• 14Mar

    The platter in the back is jerk chicken.

    I tried George “Lenky” Beckford’s Sweet Mango Cafe jerk chicken at the Travel & Adventure Show and it was spicy, flavorful and delicious. Lenky participated in the “Fiery Food Challenge” vs. other chefs. Below is the recipe for Sweet Mango Cafe’s jerk seasoning.

    -JAY

    Ingredients:

    1 cup diced onion
    3 green onions (scallions), green and white parts, chopped
    1/2 cup minced garlic
    2 tablespoons fresh thyme leaves or 2 tsp. dried
    1-2 tablespoons coarsely chopped ginger root (peeled by scraping)
    2-4 Scotch bonnet peppers (Caution, these are super-hot, little babies)
    1/4 cup pimento berries (2 tablespoons ground allspice)
    1.5 tsp. ground cinnamon
    1/4 tsp. freshly ground nutmeg
    1/2 tsp. salt
    1/4 cup lime juice
    4 bay leaves – crushed
    Pinch of cane sugar

    Directions:

    If using whole, roast the pimento berries in a dry skillet until they are fragrant, about 2 minutes. remove and crush them to a powder in a mortar and pestle or spice mill. Place all the ingredients in a blender or food processor and puree to make a pulpy paste or thick sauce. There will be about a cup or more.

    Store in the refrigerator; it will keep for a month or more. Always check before using.

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  • 05Mar

    My friend Lubos has a Slovak Recipe Website and yesterday brought some of these bow ties to an event where I was the guest speaker at GMU so I could try a Slovak dessert. Thanks so much Lubos–they were delicious. I do get the funnel cake comparison even though they do not look alike. Here is his recipe for Fánky.

    -JAY

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  • 09Jan

    Kudos to DCFüd’s own…Janet (JDS) whose soup recipe was featured on Capital Cooking’s blog for National Soup Month. I bet you could make a tasty vegetarian version of this by substituting vegetable stock for chicken stock.

    -JAY[ad]

  • 02Jan

    A few years back, I had dinner with some friends, and one of them made these sugary, scrumptious, little bundles of happiness. She called them “cake balls”. I call them truffles, because “cake balls” sounds funny to me. Despite the deliciousness of the truffles, they only required three ingredients, which makes them even more fantastic, and can also be made in about an hour, if you need a dessert quickly.

    Recipe:

    -One 8 oz. block of cream cheese, softened
    -One box/container/slab of Oreo-type cookies
    -One bag of white chocolate chips

    Using a food processor, crush the cookies until they are a fine crumb. Reserve ¼ cup. Mix in the cream cheese until well-blended. Roll small pieces of the dough into golf ball-sized balls, place them on waxed paper on a cookie sheet, and either freeze for 15 minutes, or refrigerate for an hour. After they are set, melt the chocolate chips (using a microwave, double boiler, or whatever your preference may be), and dip the truffles into the melted chocolate. Shake off the excess, and place on another sheet of waxed paper on a cookie sheet. While the chocolate is still wet, sprinkle the reserved crumbs over the truffles, and place in the freezer for 30 minutes, or the refrigerator for two hours. Serve and enjoy.

    The beauty of these is that they can be frozen (I’ve had them in the freezer for nearly two months) and customized. I believe the original recipe uses actual cake (in place of the cookies, bake a sheet cake according to the directions on the box, let it cool, crumble, add cream cheese, etc.), so different types of cake or chips can be used. Favorites so far have been peanut butter chips coating peanut butter Oreos, white chocolate chips coating lemon cake (with a little lemon extract added), and white chocolate chips coating red velvet cake. They can even be made using reduced fat Oreos and fat free cream cheese with no noticeable taste difference. As for decorations on the top, you can melt a few dark or milk chocolate chips and drizzle over the white chocolate or peanut butter coatings. I was planning on making white chocolate-peppermint coating for the holidays, but apparently peppermint extract in Arlington is hard to come by. The world is your oyster, so be creative and enjoy!

    -JDS

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  • 27Dec

    This is a quick vegan delicacy I whipped up the other day for brunch…it’s almost a pain perdu – sans egg – and really bloody tasty.

