Sunday, November 17, 2024

Cooking Like a Copycat (Dukkah)

DEBORAH CROMBIE: A few weeks ago, my daughter and I went to a very special event at a local restaurant, Lucia, in Dallas. The chef, David Uygur, was a finalist for the 2024 James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef, and the multi-course dinner was hosted by the James Beard Foundation. The food was every bit as fabulous as we'd read, the evening was memorable, but that is a whole other post. The point of today's musing is the gifts that Chef David sent home with the attendees.



Among them was a small bottle of Chef David's Pecan Dukkah. What on earth is dukkah, you are probably wondering! Dukkah is a Middle Eastern spice blend made with fragrant spices and toasted nuts. I discovered it a few years ago when Trader Joe's carried it temporarily, and I loved it, but then it disappeared and I hadn't come across it again until our dinner that night. Dukkah can be sprinkled on anything as a topping or seasoning, but it's most commonly used, along with olive oil, as a dip for bread.

And, oh my gosh, this dukkah was to die for!! (Sounds like a book title--Dukkah to Die For!) By the time I'd used up two-thirds of the little jar, it occurred to me that (since Chef David did NOT include his secret recipe) I ought to try to duplicate it while I still had some to use for comparison.

I started with a basic pecan dukkah recipe I found online, roughly:

3/4 cup pecans

1/2 cup almonds

2 tbs sesame seeds

1 tbs coriander seed, roughly ground in a mortar and pestle

1 tsp cumin seed, as above

1 tsp fennel seed, as above (actual recipe called for ground spices but I much prefer to grind the whole seeds myself)

1/2 tsp pepper

1/2 tsp salt

And nuts and seeds to a food processor and pulse until they form a coarse meal. Nothing bigger than the size of a pea, but not too much or mixture will turn into nut butter.

Turn nut mixture into dry skillet on medium-low heat for three or four minutes, stirring every few seconds. Turn heat to low and add spices. Stir for another three or four minutes until mixture is fragrant.

Well, hmm. That was perfectly acceptable, but it didn't have the color or the flavor of Chef David's. So I added:

Aleppo pepper (lovely stuff!)

Zatar

Smoked Maldon sea salt

Paprika, and a smidgen of smoked paprika

I can't give any amounts because it was a lot of adding and stirring and tasting. Finally, I added a tiny, tiny pinch of turmeric, mostly for the color, but you have to be careful as turmeric is bitter and very strong. I don't think I'd add next time.

Here's my finished batch in the skillet (after MUCH tasting.)




Here's Chef David's jar on the left and mine on the right.




And here is some of my dukkah on a plate with extra virgin olive oil and a piece of pan-loaf sourdough from my local bakery.


You just take the bread and mop, adding more dukkah or more olive oil as needed. I could quite literally make myself sick on this stuff--it is so addictive!

The final verdict on my copy cat attempt? 

Well, sigh, my dukkah is delicious, but not as good as Chef David's. 

Maybe this is because he's an award winning chef? But it was a game attempt, and I have some ideas for next time. (Use all pecans, no almonds, and toast them before adding to the food processor, for starters. And pre-toast the sesame seeds. Chef David's dukkah had a much toastier flavor and aroma.) 

So, dear Reds and readers, have you ever tried to copy a dish that you liked, just from taste? And how did it turn out?


94 comments:

  1. I enjoy cooking, but I've never been tempted to try to re-create an exact copy of a dish/seasoning/spice that I've had, even if I really enjoyed it. I am in awe of your patient persistence and of your ability to figure out exactly what to add . . . .

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    1. I was pretty tired by the end of the afternoon, Joan, but then I did have the (ongoing) satisfaction of eating what I made, and my version is pretty good!

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  2. I’m very impressed! My sense of taste is not good enough to even attempt to dupe the dukkah!

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    1. Dupe the dukkah! I love that! I'll bet you can find some easily enough in Long Beach, Lisa!

