Amman, Jordan © Patricia NivenFor the travel starved, “Chasing Smoke” is a cookbook with benefits.
Recipes from the Levantine region are nestled within a travelogue that introduces them in the context of place. From Jordan, Israel, Egypt, Turkey and Greece, food explorers Sarit Parker and Itamar Srulovich collect stories, ingredients, and ideas. Their focus here, in their fourth book, is on produce, seafood, meats and breads cooked over fire.
The espoused chefs, who own the London grill-house Honey & Smoke, travel with photographer Patricia Niven, who intimately captures settings from angles that help the reader feel to also have experienced the outdoor markets, eateries, landscapes and fiery grills they include.
Travel is a memorable mix of adventure and misadventure with happy discoveries along the way, and a chef couple’s anecdotes remind us how food-finds and exposure to people and places around the globe can expand one’s approach to eating and cooking. (They confess to following older customers around outdoor markets, believing more experienced shoppers are likely to lead to the best of what’s offered.)
The Levant is the Mediterranean Middle East, and a regional home to shish kebabs, flat breads, spice blends such as baharat, and za’atar, the sesame paste known as tahini, and Aleppo (Syria) and Urfa (Turkey) chilis.
The cooking parts of this book begin with tips on technique, moisture-protecting wet brines and dry aromatic seasoning rubs for meat, poultry and fish. A third of the recipes involve grilled vegetables. Whole potatoes, artichokes, sweet potatoes, beets and more are cooked in embers. Kohlrabi, a cabbage relative, is cooked about 30 minutes among ashes, rotated until its skin is charred and a knife is easily inserted at its center. Celeric halves go in parchment and then in foil for a 30-minute roast. For the sweet potatoes, they make a tahini with raw almonds in place of the sesame seeds traditionally used.
Peach and endive halves are rubbed with olive oil and grilled for salad. Whole green onions, cabbage wedges, apple slices, and cuts of zucchini and other squash are oil or butter-rubbed for the searing grates.
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