Middle Eastern
Turkischer
(Turkish Coffee)
Spinach Salad with Grilled Red Onion and Tahini Vinaigrette
Tahini, a creamy sesame seed paste, adds a new twist to the dressing for the salad.
Tomato and Cucumber Salad with Pita Bread and Za'atar
A typical Israeli breakfast selection would include this salad (either already prepared or with the vegetables available), the pita bread, and Za'atar along with fresh goat's — or cow's — milk cheeses, yogurt, hummus, hard-boiled eggs, olives, and avocados (in season).
Roasted Eggplant Salad with Capers and Onions
Roasted eggplant spreads and salads come in many variations throughout Greece and are usually embellished with local flavor. In the North, yogurt is often added to the eggplants, for example, throughout the Cyclades, it is the ubiquitous caper and tomato that season this delicious dish.
Smoky Chipotle Hummus with Garlic Bagel Chips
If you don't have time to make your own hummus, buy some at the market or specialty foods store, and mix in chipotle chilies and cumin to taste.
Feta and Walnut Phyllo Rolls
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 1 1/4 hr
Savory pastries are a popular element of Turkish cuisine, with a seemingly endless number of shapes and fillings. These little rolls are called sigara böregi, or pastry cigars, because of their shape.
Bulgur Salad with Chickpeas, Roasted Peppers, and Spiced Cumin Dressing
Fine-grain bulgur, sometimes labeled "good for tabbouleh," is essential to this recipe, because coarsely ground bulgur will not soften when soaked in boiling water. A late-season tomato salad or sautéed cherry tomatoes with Indian flavors complete this meal.
Chopped Arabic Salad
This salad is wonderfully refreshing even without purslane, but if you can find the green at your produce market, it's worth using for the nice crunch it adds.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 30 min
Chick-Peas and Swiss Chard
Pairing chick-peas and Swiss chard is nothing new—Armenians have been doing it for generations. But with great tomatoes and a squeeze of lemon, this quick vegetable stew is as fresh as summer. If you can’t find Swiss chard, spinach is an authentic substitute.
Cooked Olive Salad
You could also serve it on its own with crackers or bread, or offer it as a relish for grilled chicken or fish. It can be made with black olives as well as with green.
Baked Kibbeh
The fine bulgur in this recipe might seem like a specialty ingredient, but it is actually in most supermarkets, near the rice, under the name Near East Taboule Wheat Salad Mix (you won't need the seasoning packet).
Active time: 40 min Start to finish: 2 hr
Golden Couscous
This recipe is an accompaniment for Moroccan Lamb Kebabs.
Persian Rice with Pistachios and Dill
Tah-dig—the crunchy crust of rice on the bottom of the pot—is considered by many to be the prize of Persian rice. Here it is rivaled by the surprise of pistachios, whose natural sweetness is brought out by the dill.
Falafel
These hearty falafel are equally delicious eaten alone or piled into pita bread with lettuce, tomato, onion, and tahini sauce.
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 13 3/4 hr (includes soaking chickpeas)
Persian Rice Salad
Nuts, lemon juice, and fresh herbs punch up this terrific side dish.
Halvah
Jews from Persia (present-day Iran) are especially proud of Queen Esther's role in the holiday of Purim. A favorite dish of Iranian children is halvah, which they eat after they break the fast of Esther, observed on Adar 13. At nursery school, Merissa learned this recipe for halvah from an Iranian teacher. In between tastes, the children played with Esther and Ahasuerus marionettes they had made with the help of their teacher.