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  3. That dukkah sounds yummy! A couple of local restaurants serve delicious seafood stews. One is Cajun, one is Portuguese. When I try to duplicate one or the other, it's good - but never quite as good.

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    1. I'll bet your version is still really good, Edith! I love seafood stew so would be happy to try your recipe!

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  4. Wow, hats off to you, Debs, for all that work to replicate the dukkah (which is new to me). Maybe the most memorable dish I've tried to replicate is my mother's roast beef. It was an absolute failure. I've tried a few times but with no success. I think the secret ingredient is missing: my mother.

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    1. I understand you completely Amanda. Once a year I make my grandmother’s pumpkin pie. It is good but never as much as my grandmother’s because she is missing.
      Danielle

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    2. Oh, yes, Amanda. There are things my mother and grandmother made that I would never try to duplicate. They wouldn't be the same.

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  5. Thanks for this introduction to dukkah, Debs, which I never heard of. If I can find a source of decent pecans in Bern (they are a New World nut, and the ones from our main grocery store chain are low on taste and high on bitterness), I'll try to make some. As for imitating a recipe, when my husband and I were newlyweds in Bern, we were invited to Sunday lunch with my husband's best Swiss friend and his wife (now one of my best friends!) at his wife's parents' home. The parents were lovely people, and the mother, who was from the French-speaking part of Switzerland, made a fabulous rabbit stew with lots of carrots and mushrooms, white wine, mustard, and many unknown ingredients. It was a delicious revelation to me, and since then, I've been trying to duplicate it. By now, I've gotten so used to my version that I don't remember my friend's mother's version anymore, except to be convinced that I'll never be able to equal it!

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    1. That sound delicious, Kim, and your guests are probably trying to duplicate yours!

      You don't need to use pecans for the dukkah. Hazelnuts are used in Egypt, or you could use almonds or walnuts or a combination. The most important thing is for the nuts to be fresh. David Uygur uses pecans I think because he grew up in East Texas and that is big pecan country. (We live surrounded by huge old pecans, but unfortunately they are the native trees and not the commercial papershells. The squirrels, however, adore them.

      David Uygur's father was a Turkish journalist. Just how he ended up in Longview, Texas, I don't know, but it must be a good story.

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    2. My father grew up in Monroe, Louisiana (almost East Texas!), and his father had a small pecan grove. Once a year, wherever we were living, my grandfather used to send us a box of large, fresh, delicious pecans. I loved them then and I miss them now. It's good to know that I can make dukkah out of whatever nuts are the best in Bern!

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    3. My uncle was president of Diamond Walnut in California, and every year he would send us a huge can of walnut pieces. My baker-mother was in hog heaven! I now keep nuts in the freezer until I need them.

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  6. DEBS: Good attempt at replicating David's dukkah!
    I am cautiousc about using store-bought spice blends since I still have this chili pepper allergy, as I found out last June when my eye swelled shut & I had blurred vision for 6 weeks. No BBQ rubs or Cajun or Mexican or Middle Eastern or Thai spice blends. Za'tar is ok if it only contains thyme, sumac, sesame seeds & salt but some places add chili pepper. I also stopped using Aleppo pepper.

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    1. Bummer Grace, but you're good at figuring things out, so that's a blessing!

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    2. What a scary reaction, Grace. It's a good thing you didn't need to be able to drive, but it must have made reading difficult, too. Glad you figured it out!

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    3. Avoidance is the best strategy for me right now as the allergic reaction has been getting worse in recent years.
      Harissa, the African spice paste, is another popular ingredient popping up at many different eateries that I have to skip.

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    4. Oh, what a shame, Grace! Is black pepper okay?

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    5. I have no problem using black pepper. And I can also eat paprika again since my allergic reaction to nightshades like sweet bell peppers has gone away. Chile peppers are the main problem.

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  7. I would not try to duplicate anything by taste, but my husband would and has with some success. I’m not thinking of any examples off the top of my head. It’s been a while.
    Good job on the dukkah trial.

