We made it through another election. There
were some disappointments, but there were some surprises. Quite a few women,
people of color, and LGBTQ candidates won their office – not to mention that
Ilhan Omar became the first Somali-American to win a Congressional seat.
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This will make a good breakfast tomorrow. |
It seem fitting that it fell in line with
cooking food from Somalia today. The first thing I made was Malawah, or a
Somali crepes. In a bowl, I mixed all the ingredients together: 2 c flour, 2 ½
c milk, 2 eggs, 1 Tbsp sugar, ½ tsp cardamom, ½ tsp ginger, and a pinch of
salt. Once everything was mixed together, I heated up my skillet and poured a
little oil in it to heat. I ladled some batter onto the skillet and swirled the
skillet to spread out the batter to thin it out. I apparently didn’t mix things
well enough because my batter was still a little lumpy. Once it started to
brown on one side, I flipped it to brown the other side. When they were all
done, I served this with butter and honey on top. I thought these were
fantastic. I was initially a little worried about the cardamom/ginger flavor
being too much, but it was just right and blended well with the honey.
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I was a little leery about crab and tomato together, but it was actually pretty good. |
The main dish today is Somalian Crabmeat
Stew. I started this with sautéing some diced onions, curry powder (I just used
some leftover xawaash spice mix that I had prepared for the nafaqo below),
ginger, salt, and crushed red pepper, letting this simmer for a few minutes
before pouring in about 20 oz of diced tomatoes (I used the kind that had green
chilies in it). Once that had cooked down for about 10 minutes, I added in my
chunked crabmeat and let it cook down for another 10 minutes. I served this
over rice. Even though I cut my spices down, it was still a little spicy
because of the crushed red pepper. I thought it was excellent.
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I love Scotch eggs, and this vegetarian version was fire! |
To go with this, I made Nafaqo, a Somali
vegetarian version of Scottish eggs. The first thing I did was peel some
potatoes and boil them, mashing them slightly when they were cool. Then I added
a little xawaash spice mix (a Somali blend of cumin, coriander, sage, black
pepper, fenugreek, turmeric, ginger, cardamom, coves, nutmeg, cinnamon), black
pepper, turmeric powder, and flour. I mixed everything together again so that
it was well combined. In the meantime, I hardboiled 5 eggs and peeled them when
they were cool. To put this together, I put a little flour in one hand, spread
out some of the potato mix, placed a cooled and peeled egg on top and wrapped
the potato around the egg. Then I rolled it in a little flour before frying it
in vegetable oil until it turned golden brown. After they drained and cooled on
paper towels, they were ready to eat. I really liked these, but my daughter had
a differing opinion. I would definitely make these again.
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Overall, this was amazing! |
I thought this was a good meal. But my son
would hardly touch it, and my daughter only ate half. I guess I’ll have some
leftovers for tomorrow. For a country that has been in the news for a myriad of
negative things, it’s good to read positive things from Somalia and Somalis
around the world. True, there’s a lot of instability still, but as Fred Rogers
said, “Always look for the helpers.”
Up next: South Africa
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