I would make sure they were safely in class, then mill around for an
hour. One day, right outside the
supermarket Giant, I happened to meet the owner of a little food stand called
Tarbush. They sold shawarmas – chicken
and lamb – and we had a great discussion of the Middle East (I had lived in Abu
Dhabi years before and he was from Lebanon.) I told him he needed to start selling some of the other delicious foods
from that area, like falafel and hummus and tabouli. He was just starting out but said he was planning to expand one day soon.
If you live in KL or have traveled there, you know his dream came true! He started by opening a proper restaurant there in Ampang Point and there are now Tarbush restaurants in several high profile locations. Our favorite was still Ampang Point though, because it was so close to home and school. Sadly, I don’t remember his name but I like to think we played a small part in his success by our frequent patronage of his fledgling restaurant chain.
If you live in KL or have traveled there, you know his dream came true! He started by opening a proper restaurant there in Ampang Point and there are now Tarbush restaurants in several high profile locations. Our favorite was still Ampang Point though, because it was so close to home and school. Sadly, I don’t remember his name but I like to think we played a small part in his success by our frequent patronage of his fledgling restaurant chain.
Once the restaurant opened, younger daughter always, and I mean always, got the shish
tawook. I made it the other night,
thinking about her and mentally wishing her well in these final weeks of her
freshman year at RISD. Even though she
is now a vegetarian. Never mind that,
her daddy and I loved it. It's the thought that counts, right?
Ingredients
1/4 cup or 60ml plain yogurt
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon fresh thyme
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1-2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
3 tablespoons or 45ml fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon flakey sea salt
3 boneless skinless chicken breasts
Method
Clean the extra fat and sinews off of the breasts and cut
them into bite-sized pieces. Pop them in
the bag with the marinade and massage it until the chicken is well-coated. Let this marinate for as long as you have or
at least one hour.
When you are ready to cook the shish tawook, push the
chicken pieces on to some wooden skewers and heat a non-stick skillet till very
hot.
Cook for a few
more minutes until both sides are browned and the chicken is cooked
through.
Tarbush served this with
French fries and a divine garlic mayonnaise.
I try not to fry food at home so I made tabouli and hummus (Stand by for
Middle East Meal, Parts 2 and 3*) and served these and the chicken
with some Lebanese flatbread from the supermarket. I suggest you do the same.
Mmm..just catching up on my backlog of blogs to read, and this looks fabulous - I'm trying it this week! I already make my own hummus, but I'm looking forward to seeing if you put anything different in yours. (We find hummus a bit bland sometimes, and have found that a generous dash of Sricha (rooster sauce) spices it up nicely - husband *is* an LSU boy, you know!) ; )
ReplyDeleteI don't add anything unusual to it but I am rather generous with the garlic. Also, I must confess that we like to spread our Lebanese flatbread with homemade habanero pepper sauce (This potent stuff: http://www.foodlustpeoplelove.com/2011/11/habanero-pepper-sauce.html) before we spread it with hummus and add the skewered chicken and tabouli. We love our spicy over here too!
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