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    1. Thanks, Brenda. Maybe you can get your hub to try making dukkah!

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  8. I'm not an adventurous cooker, but I applaud you for recreating his recipe

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    1. And BREAKING NEWS! Dru is in THE BACK ROOM tonight! Join us! Https://the-back-room.org. With Kris, of course, and Wendy Walker and more!

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  9. My husband won a local cookie baking contest once when one of the “expert” bakers judging the contest was convinced his cookie contained cardamom. It did not and he did not ever tell her either.

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  10. Debs, David Lebovitz had a recipe for Dukkah in his newsletter this week! I'll have to look at the ingredients...

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    1. What a coincidence!

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    2. Yes, I did see that, but was so brain dead by the end of the day yesterday that I forgot! I think his recipe is a good basic one, and I will use that next time, then do a little tweaking.

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  11. Wow, Debs, well done! I have tried to duplicate my grandmother's chocolate cake, she added a splash of Canadian Club Whiskey, but never came close. Also, her sugar cookies were my very favorites, and I have come close but alas. Amanda mentioned a similar situation with her mom's recipe.

    Speaking of Grammas and cookies, I always bring baked goods when we go visit the kids. Last trip, 9 year old Quinn said, "Gramma, your cookies are always the best! You must use a secret ingredient! What is your secret ingredient, Gramma?"
    "It's love, Quinn. That's what I add to your cookies."

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    1. Aw, what a sweet boy he is, Judy.

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    2. Aw, that's so sweet, Judy!! I remember years ago trying to duplicate my grandmother's snickerdoodles, but they were just not the same. I've never attempted my mom's famous lemon meringue pie, and I don't know what recipe she used.

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  12. I'm so impressed. I'd never even heard of some of the ingredients you were playing with so patiently, trying this one and that one, like someone sitting at a piano sounding one note at a time and listening for the reverberation. I have an undeveloped palate that is mostly capable of "yum" and "yech." The only item I've ever experimented with in cooking is baking different yeast breads, and that was years ago. Nowadays I simply make whole wheat sour milk bread day in and day out (actually, now that the kids are gone, week in and week out).

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    1. Oops, that was me, Selden.

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    2. Seldon your bread recipe sounds great - would you mind sharing it?

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    3. Anonymous, it is a version of the Buttermilk Bread from Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book. I have baked 100% whole wheat bread from Laurel's Kitchen for forty years. I used to knead all my bread by hand, a dependable upper body workout. Then I began took a different job and didn't have the time. I also developed arthritis in my hands. I now have a breadmaker. This is the basic recipe that I use for sour milk bread (I had cows so had a lot of milk, but since I didn't make butter too often -- my kids preferred homemade ice cream to homemade butter -- I just sour regular milk).

      1 1/4 cup milk
      vinegar to bring the measure to a generous 1 1/3 cup
      2 T sugar
      2 t salt
      3 cups whole wheat flour (I buy King Arthur)
      2 t dry yeast (nestled in the flour)

      I could program the breadmaker but I have made ww bread for so long that I do everything by eye. I set it to basic bread dough and when it calls for additions, I add:

      2-4 T cold butter cut in chips (2 T for normal sandwich bread, 4 T for fancy dinner rolls)

      WW flour is so changeable with the seasons I adjust the flour/milk fractionally until I have a nice elastic mix.

      I mostly use the breadmaker as a kneader, due to the arthritis in my hands and now carpal tunnel in both wrists. I never actually bake the bread in the breadmaker, though I'm sure if I took the time to program it I could. The trick with 100% whole wheat bread is to knead the heck out of it, to "wake up the gluten," as Laurel says. So I use the breadmaker for this. Once it is kneaded and has risen and been kneaded twice I remove it from the breadmaker and put it in a medium loaf pan and let it rise for the third time. Bake it at 350 for 40-45 minutes. It always makes a beautiful loaf.
      Selden




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    4. Thanks for the recipe, Selden. I use my breadnmaker to knead my bread, too. I rarely bake 100% whole wheat bread, but am willing to try.

