The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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spiritualcookie
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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Your daughter's cake looks beautiful! stylish and classic. I can't tell at all that it was losing its shape :lol: I suppose this is how we learn - try new things and learn as we go - and we get to expand all the more because of it all :)

The yin yang is such a perfect symbol for the coming together of two opposite desires! :lol: A smart compromise :clap:

ah, making light, healthy recipes super yummy is a very fine art to master as well. I am always amazed when my mum makes us some healthy recipe that turns out to be even more tasty than the original less healthy version. Somehow, it's possible at times! :hearts:
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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spiritualcookie wrote: Wed Apr 24, 2024 12:46 pm Your daughter's cake looks beautiful! stylish and classic. I can't tell at all that it was losing its shape :lol: I suppose this is how we learn - try new things and learn as we go - and we get to expand all the more because of it all :)
You are so nice! :hearts: :hearts: :D Yah, that's exactly how we learn... :whistle: and I have to thank all the cake-angels that the cake held up for a WHOLE DAY (as I prepared it the night before). It truly was a miracle!!
The yin yang is such a perfect symbol for the coming together of two opposite desires! :lol: A smart compromise :clap:
:) I agree! While I would have reallllly enjoyed making a statement- with a beautiful black wedding cake :lol: A wedding is all about the couple- :shifty: I GET THAT. But... I applaude all the weddingplaners who are so selfless in the process- allll the time!! :lol: :lol: :lol:
ah, making light, healthy recipes super yummy is a very fine art to master as well. I am always amazed when my mum makes us some healthy recipe that turns out to be even more tasty than the original less healthy version. Somehow, it's possible at times! :hearts:
Oh, that is so true! :hearts: :thumbup:
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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Oh my, what a day it had been, yesterday! :hearts: It was MUCH, and it was BIG and I LOVED every moment!! :lol: And I had no "room" for a game of ABC. And I liked that! :D I LIKE taking more TIME, not "working as fast as I can, bam, bam, bam..."

So, it might be (ohhh!! :shock: :lol: ) that I DON'T do 1 rampage each day, in the future, come there hell or high water! Ohhh, that feels like freedom!! :vortex-small: :shifty:

:woohoo: :hoppy: :vortex:
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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But now, here it comes:

L, for Liechtenstein! For German-speakers: The "ie" is not pronounced as "long i", as an ie normally is. It is to the contrary the direct translation of the dialekt that is spoken here (very much Schwitzerdütsch, Swiss-German) to say "Li-eachtenstein". So, there is a "turn" between the i and the e. It makes so much sense, right?

When you look at the European map, Liechtenstein looks as a small rice-kernel. It snuggles along the Danube, between Switzerland and Austria, and is indeed tiny. It is an independent principality, very much alike Monaco. It embraces 160 square-kilometers of land and holds 40 000 people. The currency is the Swiss Franken, and Switzerland also colors intensely the dishes that are beloved here- but of course, also Austria is deep in it's genes!

DH and I have several times tried to "find" Liechtenstein, when we where in the area. You notice the signs at the street, but really... NOTHING else changes so much when you are in, and we often haven't even noticed when we got out, again! It is a very lovely, lush, wealthy, alpine part of the world, though.



...while it wasn't always this wealthy. Until after WW2, Ribel was the poor mans dish 3 times a day. It is made of ground cooked corn and -wheat, that then gets roasted in butter, and (today) most often served with apple sauce or other fruit.




Käsknöpfli ("Cheese-buttons"). Another very cheap dish that you could find all over Switzerland, Austria and even Germany! Noodles (self-made, very simple dough- most often just flour and water, that then gets scraped from a wooden board into boiling water) + fried onions + as much cheese as you can afford or do like, all mixed together in a pan and fried to the crispiness that you prefer. If you can add diced bacon, you are king!




Hafalaab, soup with vegetables, -if you have it, bacon, and dumplings from cornmeal




Rösti (pronounced Rööschti), grated potato (sometimes with added onion), cooked in a pan until it's a crispy, solid "cake"




Gschnetzelts, shredded (thinly sliced) stripes of meat- especially veal, but all things go. Served here with Rösti- triangles




Hasenpfeffer mit Knöpfli, Rotchabis and Röselichöli (Stew from hare or rabbit with red cabbage and brussel-sprouts)




fondue au fromage Cheese-fondue, dipped originally only with bread. Today, this extremely popular dish is prepared with all sorts of pre-cooked potatoes, vegetables, pickles, even with fruit (to dip or eat in between). It is always celebrated in a group. When you come to an end of the cheese, you find what gets called the "nun" or the "grandmother" on the bottom of the pot: Cheese that has burned in there a bit, and got hard and crispy. For many, this is the best bite of the whole thing.

