Jared’s Street Shawarma

Jared’s Street Shawarma

Serves 4

 This easy lamb shawarma is inspired by classic street food you can find all over the Middle East, from Egypt to Israel to Palestine. The yogurt marinade adds the perfect tangy tenderness to the lamb, and don’t skip out on the cornichon pickles — they cut through the richness and brighten up the whole party.

 This recipe also makes laffa, an Iraqi-Israeli flatbread to wrap up your shawarma, and tzatziki sauce, which pairs wonderfully with the Mediterranean spices. (And it’s convenient, because you’re already using many of the ingredients for the shawarma meat and toppings, too!) Hummus and amba, a fermented mango sauce, are other traditional spreads you could use as well. And in Israel, they’ll throw French fries in your shawarma too — feel free to go wild with toppings!

 

Ingredients:

 

From France 44:

·         1 lb fresh F44 lamb (chop, sirloin, shoulder steak, or T-bone are all fine!)

·         2 T New York Shuk Shawarma spice blend

·         ¾ cup Kalona Greek yogurt, divided (¼ cup for marinade; ½ cup for tzatziki sauce)

·         Cornichon pickles

·         Essex Lesbos feta cheese

·         2 balls of F44 pizza dough, thawed

 

From your pantry:

·         1 cucumber, cut in half (you’ll need both halves!)

·         2 cloves of garlic

·         1 T lemon juice

·         2 tsp olive oil, plus a little more for cooking

·         1 tsp dill

·         1 tomato

·         Kosher salt & pepper

 1.    Remove lamb bones (if necessary) and cut meat into small pieces, about 1 inch wide and ½ inch long.

2.    Combine ¼ cup yogurt, spice blend, and a pinch of kosher salt and pepper in a bowl. Add lamb and coat well with the yogurt marinade. Cover and refrigerate for at least an hour or overnight.

 3.            Meanwhile, prepare tzatziki sauce: Grate or mince half the cucumber (no need to peel it) and squeeze it out well. Grate/mince garlic.

4.            In a medium bowl, mix the remaining ½ cup yogurt, cucumber, garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, dill, and a pinch of salt. Cover and refrigerate to let the flavors combine while you keep cooking — this can be done the day before, too.

 5.            To cook the lamb: Sprinkle about 1 teaspoon of kosher salt over the meat. (If all you have is table salt, use ½ teaspoon.) Put about a teaspoon of olive oil into a frying pan over medium heat and add the lamb. Don’t rub off extra marinade; leave it on so it caramelizes.

6.            Saute, stirring often, until the meat is cooked through (at least 145ºF) and very crispy but not charred, around 10 minutes.

 7.            Meanwhile, prepare flatbread: Split both pizza dough balls in half. You can sprinkle a little flour if you need. Stretch out each piece until it’s approximately dinner-plate-sized, making sure not to poke any holes.

8.            Heat a large frying pan on medium-low. Working one flatbread at a time, drizzle a little olive oil on the pan and place the dough into the pan to fry.

9.            Flip when it becomes golden with a few brown spots — about 2-3 minutes per side. Store covered under a towel or in a warm oven to keep warm until ready to serve.

 10.          Prepare fixings: Chop cornichons, tomato, and the other half of the cucumber. 

 11.          Assemble: Lay out a flatbread on a plate and spread a layer of tzatziki. Add lamb down the center, and top with chopped cucumber and tomato, lots of cornichons, and crumbled Essex feta. Roll up in tin foil and enjoy!

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Dio’s refreshing shrub drink — yes even in winter.

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I am not usually one for making fancy cocktails, but shrubs are dear to my heart. I have made them on my own before (although that is usually a summertime project) and was delighted to see that we started carrying some of INNA shrub mixes - you might recognize them for their fantastic jams that we carry. 

Shrubs have three main ingredients: fruit, sugar, and vinegar. Historically, they were made as a way to preserve fruit, plus there’s the bonus health benefits of drinking vinegar (look it up, people have been doing it for ages!)

We carry a few different INNA shrub flavors but I opted for grapefruit, as that is one of my favorite flavors in general, plus I had some blood oranges at home to pair it with. Shrub cocktails (or mocktails) are super easy and customizable. I made mine with gin, but you can also add it to white wine to make a grapefruit aperitif, tequila for a grapefruit shrub paloma, (insert your alcohol of choice here), or hold the alcohol and just add it to seltzer water for a bright refreshing drink. 

No, it doesn’t taste too much like vinegar. Yes, it is delicious and great with herbs. 

I know I’m supposed to give you a complete recipe here, but it’s really just “add splashes until you like the taste”. Here’s what I made: 

  • 1 oz. Grapefruit Shrub

  • 1 oz. Gin

  • Seltzer (3-4oz)

  • Sprig of thyme

  • Freshly squeezed Blood Orange, plus some slices for aesthetic purpose

  • Serve over ice

 Get creative with this one! There are endless options. Enjoy.

Carol Ann's Speck Pasta

Speck Pasta

Serves 2-3

 

It’s early in the week, you can’t reward yourself with take-out just yet, but don’t really have much energy to dedicate towards cooking. This is the meal to make. You can be in and out of the kitchen in 30 minutes with this meal and have minimal clean up. There’s a good chance you have at least the onion in your pantry, you may even have the heavy whipping cream in your fridge (or half & half works in a pinch).

