Yesterday was the first day of autumn, and it lingers in the air. I’ve already gotten my butter croissant candles out, washed our fluffy blankets, and I am fully embracing maroon as a colour for my wardrobe. And I thought I´d kick off the season with a recipe for my favourite Portuguese soup – the caldo verde. I confess that this soup intimidated me at first. I love cooking Romanian sour soups (ciorba) and actually make some pretty tasty ones, but soups to me are such an intimate heritage of a region that I very often stay away from the really traditional ones, quietly admiring them from afar. That was the case with caldo verde until last winter, when I ventured to do one, following the recipe from Portugal The Cookbook, the same recipe book I took this Pão de Ló recipe from. I confess I have since adjusted both ingredients as well as method quite a bit and here´s my final take on the caldo verde.
During an Argentine barbecue a few weeks back, I was talking to my friend Vanessa about chimichurri and how quintessentially Argentine it just is. Whether the Argentinians actually make it at home, or buy it at the store (the spices are often sold as a mixture and you’d only add oil to them), it is present in any Argentine barbecue, and just altogether a fantastic meat marinade. So here’s my attempt (after a lot of reading) to give you my chimichurri recipe. These proportions will be enough for a barbecue, but I usually double them to have some left over in a jar. And if this is not to your liking, an alternative recipe from Bon Appetite can be found here.
The Most Delicious Creamy Butter Beans with Herb Oil
July 3, 2024One more recipe from Ottolenghi – his butter beans with preserved lemon, chilli and herb oil, is an all time party favourite of mine so I just had to bring some minor adjustments to it and add it to my blog. You can find his original recipe in his book Shelf Love. And if you’re as big of a fan of his recipes as I am, you can find one more of my favourites which I published on the blog a few months ago. As to this one, just keep on reading for a fantastic dish that you can enjoy directly from the pan!
This recipe is a delayed part two of what I wish to be a series of breakfasts from around the globe that have eggs as a base. You can find part one – Portuguese Peas and Eggs over here. Additionally find here my green version of shakshuka (which does not count for the series as I’m trying to brand the series as alternatives to the by now way too famous afro mentioned shakshuka). So we’re starting with lahsa – the Yemeni breakfast with eggs, tomatoes and cream cheese. You might have seen it on Instagram and TikTok already, personally I discovered it with Chef JJ over here. My recipe is pretty consistent with his, but since I couldn’t find it on any blog, here goes my blog written version of it.
Lately I’ve been challenging myself more to cook with ingredients I am not that familiar with, and fennel is just one of those. While analysing this tendency of mine, I’ve reached the conclusion that it might be a consequence of growing up in post-communist Romania. Being deprived of much of the non-native to Romania produce that the West had access to, I’ve grown quite obsessed with them. It can get quite maddening when guests come over and instead of serving a regular dish that would work with everyone, I´ll run a risk and come up with something half crazy – salads in particular refuse to do the boring way, as demonstrated here. So I took inspiration for this particular salad from a fennel and tangerine salad online from this site, but I swapped it for oranges and added the salmon before coming up with this final version, which now that I’ve tried over and over again, I am happy to share with you too.
Let me start off by saying that this marvellously flavourful recipe is Ottolenghi´s, not mine. I honestly make so many of his recipes (like this rice puttanesca) that I should add a tag on the blog for them. I’ve been meaning to cook with orzo (or risen, as Italians would call this pasta type) ever since I’ve seen it used over and over again in Mihai Gateste´s recipes, but I failed to find it in supermarkets. Until now…
Fajitas – or André´s signature dish during his uni years. I know what you’re thinking – regular people´s uni years meals were canned ramen noodles at best, but it seems I am marrying a rare specimen of a man who learned how to do this tex-mex dish for his fellow students, while the rest of us were eating scraps. Fast forward many years – André and I are dating and he’s making me fajitas. I remember the first time very well because we had a silly fight. As we did the second time he made me fajitas. I was afraid they were cursed at this stage, but soon learned how to enjoy spiciness on the fajitas and not in snarky comments that would make us argue. Almost eight years later it is a dish I love. We make it when we have big dinners and we make it for the two of us and proceed to eating it for days. It’s a hard dish to photograph so I never tried until today, but I thought it was high time you also got this recipe.
If you, like me, are not the biggest carrot fan but desperately want to introduce this vitamin packed veggie into your diet, this salad might just do it. You can make the dressing is bland or overpowering as you like, and play around with the ratio of the other ingredients, depending on your preferences. You can also incorporate the carrots in any way you like – I personally like to “shave” instead of shred them, because for whatever reason I feel they absorb the dressing better this way (and look cooler in pictures). Having said that, let’s get to the salad recipe.
I have mixed feelings about adapting the classical puttanesca dish to this baked basmati rice version, but truth be told it is so delicious that I think you’ll forgive me. I initially found a baked orzo puttanesca in Ottolenghi´s book Shelf, but I wanted to challenge myself and see if I could make a version of it with basmati rice instead. I left out the traditional anchovies, and changed the proportion of the ingredients around a bit, but the technique is still the same as Ottolenghi´s so feel free to check his original recipe out too. For mine, keep reading.
With Valentine´s Day just around the door, I thought of sharing this festive cheesecake with pecan nuts and caramel topping that my beautiful and extremely talented sister baked for me and some guests for our last New Year’s Eve party. You can find the Romanian recipe on her and her friends Sabina´s Instagram page at @povestiaromate, or keep reading for the English version. Whether you’re baking it for or with someone you love, or just doing it for yourself, I am sure you’ll love it as much as I did. And with that the #guestchefseries kicks off another season.