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Traditional "Beiz", a guesthouse, in Liechtenstein
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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Mini-State, let's do that again! M for Monaco!
Monaco gets called a "toy-kingdom", actually it is a Principality, located at the shore of surrounding France, very close to the Italian border. It is behind Vatican City the 2. smallest country on the planet, only containing about 2 (!!) square kilometers of ground and a whopping 40.000 citizen- of which 78% don't own the Monégasques citizenship.

I have been in Monaco... for a few hours, as our excursion-bus brought us there, when we had our Abe-cruise in the Mediterranean Sea. Actually, I was disappointed. You would need so much more "quality-time" than a mere drive-through, to catch and FEEEEEL the energy that is going on here! Monte Carlo (the capital that contains almost all of the state Monaco, and that builds into the sea further and further, because it has no room for more houses otherwise...) A glance at "the Rock", the huge cliff where the princely family is living, a glance at the casino, while seeing nothing really of it, in the quick drive-by. The feeling of tightness and constriction. We didn't "get" what Monaco certainly is, any of the energy that pops up- at least, within me, when thinking of "Monaco". Glitz. Glamour. Beauty. Thrill! Formula 1 races. High Rollers in the Casino... High energy.

The... ABUNDANCE. The "fairytale" of handsome Prince Rainier marrying the famous, beautiful actress Grace Kelly (which all wasn't SUCH a happy story, as it seems in hindsight) and the "fate" of their children (we create our own reality!)... it's not our pie, even we wish everyone the very best! :hearts: Also, Monaco was not always this place of drawing all the Rich and Famous. Just as Liechtenstein, it had been an incredibly poor spot in the world, until someone had the idea to build a Casino... even before the French Riviera started to boom, instead of being scrubby rocky land where only fishermen could survive; and the rest is history. So, many of the authentic dishes out of the area are not only deeply rooted in French and Italian rural cuisine, but are even based on "poor mans kitchen", and I like to show them as well. With those, that are more a token of what Monaco is TODAY...



...a glitzy playing field of the Super Rich. So, there are certainly Oysters, that loudly scream "High Society!!"... in all sorts of preparation, as absolutely fresh and raw, or fried, steamed with wonderful sauces, exquisitely gratined... I personally don't care about the raw version, but I love alllll the others! :romance-hearteyes:



fancy sandwiches in beautiful decorations, served on expensive Terrace-Cafés...




...and also "Pan Bagnat", a (not only) street-food you can find all over the Côte D'Azur, but especially being a delicious Monégasque, traditional sandwich. I liked this description from a blog so much: "(It) is packed full of flavor with a combination of olive oil, tomato juice, and anchovies which dissolve and soak into the fresh crisp bread over the course of twenty-four hours. This sandwich calls for a selection of any vegetables to be piled within, from crisp aniseed fennel to sweet peppers and even, when in season, wild salmon. This is a dish that Monégasque people share over long lunches and picnics by the famous Riviera. One taste, and you’ll be sure to realize what makes this dish a favorite in Monaco."



Beignets de fleurs de courgettes, a delightful culinary specialty in Monaco. These fritters -often filled deliciously, sometimes just plain, are crafted from zucchini blossoms, coated in a light batter, and then deep fried. Oh my.



Gnocchi, a very well known Italian recipe, have originated from left-over potatoes. Potato mash (sometimes also made from pumpkin or with additions of beets, carrots, zucchini...) with a bit of egg, spice and flour become yummy "little dumplings" that can be cooked or fried and become high cuisine when served with fancy sauces, truffles or gourmet fish.



Fougasse typical French flat bread, formed into art (or not). The French equivalent to the Italian focaccia, gets baked drizzled with olive-oil, often combined with herbs and olives, and gets served as a side for salads and light dishes.



Porchetta is a VERY traditional Italian dish and street-food. It's made by artisans who use age old family-recipes, from boneless pork-bellies, stuffed with liver and local wild-grown fennel, roasted over wood fire with the skin on, for at least eight hours.