    I used:

    1 pound Oyster mushrooms
    1/2 a sweet pepper
    1 clove garlic (crushed/finely diced)
    Fresh Oregano (about a teaspoon)
    Lemon Juice
    Olive Oil
    Stale bread (I used potato bread; challah would be nice)
    White wine
    Soy sauce

    Wash, pat dry, and slice your mushrooms and finely dice your pepper. Heat the oil in a largeish pan over medium-high heat. When it’s to temperature, toss in the peppers, half your chopped oregano, half of your garlic, and a splash of soy sauce. Let that cook about 5 minutes, until it begins to brown. Turn the heat down to medium, and add your mushrooms, tossing with some lemon juice, and then make sure they are all flat (not on top of one another), sprinkling the remaining garlic and oregano over top. Let that cook for 5 minutes or so, stirring occasionally, until they are done. Turn on your vent fan and the moisture will go out more quickly – this is good.

    When the ‘shrooms are cooked, remove all that to a bowl. Take 2 slices of bread and put them in the pan, upping the heat to high. Toast on both sides, sopping up most of the leftover oil. Remove and
    plate those. Now, deglaze your pan (which should have some nice charred bits hanging about in it) with the wine, and another splash of soy sauce.

    Top the toast with the mushrooms and peppers, and then the reduced deglazing liquid. Delicious!

    -MAW

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  • 16Dec

    In my inbox. Chef Michael Kiss’ cooking classes are back.

    -JAY
    —————————————

    We are back! Get you 2011 started out right! This is your year to learn how to really cook and take control of your dinner destiny. Join Chef Michael Kiss every Tuesday at 7:00PM as he shares great advice, tips and time saving techniques in his weekly series of themed cooking classes. Come and learn, laugh and taste!

    Classes like “The Cooking 101 series”, a back to basics approach to cooking, from how to hold a knife to how to tell when your pasta is al dente; these classes are the foundation to great skill. One of our favorite series for this year is “I can cook vegetarian” are you ready to take the meat free Wednesday challenge? We will explore amazing vegetarian cooking techniques and talk about the health and ecological benefits of reducing our animal protein intake. Always on the run and can’t seem to find time to eat dinner let alone make a healthy meal at home? Then our “Fast and Delicious” series will show you that with a little effort you can be rewarded with a hot healthy meal in less than 29 ½ minutes. No camera tricks we promise, just real cooking real fast.

    See you in class every Tuesday at 7:00PM.

    Whole Foods Market Cooking Classes are free.

    Email Michael.Kiss@WholeFoods.com to sign up for class.
    Put “Cooking Class” in the subject line.
    Seating is limited so don’t miss out.

    JANUARY 2011 Schedule

    This is your year to learn how to really cook!

    Tuesday January 4th
    7:00 PM
    Omnivore Class:
    Cooking 101; How to Sauté

    Sauté is one of the most versatile methods of cooking. Not only can you use this skill to bring out flavor in your ingredients it is also a super fast way to cook. Join Chef Michael Kiss and learn how to properly sauté everything from chicken and fish to every vegetable you can find. You will even learn the stylish chef flip.

    Tuesday January 11th
    7:00 PM
    Vegetarian Class:
    Get Keen on Greens

    Leafy greens are some of the most nutritionally dense foods on the planet, but they aren’t always tops on our favorite food list. Join Chef Michael Kiss as he helps you through the jungle of great greens. We will talk about all of the different types and their flavors and the best ways to make them something we love to eat. We promise the pickiest eaters will soon say more greens please.

    Tuesday January 18th
    Omnivore Class:
    7:00 PM
    Fast and Delicious; Curried Lamb with Pan Roasted Chick Peas with Winter Radish Salad

    With our fast paced lives we live it is hard to make time to prepare a great meal. Join Chef Michael Kiss as he takes you on a fast and fun ride on how to save time in the kitchen. Dinner will soon be just something wonderful you whip up. How do you make it look so easy?

    Tuesday January 25th
    7:00 PM
    Vegetarian Class:
    I Can Cook Vegetarian

    Are you up for the Challenge? Can you commit to MEAT FREE WEDNESDAY? Well, it won’t be a challenge when you join Chef Michael Kiss and learn how to cook without animal protein. Nutritionally complete and filling meals with amazing flavor that will keep even the biggest steak lover in your family coming back for more. A fun way to make healthy choices sustainable; Take the challenge!

