Open Sesame
$22.95
Title | Range | Discount |
---|---|---|
Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
- Description
- Additional information
Description
Get creative with these 45 globally inspired recipes—each with a unique sesame twist—in this stylish, palate-pleasing cookbook.
Like a little black dress, tahini can seamlessly transition from day to night, from savory to sweet. Reimagine how tahini can fit into your everyday repertoire with all the style and whimsy from the host of the James Beard-nominated Your Last Meal podcast Rachel Belle.
This creamy, nutty ingredient is more than just a cult condiment du jour:
- It’s an allergy-friendly nut substitute!
- Replaces dairy in vegan dishes!
- Full of heart-heathy fats, plant-based protein, and chock-full of essential vitamins!
- Adds a roasty-toasty, elevated flavor to many desserts!
Sprinkle some sesame sparkle into your life with recipes that Isaac Mizrahi calls “slightly insane” but “irresistible,” including:
- Everything-Including-the-Bagel Salad
- Falafel-Spiced Tahini Deviled Eggs with Crispy Chickpeas
- Chocolate Miso Whoopie Pies with Tahini Cream
- and, of course, Ethereally Creamy Israeli-Style Hummus (now available in traditional, golden, and hot pink!)
These forty-five inventive recipes each have a global flair and a sesame twist—plus a robust (and surprising) dessert section to hit that sweet spot to please even the most jaded tahiniphile.Contents
Foreword by Isaac Mizrahi
Introduction
Morning Meals
Congee with Sesame Soy Mushrooms and Jammy Korean Marinated Eggs (mayak gyeran)
Roasted Strawberry Toast with Goat Cheese and Tahini
Aleppo Spiced Tahini Yogurt with Burst Tomatoes and Sesame Fried Egg
Tropical Tahini Pineapple Smoothie
Chonky Tahini Maple Granola with Pistachios and Coconut
Sesame Crusted Waffles with Tahini and Maple
Party Snacks
Furikake Chex Mix
Falafel-Spiced Tahini Deviled Eggs with Crispy Chickpeas
Pita Chip Nachos with Tahini Feta Queso & Chicken Shawarma
Ethereally Creamy Israeli-Style Hummus
Golden Hummus
(or Hot Pink Hummus! Page )
Rustic Sesame Lavash Crackers
Tahini, Sour Cream & Caramelized Onion Dip
Onigiri with Homemade Furikake
Mains and Sides
Everything Including the Bagel Salad
Beet Salad with Garlicky Tahini & Mint Gremolata
Roasted Kabocha Squash with Tangy Miso Tahini Drizzle
Crushed Potatoes with Tahini Feta Queso and Olive Tapenade
Gingery Sesame Chicken Soup with Rice Noodles
Rainbow Farro Bowls with Herby Tahini Sauce
Cozy Kitchari with Cilantro-Tahini Sauce
Vietnamese Fresh Rolls with Tahini Hoisin Dipping Sauce
Cold Sesame Soba with Summer Veg
Beef Arayes with Garlicky Tahini Sauce
Challah Chicken Schnitzel “Shabbat Sandwiches”
Pasta with Sesame Chicken Mince and Creamy Lime-Basil Sauce
Steak Tacos with Charred Corn-Sesame Relish
Gingery Chicken Meatballs with Sesame Chile Crisp Glaze
Weeknight Poke Bowls
Crispy Sesame Schnitzel’d Mushrooms
Sweet Things
Chocolate Miso Whoopie Pies with Tahini Cream
Tahini Frangipane Apricot Galette
Tender Tahini Almond Cake with Strawberries and Cream
No-Bake Berry Tahini Layer Bars
Tahini Banoffee Pie
Black Sesame Shoothie
Crisp Sesame Brittle
Super Sesame Sundaes with Sesame Brittle, Chocolate Tahini Magic Shell and Tahini Whipped Cream
Acknowledgments
IndexRachel Belle is the creator and host of Your Last Meal podcast, a James Beard Award finalist, and host of The Nosh with Rachel Belle, a food-themed TV show on Seattle’s Cascade PBS. She spent twenty years as a broadcast journalist, winning the national Edward R Murrow Award for news radio feature reporting; was named Seattle’s Best FM Radio Personality by Seattle Weekly; and did a bunch of food writing for many publications that no longer exist (loved you, Lucky Peach!) Rachel is an enthusiastic home cook and cookbook recipe tester who especially loves cooking in campervans and over campfires. She doesn’t believe in blueberry bagels and pets every single cat she sees. Her relatives claim to have invented both the tube top and the bagel dog. She lives in Seattle, Washington.Introduction
Be honest. Have you ever finished an entire jar of tahini? How many times have you bought tahini for, say, a hummus recipe or a salad dressing, used ¼ cup and then watched it slowly migrate to the back of the refrigerator, unsure of what to do with the rest? *slowly raises hand*
Here at Open Sesame we believe in No Tahini Left Behind!