Bouillabaisse is THE staple from Marseille- (while I am certain that every harbor originated a recipe like this...) in it's beginnings, it was the meal that fishermen and their family ate from what wasn't sold on the market. It is a rich vegetable-broth in which the trim-offs from the market-day (as fish-heads and flappers) get decocted and then removed, and then everything of what needed to be consumed to not spoil, was put in there. So there you have the origin of the tradition, that a true Bouillabaisse contains at least of 3 different kinds of fish or seafood!



Socca (chickpea flour flatbread) It is a popular street food which hails from Nice, France, that gets broiled in huge pans by vendors in the streets, and cut to satisfy the demand. It can be adapted to include any flavors that you may wish for, from herbs to chili and olives. "The outside is famed for being crisp and charred, whilst the inside is left creamy. Served up with a fresh rose, olives, green salad and a group of good friends, this is a dish to be shared", so the blog where I read about it, says!



Sweet Tourte de Blettes : The authors can't agree if this is a Swiss, a French, or a traditional dessert from Monaco. It showcases a fusion of sweet and savory flavors, in a unique but very harmonious combination of chard, ("Blettes" in French) mixed with sugar, eggs, and lemon zest.



Galapian (cherry and almond tart). This unique sweet tart- really a filled Macron, or Macaron, is traditionally made with whipped egg whites, cherries and almond flour. Best served alongside sweet Muscat wine, as recommended by Bouchard who invented it, himself.


...I dream of cruising the Côte D'Azur outside of the season when it's not yet too warm and overcrowded. I want to stay in all the iconic Grand-Hotels of the French Riviera... as the Le Negresco in Nice, the Carlton or the Martinez in Cannes, ...and OF COURSE in the stunningly beautiful Hôtel de Paris in Monte Carlo, with it's terrace looking over to the Casino with the amazing super-cars in front of it! Driving in a beautiful classic Cabriolet myself, with my TRUE dream-man (my husband!!) :hearts:. With LOTS of time, and LOTS of money.

...High-Flying! Loving. BEING THERE, wholly, fully, with no resistance!
Taking it all in, fully, dlighted. inspired. Relaxed and in awe! In love. In eagerness for more and more! Chilled out, and SO satisfied! Living. Enjoying. Ahhhhhh!! Celebrating! Basking, in all of it, in blessed, wonderful, satiated, happy physicality. Oh, yes!! :vortex:


Grace Kelly and Cary Grant in »To Catch A Thief«, 1955. Sitting in a wonderful lightblue 1953 Sunbeam Alpine Mk I, looking down at Monte Carlo. Where she, then, met Prince Rainier, by the way.
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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N, for Netherlands! A lot of Germans think, the right name for the country would be "Holland", but that is just the name of 2 districts (North- and South Holland) within the Netherlands. I've been there LOTS of times! DH and I drove to Amsterdam as soon I held the drivers license (earliest time for that in Germany is 18 years of age), and it was such an adventure, two virgin travelers, attempting to conquer the world! We wandered the city in the night, explored the Grachten, the tiny canals via boat ride and shopped at the amazing markets. We chose our way home besides the big highways and discovered tiny villages, hidden art galleries, and the artful, stunningly intricate brickwork of old streets. Then, my mother in law and her husband moved from the US to Netherlands and lived there at 2 different places in Limburg, both several years. We visited each year, with or without our kids, and explored the small town-life, the cuisine, the wide, beautiful heathlands with meandering little creeks in the sandy land.



One year we traveled with 3 motorbikes to the Dutch shore, together with a friend of ours and DH's sister, and "enjoyed" typical Dutch summer-weather. I think it rained every day of all our 2 weeks! We had the amazing adventure to drive in an angle of 45 degree, leaned into the stiff breeze that came in from the ocean- and had to deal with the sudden slipstream behind the huge traffic signs :lol: In the end, the tent of our friend went down in the steady rain and we all crawled into our tent, and the end of that was that the friend and sister in law had a fleeting affair... and my dear man dislocated something in his spine while trying to lift up his heavy motorbike, on swampy ground. And the end of that was, that I tried first time of my life, to heal with my hands. It worked... and that was a huge glorious start to my further career... :)

And then again, 2019, we took our daughter and her whole family into a summer cabin to Netherlands shore in Zeeland, so that the kids could play in the waves... well, it was again rainy, cold and VERY windy, in ALMOST every day of our 2 weeks! :roll: :lol: but that became somewhat a good thing, when we finally went towards Amsterdam so that I could attend the Abe-seminar, and they had an awesome time sailing a one- mast Tjalk on the Ijsselmeer. And there... the sun came out. You just HAVE to travel with Abraham.