    About Chef Michael Kiss

    Chef Michael is a graduate of Pennsylvania Institute for Culinary Arts in Pittsburgh, PA, but his passions for great tasting food starting years earlier in his family kitchen. He loves to cook all types of food and is always on the lookout to learn something new about people and ingredients and how they come together. Chef Michael has cooked in great restaurants in Chicago IL, Pittsburgh PA and Savannah GA always absorbing the local flair for food along the way. He came to Whole Foods Market in 2004 in search of new frontiers in his sojourn of all things culinary. He needed to know where his food came from and how and why the ways our ingredients are produced can affect our lives. Recently his culinary travels have taken a healthy turn. And over the last year he has changed his entire lifestyle to include exercise, healthy plant based cooking and meditation. Chef Michael is passionate about cooking and life and loves to share his knowledge with all.

    Eat Well!

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  • 06Dec

    I’m not a baker/cook/chef by any stretch of the imagination, but I (and I figure most of the world) love to try a new recipe

    Picture by JDS

    every now and then. A few weeks ago, a friend of mine had posted a link on his Facebook page about the Cherpumple. For those that haven’t seen or heard of the Cherpumple, it’s essentially a dessert version of the turducken (a chicken inside of a duck inside of a turkey). Chef Charles Phoenix had created the Cherpumple, which was an apple pie baked inside a layer of spice cake, a pumpkin pie baked in a layer of golden cake, and a cherry pie baked in a layer of white cake, all stacked together and smothered in cream cheese frosting.

    I decided to make a version of this for Thanksgiving for my friend, Brian, the head chef at Restaurant 3 in Clarendon, as a “Happy Thanksgiving/Congratulations on Being on Bacon Paradise” gift. However, I don’t like cherry pie. It looks like guts and tastes strange, so I decided to create the Pecpumple: an apple pie baked into a vanilla cake, stacked on a pecan pie baked into a butter cake, stacked on a pumpkin pie baked into a spice cake, and covered in cream cheese frosting (frozen pies, boxed cake mix, canned frosting). In my mind, this was a simple feat, but as it got closer to go-time, I began to worry about the structural stability of this monster (guess that half a Master’s in Engineering didn’t help much). Common sense kicked in and reminded me that cake is generally crumbly and pie is generally gooey. These combined could easily make for a disaster, so I made the cakes denser by adding whole milk and eggs, and decreasing the amount of water added (I kept the oil and butter in because no one likes a dry cake).

    The pecan-butter layer was first, since I failed to read the directions on Phoenix’s website and both the pumpkin and apple

    Click for larger pics.

    pies needed to bake and cool first. The process seemed simple enough; make batter, pour some batter in the pan, add pie, add batter, bake, cool, stack, frost, dive in. Nowhere in the directions mentioned how much batter to cover the pie with, so I ended up with a few smoke alarms screeching, and a nice circular design of batter on the bottom of my oven. Luckily, I was able to clean that with no issue and proceeded to bake each layer, each with less batter overflow. There was a ton of excess cake batter remaining, so I baked a couple of cakes for my office and friends while I waited for the layers to cool.

    Obviously, each layer was quite heavy (pie inside of a cake- duh), and after carefully stacking the apple on top of the pecan on top of the pumpkin and quickly frosting each layer and sides, the Pecpumple was born. Except for that hole where the apple pie filling was oozing out (patched shut with a scoop of frosting), it was just as I pictured. It was a tower of happiness; of pies and cake and frosting and all-around deliciousness.

    Welcome to the world, Pecpumple.

    We brought it to the restaurant, where we would be having Thanksgiving dinner, and placed it in the refrigerator to set a little bit longer. When it was time for dessert, Brian and his sous chef, Sean, cut the masterpiece. One word: glorious. Actually, if I’m being honest, the one word would be “shocked”. The Pecpumple stayed together and didn’t look like the result of a food fight between Betty Crocker and Mrs. Smith. And it was delicious. Very sweet, of course, but a great combination of desserts, and a nice switch-up from the usual pumpkin or sweet potato pie that is synonymous with Thanksgiving. Would I do this again? You bet. Should everyone try this? You bet. Will you get a little stabby when the crust on the pie burns and you have to shave it off with a knife because your oven is old and cooks uneven? You bet. But you laugh and move on. They always say that nothing that’s ever worth doing is ever easy, and this is something that is definitely worth doing. And if it ends up collapsing or imploding, oh well, you now have six desserts smashed into one, so grab a fork and dig in.