Like a little black dress, tahini can seamlessly transition from day to night, from savory to sweet, from the Middle East to the Midwest, with a healthy drizzle baked into your morning granola, poured over Pita Chip Nachos (page XX) in the form of creamy Tahini Feta Queso (page XX) and, for dessert, Chocolate Miso Whoopie Pies with Tahini Cream (page XX). Tahini: it’s not just for hummus! But we’ll show you how to make a fantastic version of that, too.
This book is a celebration of sesame in its many forms: the distinct, earthy warmth of sesame oil bobbing on the surface of a noodle soup, the toasty crunch of a sesame seed crusted mushroom schnitzel, and the deep, dark nuttiness of black sesame paste blended with dates, banana, and milk.
But the origin story of this book is rooted in a Tahini Epiphany™.
Growing up in the 1980s with an Israeli-raised dad, my family ate a fair amount of chhhoumoose. That’s how we pronounce hummus—the Hebrew way—with the signature guttural, phlegm clearing roll in the back of the throat (she’s one page into her cookbook and she’s already said phlegm?). Chhhhhouuumouuuse! This was before “hummus” was a household name, before you could buy seven varieties (pumpkin spice hummus! chocolate hummus!) at Trader Joe’s. This was before we’d ever heard of Trader Joe’s!
Hummus is simple: a blend of chickpeas, tahini, lemon, garlic, ice water, and salt. But every time I made a batch in my own kitchen, it never tasted quite right. I tried everything: tirelessly peeling the skins off every single garbanzo bean, soaking dried beans in baking soda-spiked water. The hummus I ordered in restaurants, or bought from the supermarket, wasn’t any better.
One night, after a performance at the Mercer Island, Washington JCC, the audience was treated to a Middle Eastern nosh. I halfheartedly scooped an obligatory blob of paprika-dusted hummus onto my tiny plate, dragged a wedge of pita through it and, reader, I immediately lost my mind.
“Who made this hummus!?” I squawked, interrupting groups of kibbitzing strangers with my broken record question. This was it! The flavor I’d been chasing for over a decade! I was given the phone number of the caterer, an Israeli man my father’s age, and the next weekend I was standing in Eli Lahav’s kitchen watching him make chhhoumoose.
He cranked open a giant can of chickpeas from a restaurant supply store, glugged an ungodly amount of tahini into the food processor, and after a single taste it became clear: delicious hummus relies completely on delicious tahini! I needed better tahini and lots of it.
Not long after, I interviewed the chef-owner of Seattle’s Aviv Hummus Bar for my podcast, Your Last Meal. Aviv serves life-changing hummus, the best I’ve tasted outside Israel, and although he wouldn’t share the brand of tahini he uses, he gave me a clue: it must be made in Israel.
A shipment of Har Bracha tahini later, I stood in my kitchen in disbelief: I did it! I finally made the good hummus! I have since become a tahini evangelist: sending friends home with my favorite brands, typing up and emailing out my hummus recipe, and bringing it to potlucks. And now (mwahaha) I have an entire book to proselytize!
But this book is so much more than hummus, or even Middle Eastern cuisine! Tahini is your plant-based ticket to creaminess, an understudy for peanut butter when allergies are at play and its mild nuttiness was destined for desserts.
