I am a dude but I love to cook. My wife and friends tell me to try out for MasterChef. Who here says they can cook? I made a bad ass meatloaf tonight.
This is where I was a few years ago and I decided to start pushing myself. The cuisine in NYC is very diverse. I can now cook Asian and Indian food. I had never cooked a curry until this past year. Also cooking seafood I had to learn. Growing up in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas does not lend to a lot of fresh seafood. Mussels are underrated. Scallops are tasty. Grilled octopus is yummy.I would say I am great at cooking the things that I cook.
I am by no means a great cook.
Give me a list of ingredients and tell me to go to work and you're probably in trouble.
If I make you something I cook regularly, I'd say I'm pretty skilled at that.
Otherwise, I'm pretty limited and sheltered.
If I didn't cook, my family would have all starved. My wife can burn water.
Hummus, was taught this one by a friend of mine who was half Lebanese.If it's gay to have a recipies thread I don't want to be straight.
Hollywood lay out your recipies. Especially interested in the hummus.
BTW, https://www.thespicehouse.com/sumac this has become one of my favorites to add to my bbq rubs as well. It's also great on roasted chicken, just rub the chicken skin with some quality olive oil, then salt, pepper and sumac, or as a kabob seasoning for beef or chicken.Hummus, was taught this one by a friend of mine who was half Lebanese.
Hummus
1 can garbanzos/chick peas (14-16 oz) (if they are hard, you may need to cook them a bit to soften them up, but cool them off in the fridge before using)
1/4 cup tahini (sesame seed paste), but if in a super pinch - you can actually substitute 1/4 cup smooth peanut butter.
Juice of 1 lemon - must be fresh to be good.
1/8 cup quality olive oil + 1/8 cup to pour over top at finish.
2 cloves garlic, or roast 6 to 8 cloves and use them (they are quite a bit milder after roasting and adds a different flavor.)
1/2 to 1 teaspoon kosher salt (this will vary depending upon how salty the canned beans are) I generally drain the chickpea juice into a separate container and use it to "thin" things out if it's too thick.
Put everything in the food processor until smooth, reserving that 1/8 cup olive oil to top.
Optionals:
add a scant teaspoon of lemon zest
roast a small red pepper (sweet or hot) and add to the food processor
1/2 teaspoon (or to taste) of cumin and/or sumac (spice)
roasted garlic, crushed and put on top
My personal favorite? - top with some pomegranate seeds. Especially if you go heavy with the garlic, lemon and/or hot peppers as it offsets that acid or heat with a bit of sweet.
Feel free to experiment with toppings.