    The first slice of the Pecpumple. Eat your heart out, world.

    -Guest Blogger Janet (JDS)

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  • 28Oct

    Benjamin Lambert, Restaurant Nora: Hawaiian Hearts of Palm Salad, Thai Basil, Cucumber, Mango, Coriander Berries, Basil Seeds, Heirloom Tomato Water, and Hearts of Palm Sorbet

    Tuesday evening I attended StarChefs.com 2010 Washington DC Area Rising Stars Gala and Awards Ceremony at Charlie Palmer Steak. Here is the menu. Some relatively local culinary rising stars got to showcase their talents, and the results were quite good. I always find it interesting when ingredients that 100 years ago would have been low end (beef cheeks, sweat breads) are featured in high end cuisine. Also, my Latin American (and Italian influenced) culinary roots prepared me for dishes with palm hearts, sweet breads, and fresh beets, ingredients I grew up on. Hearts of palm sorbet…yum.  The wine/beer pairings were great and they even had one barley wine.

    My favorite dish was Jason Alley’s (Comfort):
    Braised Australian Beef Cheeks, Juniper, Ginger Beer, Stone Ground Grits, and Arugula.

    It was tender, beefy, flavorful, and delicious…and the cheese grits were very good.  Hmmm…cheese isn’t mentioned in their description.

    My favorite dessert was Isaiah Billington’s (Woodberry Kitchen):
    Summer Pudding.

    It featured currants and raspberries, and I’ve been meaning to try summer pudding since s

    Isaiah Billington, Woodberry Kitchen: Summer Pudding

    eeing it on a 2 Fat Ladies episode.  I preferred it to standard bread pudding.

    Gina Chersevani, a mixologist of PS 7 created a great cocktail with Highland Park Whisky (which is very good and could be used in desserts if used correctly):
    – Beet-iful Apples with Highland Park Single Malt Scotch Whisky, Dolin Sweet Vermouth, Apple Juice, Red Beet Reduction, and Mint.

    Ok, ok, honorable mention to my 2nd favorite savory dish:

    Dean Maupin‘s (Keswick Hall)
    Duck Confit and Ricotta Gnocchi with Butternut Squash, Arugula, Cracklin’s, and Grated Wisconsin SarVecchio Parmesan.

    The cracklin’s and the gnocchis were as good as the confit.

    It was a great night with wonderful food and good company; fellow bloggers Dining in DC, Greg’s List, and Girl Meets Food were present.

    Bryan Voltaggio, VOLT: New Zealand King Salmon, Everything Bagel Crumbs, Pickled Mustard Seeds, Lemon Pudding, Chives, and Red Onion

    Here are the the PS7 (drink) and the Woodberry Kitchen (summer pudding) and the recipes:

    Beet-iful Apples

    Mixologist Gina Chersevani of PS 7’s

    The recipe is per batch (10-12 people)

    Ingredients:

    32 oz of fresh apple juice (mix of Jonathan’s and pink lady)

    10 oz of lemon juice

    1/4 pound of 10 x powdered sugar

    10 oz Red Beet Reduction

    1 (750ml) Highland Park 12 year

    10 oz Dolin Sweet Vermouth

    1 oz mint leaves

    10 dashes of Fee Brothers Bitters

    Bertrand Chemel, 2941: local beets, compressed watermelon, laughing bird shrimp, cherrywood balsamic

    1 tbs of Orange Zest

    Method:

    In a punch bowl, combine sugar, lemon juice, Highland Park, Dolin Sweet vermouth, whisk together until sugar is dissolved.  Then add apple juice, beet reduction, fee brothers bitters, then add ice block and garnish with mint leave and Orange Zest, let set for about 20 minutes and serve.