 Ingredients 

I package (250g) Pappardelle Egg Pasta

4 oz sliced Speck, cut in ¼ inch strips

1 medium onion diced

1 cup heavy whipping cream

4 oz Alpine cheese (such as Gruyere or Comte), grated

salt & pepper 

Vegetable oil



1.    Heat 2 tsp of vegetable oil in pan over medium high heat. Add speck, cook 2-4 minutes until crispy. Remove from pan with slotted spoon to paper towel lined plate.

2.    Heat 3 qts water in separate pot for pasta.

3.    Heat 1 TBSP vegetable oil in now empty pan over medium heat, add onions and ½ tsp salt. Cook until onions are softened 8-10 minutes. Add heavy whipping cream, lower heat to medium low, cook until slightly thickened 5-8 minutes.

4.    Add 1 tsp salt to boiling water cook pasta 2-4 minutes until al dente. Before draining, save ½ cup pasta water.

5.    Once sauce has thickened add grated cheese and salt and pepper to taste. Add pasta, coating noodles with sauce. Add pasta water 1 TBSP at a time until desired consistency is reached. Portion, noodles in bowls and serve with crispy speck on top!

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3 Ways To Up Your Snack Game

salmon_bagel I've always thought the word "snack" was particularly cute. If it were personified, it might be a fluffy, pink-nosed bunny hopping in and out of the edges of your day, softly cooing, "Time for a snack! Time for a snack!" Yes, time for a snack. A mini treat. A pre-meal meal. Something small, right?

A lot of us grow up learning that snacks are innately insubstantial and menial, like a handful of peanut butter M&Ms or grapes or a bag of chips. We think of them as the doesn't-really-count prelude to a steak dinner. But a snack can be so much more. In fact, it can actually satisfy that hungry hole in your belly while being delicious, too.

One of our favorite ways to snack at the Cheese Shop is to get creative with our dips and spreads. Check out these three ways to have a snack that won't leave you wanting:

1. Bagels + Smoked Salmon Spread (pictured above) If you thought bagels were just for breakfast, you thought wrong. Spread a sesame bagel with some classic smoked salmon spread (made with dill and cream cheese, of course!), top it with some crunchy cucumber slices, and YUM.

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2. Veggies + Dip Up your veggie intake by dunking raw carrots, zucchini, and celery sticks in our lemony and light artichoke tarragon dip (on the left) or our spicy pimento cheese dip (on the right). That pimento cheese is also wicked when melted on toast.

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3. Pasta + Smoked Paprika Parmesan And when you need to go a little heartier, toss some hot pasta with a few healthy spoonfuls of smoked paprika parmesan dip and dig in. Not bad with a happy hour glass of wine too, I might add.

Eat hearty!

Baby Goats Are Budding!

On goat dairy farms, March is a pretty common time for kidding to go down. Kidding refers to the birth of baby goats. It's an exciting, energetic, and slightly stressful time of year for goat farmers. After all, for about 5 months (the most common gestation time for most breeds) farmers and does (female goats) alike have been anxiously awaiting the arrival of squirming little kids.

Even better than a collection of adorable baby animals to cuddle? Goats' milk! Once a doe has given birth (often to triplets, by the way) she will begin to produce milk. If she's milked continuously, she'll provide her farmer with 10 months-worth of delicious white stuff.

We love the tangy expression of goats' milk cheese at our cheese counters, so spring is an exciting time of year. It means we can begin looking forward to another round of some of our favorite cheeses from Vermont Creamery and other producers.

For lots of swoon-worthy photos of kidding season, check out Fat Toad Farm's website. They make the most luxurious goats' milk caramel, too, which we happily carry on our shelves. For an extra seasonal treat, mix their caramel into this St. Patrick's Day cocktail recipe:

irish_cream

GOAT'S MILK CARAMEL IRISH CREAM Yields 1/2 gallon to share | Adapted from Fat Toad Farm

1 cup heavy cream 1 cup whole milk 2 cups Irish Whiskey 8 oz Fat Toad Farm Goat's Milk Caramel 14 oz sweetened condensed milk 1/4 cup chocolate syrup 2 teaspoons instant coffee 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 1 teaspoon almond extract

Put everything into a blender and blend for 30 seconds. Pour over ice and enjoy!

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How To Stay Warm

fondue_image In Minnesota, it's frigid and snowy outside. But inside our houses, we melt nutty cheeses in little pots, add a little white wine and some spices for oomf, and dip things into this smooth cheesy mess all day long. It's a winter ritual. It's a delicious way to stay warm.

Classic Cheese Fondue

1 clove garlic, minced 1/2 pound Gruyère, grated 1/3 pound AppenzellerComté Melodie, grated 3 tablespoons unbleached all-purpose flour 1 3/4 cup Petit Roubie Picpoul de Pinet wine 1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg A splash or two of Kammer Black Forest Kirschwasser (optional)

Toss the cheese with the flour. Rub the interior of a medium saucepan with the peeled garlic. Place over medium heat and the add wine. Bring to a simmer and add the cheese mixture, one handful at a time. Stir in the nutmeg and minced garlic.

Stir over low heat until smooth and cheese is melted and bubbling. Add a splash or two of kirsch and continue stirring until it starts to bubble just a bit. Transfer cheese mixture to a fondue pot and you’re ready to go! Don’t forget to stir frequently.

Try dipping hunks of baguette, blanched vegetables, tiny cornichons, or cubes of salami. The possibilities are endless, even if your stomach isn’t. Enjoy!

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