So you see, the Netherlands are very near and dear to me! It feels a bit as coming home, when I think there. Including the amazing food that we enjoyed over and over and over! :hearts:


One of the VERY BEST experiences foodwise in Netherlands is, to visit a Pannekoeken-huis (a restaurant serving Dutch pancakes). Again, as everywhere in Europe, pancakes here are flat, a bit like Crepe. Dutch pannekoeken come in hundreds of styles, with baked-in fruit, chocolate-chips, fresh fruit as toppings, jam, Nutella, icecream, whipped cream... or savory, with baked-in cheese, vegetables or bacon and hearty sauces. Stroop= syrup, and sugar are always on the table for self service!



Stamppot - "stamped pot", a mash of potatoes and maybe every imaginable other vegetables, together with smoked Rookworst.- or remains of more fancy dishes. This delicious pots of tossed together leftovers are favourites in all of Europe, filling, hearty, especially in cold days or after hard physical work.



Rijstafel: Indonesian food (coming from a former Dutch colony) is deeply anchored in Dutch cuisine, and everywhere available, and very, very delicious!
A “rice table” consists of 15 or even more side dishes served in small portions, accompanied by rice. Typical options include egg rolls, sambals, satay and vegetables.



The Netherlands are famous for all their many wonderful Cheeses. Especially famous is the Gouda (offered mostly in young, middleaged and old, or even smoked version). This cheese is named for the city in which it was sold, as the Gouda-cheesemarket (while there other cheesemarkets also) is a fascinating spectacle that screams "Netherlands"- with lots of celebrated old traditions, traditionally dressed people, music and FOOD! Oh, and with the beautiful, famous, black Dutch carriage-horses "Friesen"!





Bitterballen and Kroketten- fast food that you can get all over the place, sometimes just as an aside to beer, sometimes as "just a bite to eat", sometimes as filling of a sandwich, or as part of a full meal. They are breaded, deep fried dumplings filled with gravy and sometimes meat, served with mustard. I wasn't too excited about them...



Haring: Fatty Herring is lightly brined and salted and served with lots of chopped onions and pickles. This makes a delightful meal when served with potatoes and butter, and/or with sour creme and raw apple-slices- or as street food, held by the tail an lowered into the mouth. A fun way to have a really savory bite to neutralize after too many Stroopwafels or Poffertjes! :D



Poffertjes now finally are puffy "pancakes", while in mini-size. They are made with a buckwheat- yeast dough, and baked in special pans- you will see them all over Netherlands, on all exhibitions or in food trucks, or as breakfast option in hotels. They come served only with butter and icing sugar (maybe the best and traditional option), or with whipped cream, fresh fruit or syrups.



Olibollen ("oily balls") are sort of Dutch Christmas-donuts, often with raisins or candied fruit in the dough, rolled in icing sugar.



Bolus is the crispy, deepfried, very delightful Dutch version of a cinnamon bun. Worth a travel to Netherlands all on it's own!



Stroopwafels are very thin wafers—stuck together with Stroop=caramel syrup. You get them everywhere, fresh at bakeries and food trucks across the Netherlands, as well as sold packaged in grocery stores.



Spekulaas (or per example the German Spekulatius) is a traditional spicy and very delicious brittle and crisp cookie known all over the northern part of Europe. We all have our own wooden molds for preparing them, or carved rolling pins and slightly different recipes, but probably, most buy them ready made in stores.



Hagelslag (=hailstorm) comes in different colors -as chocolate, white chocolate, or colorful with red, white, green bits. In other European countries this sugar crumbs (even what is called chocolate is rarely a good true chocolate but more sugar) are used to decorate cakes, but in the Netherlands they are a beloved topping for breakfast-sandwiches.



Ontbijtkoek, =Breakfast-Bread is a delicious, sturdy "cake" that awakens memories of gingerbread, but less dense. It is eaten (as the name says) for breakfast, with butter and jam. My children love it whenever I get hold of it here in Germany. Really, give it a try! There is SO MUCH to love in the Netherlands!! :hearts:


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My family and I, 2019 in the Netherlands (including me, going to the Abe-seminar in Gashoulder, Amsterdam)
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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Today is basking-day! :vortex:

No really, I worked all day with my daughter, and now I am wiped out. I look forwards to P and Portugal, tomorrow! :hearts:

:grouphugs: :balloons_wave:
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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I can do "O" for us : )

Oman:

I didn't know anything about the food of this country, but was curious, so here's what my research found:

The Omani menu is a fusion of influences from its Arabian, Persian, African and Levantine neighbours as well as from further flung places like India.