    Summer Pudding

    Sustainability Chef Isaiah Billington of Woodberry Kitchen – Baltimore, MD
    Adapted by StarChefs.com
    Yield: 4 Servings

    INGREDIENTS
    Butter Bread:
    500 grams bread flour
    208 grams water
    50 grams eggs
    50 grams soft butter
    35 grams sugar
    10 grams salt
    7 grams instant yeast

    Pudding Fruit:
    80 grams sugar
    2 to3 grams traditional (e.g. apple) pectin
    400 grams fruit, like young plums, blueberries, and raspberries*

    METHOD
    For the Butter Bread:
    Put the flour, water, eggs, butter, sugar, salt and yeast in the bowl of a standing mixer and mix for 2 minutes on low speed. Rest the dough 20 minutes, then mix for 6 minutes on low to medium speed. Proof the dough for 90 minutes at room temperature, then shape it to fit a loaf pan, making it at least 1 inch wider and longer than the loaf pan. Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Let the dough rise in the pan for 90 minutes, then bake in the oven until a thermometer inserted in the center of the loaf reads 190ºF. Unmold the loaf and cool. Let sit for 1 day to go stale.

    For the Pudding Fruit:
    Stir together the sugar and pectin. Cook the fruit in a pot over a medium flame until it’s sitting in its own juices. Bring to a boil, then stir in pectin mixture. Return to a boil, remove from heat, and stir in more fragile fruit like raspberries.

    To Assemble and Serve:
    Cut the crust off the bread and put in the freezer. Line 4 dome or pudding molds with plastic wrap with plenty of excess plastic wrap around each side (any kind of ramekin or low wide coffee cup will work). Slice the half-frozen bread lengthwise as thinly as you can. From the slices, cut 4 circles the size of the bottom of your mold, 4 circles the size of the top of your mold, and 4 long ribbons equal in height to your mold and as long as its circumference. Place the small circles and ribbons in the molds to form the puddings’ tops and sides. Stuff the molds with fruit, ladling in any extra juice to soak into the bread. Cap each mold with a large circle of bread, seal it tight with the plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight. Remove from the mold before serving.

    * Fruit should reflect the seasonal fruit available, preferably a mix that shows off the bounty off the season. The height of summer, of course, is best in Maryland, as strawberry and cherry season wind down right as gooseberries, blueberries, and blackberries begin. Darker colors to dye the bread, or at least one dark fruit, should predominate. This pudding can also lend itself well to preserved fruits used right out of the jar, since they are probably already sweetened and lightly cooked. A little bit of jam cooked into the fruit can replace the pectin and sugar. For that matter, use your judgment to take the measurement of pectin and sugar up or down, depending on what fruit you are using.

    -JAY

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  • 26Oct

    In my inbox. The Neelys are a lot of fun.

    -JAY
    ————–

    KRAFT FOODS and CELEBRITY CHEFS, THE NEELYS, HUDDLE AT HOWARD HOMECOMING TO FIGHT HUNGER

    Neelys Attending Game to Champion Kraft Foods’ Huddle to Fight Hunger Campaign

    WHAT: Kraft Foods’ three-city HBCU Football Classic tour in support of its largest branded initiative ever to fight hunger in America, Huddle to Fight Hunger, will make its final stop at the Howard University Homecoming game. Kraft Foods will present the Huddle to Fight Hunger interactive tent at the tailgate area and give-away Kraft Foods snack packs and samples.

    Kraft Foods also sponsored the Southern Heritage Classic football game in Memphis, TN, and the Morehouse Homecoming game in Atlanta.

    WHO: Celebrity chefs Pat and Gina Neely will host a Meet & Greet during the tailgate event and participate in the pre-game activities to help champion the cause.

    Consumers can text HBCU and their zip code to 71717 resulting in Kraft Foods donating a meal to their local food bank. The campaign goal is to give 20 million meals to Feeding America, the nation’s leading hunger relief organization.

    Kraft will be donating the monetary equivalent of a meal. $1 donated = 7 meals secured by Feeding America on behalf of local food banks. Maximum donation from all digital and social media activities is four million meals. Text campaign ends 1/9/11. Message and data rates may apply. One text per person.