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    5. Thank you, Selden! I have Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book but if I've made that bread, I've forgotten it. As much as I love our local bakery, they don't make a 100 % whole wheat bread. I have a dough hook for my Kitchen Aid mixer so could certainly give this recipe a try. And I love anything made with buttermilk....

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    6. I like to use the bread hook on my KitchenAid stand mixer to do all but the final kneading.

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  13. Loved this dish from one of my favorite restaurants. It was Tofu with Stir Fry Vegetables and Aubergine (Eggplant). I tried many times to duplicate the flavors, though not quite there yet...

    Your Dukkah recipe sounds yummy. There are some dishes that are difficult to duplicate, though.

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    1. I've never had any luck duplicating Asian restaurant recipes, Diana. I suspect it's their seasoned carbon steel pans and really high heat that make the difference. As Hank says below, a good excuse to eat out!

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    2. perhaps it is the Wok?

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  14. Oh Deb, the dukkah recipe you tried sounds delicious! Adding to my To Be Tried recipes! Thanks!

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    1. It is delish! (And I love any excuse to eat good bread and olive oil!)

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  15. Debs, toasting both the nuts and the spices next time, maybe? Not together, though. Dry toasted spices are the key to many Middle Eastern foods, as I've read, and I've used that technique a few times. It changes the warmth and depth of flavor. Dukkah sounds fabulous, and well worth trying to perfect your own recipe.

    I have tried repeatedly to recreate cacio e pepe, with ridiculously limited success, a personal failure, no matter what technique I've tried. However, the one really useful trick I found during that odyssey is dry toasting a good quantity of whole peppercorns. I liked it so much that I keep some in a grinder to use in cooking.

    I'll just have to go back to Italy for the real thing, right?

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    1. I did pre-toast the sesame seeds, although not enough. And the spice and nut mixture was all toasted together once pulsed, but I think you are absolutely right. Pre-toast whole spices before grinding in mortar and pestle, pre-toast pecans and sesame seeds (but not together. Too easy to burn sesame seeds.) I could skip the mortar and pestle and just dump the whole toasted spices into the food processor, but my theory was that using the mortar and pestle does a better job of releasing the oils in the spices.

      I have been tempted to try making cacio e pepe, so any tips appreciated!

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  16. Well Debs, I learned something new this morning, I never heard of dukkah before. You must have loved it very much to try to duplicate until, at least, it was satisfactory.

    While I visited Oxford UK, I went to a little bistro were they served a hot salad of beets and goat cheese. It was so delicious. Through the years I tried to replicate it. It shouldn’t be difficult, being essentially two ingredients. I tried different varieties of cheese but even if it is always good, it’s never the same.
    Danielle

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    1. I'm intrigued by this, Danielle. I wonder if it was in the way the beets were prepared? Or it could be that they had access to a French goat cheese that you just can't replicate. Boo.

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    2. Oh, I would love a hot salad of beets and goat cheese. My favorite item on the menu at Biaggi's, an Italian restaurant 40 minutes away, is their Honey Roasted Beet and Argula Salad. Its ingredients are Avocado, Sun-Dried Cranberries, Spicy Walnuts, Montchevré Goat Cheese, Field Greens, Honey Balsamic Dressing. Yum! My second favorite item there is Bacon Wrapped Dates (Applewood Smoked Bacon Wrapped Dates). I've never tried to duplicate either of these appetizers, but I'm thinking maybe I could. I know I'm ready for a trip back to that restaurant.

      Maple-Balsamic Glaze

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    3. Kathy, what town is Biaggi's in?

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    4. Karen, here's a link to the map showing where the Biaggi's Restaurants are located. Perrysburg, Ohio is the only Ohio location. There is one in Ft. Wayne, IN and the one I go to in Evansville, IN. Then, they are all west of Chicago.

