| ^recipe is written in the video link comments/description |
Dolmas instead of the kofte. I would personally order them — our local Greek and Uzbeki places have fantastic ones. Fritters and homemade pitta/hummus already sounds like a lot. I love the idea of a champagne pomegranate cocktail with this. Stew and soup could be made ahead, so that’s nice… I would do both only if you’re not doing the fish. Grilled fish is a nice side for people who want to go lighter. Perhaps instead of the soup, you could do Ottolenghi’s roasted cauliflower with green tahini sauce. It’s a lot of food, so I would go light on dessert. If you want to be fancy, a pavlova with fresh fruits and just a drop of rose water in the fruit can be very elegant. Or a fruit salad with semolina honey cake and ice cream. |
Very helpful, thank you. Leaning toward: apps - hummus (buy or make day before)/pita, fritters, dolmas (maybe purchase but I would love to make them) main - stew (make day before, skim fat, etc), eggplant puree, shepherd's salad, grilled fish skewer dessert - still leaning toward a chocolate pots de creme but with rosewater whipped cream; mostly because I know the pots de creme are delicious and small/individual; the pavlova sounds nice and I did come across a recipe with rose water. I haven't made one before so that's my hesitation. It looks lovely! cocktails - still settling on these but will probably do one of the rosewater/pomegranate champagne cocktails and possibly the mezcal or bourbon/date drinks all suggested here. Thanks for flagging the cauliflower soup! That is perfect if I do end up doing a soup instead of the fish. I was thinking the red lentil one would be heavier than I would like. I'll head to a middle eastern market tomorrow and see if that solidifies some ideas! This board has been a great help! Thank you! |
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My favorite Middle Eastern dessert is Mutabbaq, which is basically a sweetened, orange blossom flavored cheese in filo pastry. It's really easy to make too.
Ottolenghi has a recipe for it in his book Jerusalem. I used to live in the Middle East and made this for dessert whenever I had people over for dinner. Everyone loved it. |