SAVOURY DISHES:

Sakhana (Sweet Milk Soup)
Sakhana is a thick, sweet soup made from wheat, dates, molasses, milk and Fatta (a meat and veg dish)

Harees (aka "Savoury Wheat & Meat Porridge")

This is a dish of boiled bulgar (cracked wheat), slow-cooked in homemade broth for hours, then mixed with meat and seasoning until it becomes creamy. The broth is a soup made from chicken, vegetables, garlic, black peppercorns, cinnamon, allspice, cumin seeds, turmeric, cardamom and clove. The finished dish has the consistency of porridge! And can be topped with some cinnamon, ground nutmeg and clarified butter - which is said to add the best flavour. It sounds very interesting! I can imagine the texture must be quite satisfying, warming, homey, comforting and filling. One food blog describes it as being "one of the most comforting dishes to exist in the history of humankind. "
It is said that almost all countries in the Middle East have a similar wheat porridge with slight variations.

Mashuai


This traditional Omani seafood dish is of a roasted kingfish, flavoured with lots of spices (cumin, ground coriander seeds, cinnamon, ginger, turmeric and salt) and garlic and served served over a bed of lemon-flavored rice with cashews on the side.

Albadhinajan Mae Tawarkh (Sweetened Eggplant)

A vegetarian eggplant dish, of eggplants sweetened with dates and molasses, cooked with onions.,

Machboos (or Maqbous, sometimes also called kabsa)

Maqbous is a chicken and rice dish packed with a legion of spices and a sweet rosewater-raisin tang. It’s a close cousin of the Indian biryani. The rice is light and fluffy and the spices are the stars of the show. Onion, garlic, ginger, cloves, cinnamon, bay leaf, and cardamom pods all add to the flavour, The secret ingredient in Omani Machboos is the indigenous black lime.

Shuwa (aka Quzi)

This is a meat dish consisting of meat marinated in a spicy date paste (with garlic, peppercorns, corriander seeds, cinnamon, cloves, cumin seeds, cardamom pods, nutmeg and chilli flakes, limes and vinegar), wrapped in leaves such as banana leaves and / or a date palm bag, and slow-cooked for a minimum of 6 hours and a maximum of 2 days in a special oven, which traditionally is a pit dug in the ground. The secret is marinating the meat in spices for up to 48 hours. The finished meat is so tender it falls straight off the bone.

Muqalab (aka Maqlai)
This is a dish of meat mixed with organ meats, flavoured with garlic and Omani masala spices. Sometimes the recipe calls for cinnamon, cardamom, cloves, black pepper, ginger, garlic, and nutmeg.
-

DESSERT

Halwa

There are lots of different version of Halwa throughout the Middle East and Asia. The Omani version is made with almonds and farina, caramelized sugar, rose water, saffron, butter and cardamon, and is often a dark brown jelly-like dish.
-

DRINKS:

Kahwa

This is Omani coffee, which is coffee mixed with cardamom powder. Often served with sweet dates or halwa.
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

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spiritualcookie wrote: Mon Apr 29, 2024 3:57 pm I can do "O" for us : )

Oman:

(...)


Albadhinajan Mae Tawarkh (Sweetened Eggplant)

A vegetarian eggplant dish, of eggplants sweetened with dates and molasses, cooked with onions.,
I love it!! :hearts: What a joyful, fascinating surprise!! :vortex:
Ohh I am so curious to eat all of this at some time. :hoppy: As you said as well, it is soooo fascinating to THINK about a completely unexpected thing, as sweetened eggplant! :o :hearts: How must it be to smell and TASTE it!

PLEASE keep chiming in, whenever you (or someone else) wants to! :lol: I must admit, knowing that our "house-father" Simon is a Swede... I wish he would do S for Sweden! :hearts:
And I really look forwards to U for United Kingdom, done by Cookie... :hearts:

And then we have Q, W, X, Y and Z... where there is no European country for it and I will just lay back and bask more! :lol: Anyone called to them?

I SO ENJOY THIS THREAD!!!
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Re: The ABC-Game, about Countries and their Food!

Post by spiritualcookie »

Yes! I was curious to taste many of these things too! a meat porridge! sweet eggplants! jelly for halwa (which I usually know as a dry crumbly slab made from ground sesame seeds)!

I felt uplifted researching these because it was so interesting and fired off so many new rockets of desire! It made it be feel-good :) :hearts:
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