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  17. As Amanda and others mentioned, I've never been able to duplicate many of my mom's simplest foods--cornbread, biscuits, potato soup. No written recipes for most of the things she cooked.

    And Selden nailed it when she referred to her palate as undeveloped--same here. I could never try to duplicate a recipe like dukkah just by taste. But given the basic recipe and all the tips and tricks mentioned above, I may give it a try this holiday season.

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    1. I think any attempt at dukkah would be good, Flora. Any combination of toasted nuts, toasted sesame seeds, and those spices is a winner.

      I apparently have a really good palate and I may even be a "super smeller" both of which are sometimes more of a curse than a blessing!

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  18. I can’t make my mother’s beef stew. Beef, and old pressure cooker. Carrots, turnips, potatoes and if we were lucky parsnips. (I never had dumplings until after university – and I love them but once again I cannot make them.) My favourite meal! She would make it between 10:30 when my father brought home the beef, and noon, when we were back from school. Was it her method, the pot, or the meat (might have been green – my father often brought us meat that was well past its sell by date. We had great immune systems!)
    I often try to replicate recipes, but often find things to be just a few ingredients short – a side-effect of living in the country. Apparently, you cannot substitute turnips for Aleppo pepper – I don’t know why. I find that I even have a problem replicating my own recipes – again it probably goes back to the ingredient issue, or how I am feeling at the time. Feeling hungry – most likely used more butter than before. Added hot pepper – was it sauce, or freshly chopped, and if so how hot were those peppers? That means my recipes are non-reproducible, so enjoy what is before you, and consider everything an experiment.
    That bread looked really tasty – and I don’t eat bread!
    Oh, and my daughter is a meticulous baker – she probably counts the grains of nutmeg. She can reproduce her recipes the same every time. She makes one of the best ginger cookies (she adds chili powder) and brownies. We hire her baking for family dinners!

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    1. Margo, you made me snort. No, I don't think you can substitute turnips for Aleppo pepper--although you can order Aleppo pepper on the internet.
      I am obsessed with this loaf pan sourdough from our bakery. But the loaf is 14 inches long! I have to portion it out in the freezer with parchment paper between slices.

      While I am a great experimenter, I am a terrible baker. All that precise measuring is no fun. I've got my hub watching Great British Bake Off and I keep telling him he should (the man who does NOT cook) take up baking. He would be good at it.

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  19. From Celia: thanks Deb’s for a wonderful post and great discussion. I don’t think I’ve ever know ingot had dukkah, but I do make my curry spice mixes and roasting or toasting the spices helps.
    But a lunch of cannellini stuffed with chicken and sauced with Italian cheeses is still an unfulfilled dream for me. I was a teen on a family trip along the Amalfi coast and I think the lunch was in a monastery. It was so delicious. I really should have another go at making it again. In the meantime I’ll check my spices and try your dukkah.

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    1. Oh, do, Celia! It is so good. You need some really good bread and olive oil to go with it. David Lebovitz's recipe sounds like a good place to start. https://davidlebovitz.substack.com/p/everythings-better-with-dukkah?publication_id=112435&post_id=150041788&isFreemail=false&r=apid1&triedRedirect=true

      But I don't think I would ever attempt your cannellini. Although I did make a fabulous Pasta Amatriciana the other night.

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  20. What a great Sunday post. I had never heard of dukkah, and now it is on my tbt (to be tried) list. It just might become a hostess gift for fall. I don't remember trying to recreate a dish from a taste memory. Maybe I didn't trust myself, maybe I was to into research, who knows. Mom mostly followed recipes from the back of packages, and those cut from newspapers. I must have followed her example except now I go online. Happy Sunday everyone.

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    1. Thanks, Coralee! Yes, I was thinking this would made nice little Christmas gifts, maybe with some good olive oil. I would need some cute little jars, though!