    WHEN: Saturday October 30, 2010

    10:00 am – 3:00 pm Huddle to Fight Hunger tailgate event featuring fun activities, music and Kraft Snack Pack giveaways (grilled Oscar Mayer hot dog, Kool-Aid pouch and Oreo cookies)

    11:00 – 11:45 am The Neelys’ Meet & Greet at Huddle to Fight Hunger tent – photo ops, media interviews welcome

    12:00 – 12:30 pm The Neelys’ Special Appearance at Alumni VIP Tent

    12:45 – 12:50 pm The Neelys’ on-field welcome – photo ops, media interviews welcome

    1:00 pm Game Kick-Off

    WHERE: Greene Memorial Stadium, Washington, D.C.

    WHY: For each person who joins the Huddle, Kraft Foods will donate one meal to his or her local Feeding America food bank. Hunger remains a serious issue in the United States. In fact, 49.1 million Americans, or one in six of our neighbors, don’t always know where their next meal will come from.

    Americans can help Kraft Foods meet their donation goal by visiting www.HuddleToFightHunger.com to learn about all the ways they can get in the game. The campaign will culminate in San Francisco on January 9, 2011, with the first-ever Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl, featuring college football teams from the WAC and PAC-10.

    To join the Huddle to Fight Hunger effort visit www.HuddleToFightHunger.com today.

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  • 24Oct

    It’s fall, and that means it’s time again for me to cook pumpkins. Because, as we all know, I love the orange beasties. Plus, it’s just before Halloween, and this is a great party recipe: it’s delicious, easy to make in quantity, and goes well with both booze and candy. I was inspired by a Thai pumpkin soup (Tom Jieufak, I think) I had recently, and so the primary flavors in this dish are Thai, but I modified it for my current veganism (more on that in a later series), and since this was made on the fly the proportions are a bit random and you should adjust to your own tastes. Also, you might like it less spicy than I do, so adjust accordingly. Here’s what I did:

    From: http://www.flickr.com/photos/calliope/4988191034/

    Photo by Muffet

    Ingredients:
    o 4″ shoot of lemon grass, sliced
    o 2 tsp fresh ginger
    o Health handful of fresh basil leaves
    o 1 green bell pepper, chopped
    o Juice of 1 lime
    o 4 oz water
    o 1 tbs peanut oil
    o 2 garlic cloves, chopped
    o 5 shallots, thinly sliced
    o Half a vidalia onion, thinly sliced
    o 1 tsp crushed dried red chili flakes
    o 3 Thai chillies, chopped
    o 22 oz vegetable stock
    o A handful of green beans, chopped
    o 2 tbs soy sauce
    o 2 tbs vegan Worcestershire sauce (or fish sauce)
    o Cubed peeled meat of 2 small pie pumpkins
    o 1.5 t sugar
    o 1.5 tsp fresh ground white pepper
    o 2 tbs organic creamy peanut butter
    o 3 tsp curry powder (I used Madras, but if you have Thai it might be better)
    o 8 oz coconut milk
    o Splash of rice vinegar
    o Sriracha
    o Turmeric
    o 2 tsp arrowroot powder

    To facilitate cutting up the pumpkin, I microwaved them for about 4 minutes each…while that’s happening, chop everything else. Puree the ginger, 1 garlic clove, lemongrass, green pepper, lime juice, curry powder and water a blender, and drain off excess liquid. In a large saucepan (I actually used a Dutch oven) over high heat, fry the chilies, the other garlic clove, and shallots over high heat till they get a little crispy, then add the onion and let them get a bit translucent.

    Now add your pumpkin, beans, soy/Worcestershire sauce, all but a couple ounces of the stock, and the puree, reducing heat to medium. Stir for about a minute, and stir in the peanut butter, sugar, and white pepper, then simmer. While that’s happening, dissolve your arrowroot in the remaining stock. When the pumpkin is very nearly done, crank up the heat to high, add the coconut milk, and bring to a rolling boil for a minute or two. Drop the heat back to medium-low, and adjust flavor with Sriracha, vinegar, and turmeric. Finally, stir in your arrowroot mixture to thicken (you could probably also just cook it longer to reduce, but I am lazy).

    I served this over French bread, but rice noodles would be good too.

    -MAW

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