps maintain the green colour.
Since I did not have the time or the means to make the ash, bicarbonate of soda had to suffice. It was quite easy to make this. I had it with ugali and tuna and I really enjoyed it. You can mix Kunde with other leafy greens such as spinach, sukuma wiki, mchicha, terere etc. I chose to make this plain as it was the first time I was eating or even preparing it. How do you like to eat your?
HAPPY COOKING!!!
Ingredients
- 2 big bunches of Kunde
- 2 Tomatoes, chopped
- 1 large Onions. chopped
- 1 teaspoon Bicarbonate of soda
- handful of Dhania (Coriander), chopped
- 1 tablespoon Garlic
- ½ teaspoon Ginger Chillies (optional)
- Salt and pepper to taste.
Instructions
Pluck the leaves from the stalks so that you remain with the leaf ONLY Clean the leaves thoroughly.
Put the kunde in a pot add enough water to cover them completely, add the bicarbonate and boil for at least 10 minutes. Drain and set aside
Put the onions in a pot, fry until soft. Add the ginger and garlic and cook until fragrant then add the tomatoes, salt and pepper.
Cook for about 4 minutes till the tomatoes soften. Add the chillies and dhania and cook for a further two minutes Add the kunde and mix well.
Cook for about 3-4 minutes until warmed through. Serve hot.
HAPPY EATING
https://www.themothershipvillage.com/kunde/
ROSEMARY ROASTED POTATOES
I LOVE POTATOES…………………
I am sure in one of my earlier posts I probably mentioned that I am in love with them. For me potatoes are what I can not live without. Life would TOTALLY suck if I could not have them. My friends always make fun of me and say that I love potatoes because I’m Kikuyu (a majority tribe in Kenya) well this could be true, seeing as we Kikuyus tend to add potatoes to every dish save for tea 🙂 but Kikuyu or not I love them.
But like any other food they can get monotonous. So I am always looking for new ways to make them and discovering and rediscovering. I was taught the basics of this recipe by my mother. You boil the potatoes to soften them and cook them through. Then you shallow fry them so as to give them a nice crunchiness and beautiful color.
You can try these potatoes by boiling them in your beef or chicken stew then removed them from the stew and shallow fry them. Or you could use a ready made stock of your choice, you can even try and experiment different spices in the water if you’re using water to boil. Try ginger, some onions, masalas etc. You could also use aromat or garlic salt instead of normal salt. Anything could work just depends on your taste. I enjoy them this way, served them for company a couples of times and they are always quite popular so do try them. HAPPY COOKING!!!
Ingredients
- Potatoes
- Garlic powder
- Rosemary sprigs (fresh or dry)
- Oil for frying
Instructions
Peel the potatoes and cut them into quarters. Put them in a pot, fill the pot with water till all the potatoes are fully immersed.
Put about a tablespoon each of garlic powder rosemary to every 1.5 ltrs of water (you could adjust this depending on taste) boil till the potatoes are cooked through but not too soft that they break when pierced.
Drain all the water from the pot; give the potatoes a good shake. This breaks of the edges and makes them even crunchier.
Fill the base of a shallow frying pan with the oil. Heat the oil
Place the potatoes into the oil and cook them till well brown turning them around. Half way through sprinkle a few rosemary sprigs on top.
Once it’s all brown place the potatoes to drain on a kitchen towel.
Serve when still hot. HAPPY EATING!!
https://www.themothershipvillage.com/rosemary-roasted-potatoes/