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  21. We went to a sandwich shop in Venice, Italy right on the plaza. It was called the American Cafe. We thought we would go in to check it out. They had some unusual sandwiches that we'd never heard of in the States. We ordered the mushroom sandwich on white bread with mayo. Sounded so weird that we had to try it. Yikes! It was so delicious we went back for seconds. I tried to replicate it at home but it always tasted yucky.

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    1. So interesting! Do you think they marinated the mushrooms?

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  22. Yum, yum, yum. Your Dukkah looks fabulous. I haven't heard of it, but I'm going to try it.

    Copycat recipes - yep. A long time ago in a place called South Florida there was a restaurant/grocery named Unicorn. It later morphed into one of the first Whole Foods in South Florida. As Unicorn, they made an apple, walnut, cranberry cinnamon crunch pie. I loved it but could never find a recipe - this is pre-Internet. After much experimentation I came up with something that was 99.9% close. Made it yearly for Thanksgiving until hubs developed an apple allergy.

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    1. Yum yum on the pie, too, Kait. I would love that!

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    2. Is your hubs also allergic to pears? It would alter the taste yes, but the pie would still be tasty.

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    3. Great suggestion! He hasn't reacted to pears, so I will try that. The consistency should be similar and maybe less cinnamon. Hum....Thank you!

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  23. Wow, you are determined, Debs! It would never occur to me to try to duplicate that—I would just go see if if I could buy it. :-) My duplication fail is Chicken Milanese. I just can’t get the chicken crispy on the outside and tender on the inside .
    I wonder if restaurants that make it so perfectly us a deep fat fryer…which I am not going to do.
    Another reason to go out to dinner !

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    1. Now I want to try this, Hank! They might use a deep fryer... Have you tried a cast iron pan? Or just go to dinner, lol.

      If I could have bought Chef David's dukkah I certainly would have!

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    2. Hank, growing up my mother made veal Milanese regularly, although she she called it veal cutlets. She double breaded the cutlets: beaten egg, bread crumbs, then beaten egg and bread crumbs again. She cooked it in the oven with just enough oil in the pan so they wouldn’t stick.

      Another thing to try, if you have one, is an air fryer.

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    3. Yes, Debs, I use a cast-iron pan! I just may not be using enough breadcrumbs. And Pat, egg, bread, egg bread idea sounds great , too! I’m trying to hold back on carbs, but maybe that’s impossible with this recipe. I will try the double breading, and let you know!

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  24. Deborah, I believe Chef David’s attempt at creating a Duncan and Jemma mystery would be far less successful than your dukkah. :). So envy your kitchen skills and daring, I would be afraid to try. And please, you keep writing wonderful books and let David make wonderful dukkah. Elisabeth

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    1. Thank you, Elizabeth. That was a Sunday afternoon cooking project, I will admit, that took more time than I anticipated. I don't regret it, though. And who knows, you may see one of the novel characters (probably Kit!) making dukkah!

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    2. Yes, Kit! Elisabeth

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  25. I found this from David Lebovitz (thanks to Lucy's suggestion):
    For the Dukkah

    3/4 cup (100g) hazelnuts or almonds
    1/2 cup (70g) sesame seeds
    1/2 cup (150g) pumpkin seeds
    3 tablespoons coriander seed
    3 tablespoons cumin seed
    1 tablespoon fennel seed
    2 tablespoons coarse ground black pepper
    2 teaspoons scant fleur de sel, or fine sea salt
    1 teaspoon sweet paprika

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    1. Thank you! I did read the Lebovitz newsletter, I'd just forgotten about it. Hazelnuts are the most traditional base for dukkah. I like David Lebovitz's addition of the pumpkin seeds, so may do that next time. Also, he pre-toasts the nuts before grinding, which is a step I didn't do (they do get some toasting once ground) and I think that will make a big difference.

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    2. I have browsed through David Lebovitz's website just now looking for Apple and Pumpkin Pie recipes. I was thinking how fun it would be if he could be a book writer guest here on JRW. Probably a long shot, but would be so interesting.

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    3. It seems like our Lucy has had some contact with him? He's working on a new book--maybe he would be convinced to visit JRW. What a fun idea!