Sesame is one of the most ancient ingredients, eaten by humans for thousands of years. Grown in Asia, Africa, and South America, and exported around the world, it finds its way into the kitchens of many, many cultures.
In Open Sesame, we’ll explore some well-known Asian and Middle Eastern applications for sesame, get creative with takes on Mexican and Indian dishes and sprinkle sesame on some American classics.
Not All Tahini Is Created Equal!
Tahini is made from a single ingredient: toasted sesame seeds. That’s it! Just roasty toasty, teeny tiny sesame seeds ground down to a silky, beige, peanut-buttery paste. No salt. No added oil. Just sesame.
But each brand of tahini can taste quite different depending on where the sesame seeds were grown, what variety they are, if they’re hulled (creamy and mild) or unhulled (gritty and bitter), how deeply they’re roasted and how many months (or years!) that jar has been languishing on the shelf. Unfortunately, you rarely see any of that information on the label!
But choosing a good tahini is important! A bitter tahini can muck up a dish (especially in hummus and sauces where the tahini is front and center) and trick you into thinking the recipe is to blame.
So how do you choose a tasty tahini? Allow me to tahinisplain you:
· White Humera sesame seeds, grown in the northwest corner of Ethiopia, are considered the world’s best. All Israeli tahini (or tahina) is made from Humera seeds and when I researched where my favorite brands of tahini were made, coincidentally they were all from Israel! Turkey, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia are also importers of Humera sesame, but it’s unclear if all their tahini is made with it.
· Shop at a Middle Eastern or international market. If you love to cook, you probably love taking field trips to foreign grocery stores! While mainstream supermarkets can carry good tahini, you’ll find a larger variety at a specialty store. Choose a couple bottles of tahini, from different countries, and see what you like! If you don’t have a market in your area, order popular brands online (my suggestions are below).
· Check the expiration date! This might sound obvious, but I recently came home with one expired jar of tahini and another that had been bottled more than a year before (it wasn’t technically expired, but definitely not fresh). Next time I’ll take my own advice!
· Fresh tahini should be easy to stir! If you’re struggling with claylike clumps or a thick layer of murky oil, it’s probably past its prime. If the tahini is clumpy, but still tastes good, scrape it into a food processor and blitz it back to silky smoothness.
· I’m loving the squeeze bottles of tahini. While it doesn’t affect flavor, having the ability to shake a bottle (no stirring!) and squirt tahini directly onto my waffles (recipe on page xx) or into a tablespoon has me reaching for the tahini far more often.
My Favorite Tahinis
Har Bracha
Soom (their dark chocolate tahini with sea salt is swoonworthy!)
Mighty Tahini
Haddar by Baracke
Seed & Mill
Tahini Tips
· Tahini + cold water sitting in a tree! The best way to thin tahini into a sauce or a dressing is with cold water. Tahini tends to seize up when blended, but the cold water smooths it right out. Add a little at a time until you get the texture you want.
· Mix your tahini well before each use!
· Store open jars of tahini in a cool, dark place or in the fridge.
· If you’re left with a small amount of tahini at the bottom of a jar, make a dressing or sauce by adding your other ingredients directly into the jar and shaking vigorously.CN
Additional information
Weight | 13 oz |
---|---|
Dimensions | 6.7500 × 8.0000 in |
Imprint | |
Format | |
ISBN-13 | |
ISBN-10 | |
Author | |
Audience | |
BISAC | |
Subjects | Middle Eastern cookbook, Cookbooks, medieval, cookbook, german, jewish, cook book, esoteric, spirit, cooking gifts, jewish books, cook books, Recipes, CKB105000, cooking books, jewish gifts, jewish cookbook, middle eastern cookbooks, kosher cookbooks, CKB049000, jewish cooking, african cookbook, jewish cookbooks, self help, Mythology, occult, philosophy, Christian, anthropology, inspirational, adventure, historical, crime, psychology, spirituality, theology, buddhism, health, biography, classic, spiritual, thriller, military, mystery, Cooking, Food |