Dining Chez Moi

Food, cooking and entertaining are pervasive passions for me. Dining Chez Moi is my place to write about food, daily menus, marketing trips, food events, food adventures, and forays into dining out, especially if they involve ideas for home cooking. This is primarily a tour of my personal kitchen, rather than a restaurant review journal.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

My Favorite Tabouli

Tabouli is a wonderful accompaniment to hummus, flatbread and felafel. Serve it with feta cheese and Greek olives. This recipe for tabouli has been a favorite of mine for years. It's a great summer salad; good for picnics because it doesn't spoil easily.

You can buy Bulgur wheat at a middle-eastern specialty shop, or at Trader Joe's if you're lucky enough to live near one. If you can't find it anywhere nearby, you can substitute cous-cous.

This recipe is inspired by the delicious tabouli I had at Emily's Lebanese Deli, in Northeast Minneapolis, so I call it

Lebanese-style Tabouli
1 cup dry bulgur wheat
2-3 cups cold water
1-1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 cup fresh lemon or lime juice
1 tsp. crushed fresh garlic
1/2 tsp. dried mint
1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp. ground cloves
1/8 cup olive oil
fresh black pepper
1 packed cup freshly chopped parsley
1/2 cup chopped scallions (include the greens)
2 medium tomatoes, diced

First, prepare the bulgur by soaking it for 2-3 hours in cold water. Most recipes that use bulgur wheat instruct you to use boiling water, but I've found that this "cooks" the wheat a bit and makes it mushy and sticky. Soaking in cold water results in a fluffier grain that doesn't hold onto the water. This gives it more capacity to absorb the liquids in the ingredients, without getting soggy. Check it after an hour or two to see if it's gotten to a pleasing texture. It should be "al dente" like good pasta: still offering some resistance to the tooth.

When it reaches the "al dente" stage, drain it thoroughly by lining a colander or large strainer with cheesecloth. Dump the wet bulgur into the cheesecloth, gather up the corners and squeeze the water out of the wheat. While preparing the other ingredients, let the damp wheat sit for another hour, stirring and tossing it from time to time, to fluff it and dry it.

Add the lemon juice, garlic, oil, mint and seasonings and mix thoroughly.

Add the chopped parsley and onions and toss everything together.

Just before serving, add the chopped tomatoes. Correct the seasonings.

Serves 8

3 Comments:

Blogger Small Satori said...

i have a really wonderful Israeli tabboulah recipe (probably came from one of Paula Wolfert's books, darned if I can remember which at the moment) which uses only 1/3 cup bulgar, 3 cups of parsley and cumin & a pinch of hot pepper in addition to the cinnamon.

Try it...using the larger amount of parsley changes the character of the salad entirely. In place of the recommended Trukish red pepper, I use a medium hot paprika.

6:47 PM  
Blogger Rina said...

Hey, I have finally found your blog via your recent comment on mine. What a great idea, I think I am going to make Tabouli today, I love your recipe, I have a similar one, sans garlic.

10:09 AM  
Blogger Moi Frey said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

12:31 PM  

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