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  26. I meant to mention that the Michelin Guide gave out its first ever awards in Texas last week. Only one Dallas restaurant, Tatsu, got a star, but many of our favorite restaurants (including one here in McKinney!) got recommendations. Lucia received a Bib Gourmand award, which Kayti and I (and some of the local food critics) found a bit bizarre. The parameters of the Bib Gourmand are that you should be able to eat two courses and either a drink or a dessert for under $50. Not! If you only got bread (which is to die for) on the appetizer course, and then the cheapest pasta, you would come out under $50 but no room for a drink or dessert. So that was really stretching it!

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  27. Dukkah... writing it down. There's a wonderful middle eastern food store near where my children live in Brooklyn (Sunset Park) - SAHADI'S where you can buy middle eastern spices including Dukkah - sadly I think they only deliver local to the stores. Everything I've ever gotten from there has been superb, and the owner has written a cookbook ("Flavors of the Sun". Here's where I found DUKKAH: https://sahadis.com/collections/spices?page=2

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    1. What fabulous stuff they have! And I'll be the shop smells heavenly. When you are there next, try the dukkah and let me know what you think.

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  28. I know I've tried to replicate several brunch dishes I've been served over the years. Ross and I used to love a leisurely brunch, but you know, after the kids came, it was tossed overboard.

    As for spice mixes, I love interesting ones from different food traditions, but I'm MUCH more likely to search online and see where I can buy them than to try to replicate them. Ultimately, my pleasure from cooking is 100% in the eating, not in the doing.

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    1. Some foodie friends just gave me the most marvelous gift. It's a box of 12 tins of spice mixtures, each from a different country. Jamaica jerk mix, Indian garam masala, etc.

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    2. Well, there are LOADS of dukkah blends available online. And you can look at the ingredients in the different recipes--very helpful if you want to make your own!

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  29. Back in my very early twenties, I went to a "fancy" French restaurant for the first time and was enamored of their cream of mushroom soup. So I proceeded to take tiny tastes, analyzing the flavors as best I could, then went home and did my best to recreate it. (Sherry, I realized, was the secret ingredient.) And it was simply marvelous. I think this is one of the things that triggered my later decision to go to culinary arts school.

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    1. Sherry is so magical! — I think it’s Hallie that has the Sherry chicken recipe?

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    2. So funny that you should post this, Leslie. I bought some oyster mushrooms at the market yesterday, and was just thinking of sauteeing with some cream and black pepper, and a dash of sherry, to eat on toast. There is something about mushrooms and sherry....

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    3. And now I want Hallie's sherry chicken recipe... My mom made a cream of mixed seafood with sherry and mushrooms in a puff pastry shell. What's that called and does anyone have a recipe?

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  30. As I mentioned above, the roasted beef salad and bacon-wrapped dates are two dishes I'd like to try to replicate, but since I rarely cook anymore, I probably will just enjoy them at the restaurant. Of course, I don't think these two dishes would be that hard to replicate. I don't think I could ever taste something and figure out what was in it to make. I did come across Jennifer Garner's Brown Butter and Sage Pasta that I am going to make. I like a simple pasta dish with no meat or tomato sauce. I do think I'll use angel air pasta though. You can use different kinds of pastas for it.

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  31. OOOOHHHHH! I am so trying this, Debs. I love the Dukkah our Greek restaurant makes - they use pistachios, cumin, cinnamon, etc. Anything I can swab up with bread is a YES from me. The only thing I've tried is the sticky toffee pudding I had at Gallagher's Boxty House in Temple Bar - Dublin. It was the best I've ever had and my copy was okay, but I think I need to go back and study it some more. LOL.

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  32. A shot of Sherry transforms split pea soup too. Courtesy of The Raymond restaurant in Pasadena CA

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    1. Oh yum! And it's about time we made split pea soup here! Was it Laurie Colwin who put sherry in her split pea soup? I will look up!

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