Ethiopian Feast
Robert was in town, so I used his arrival as a perfect excuse to try my hand at Ethiopian food, which we both love, especially Doro Wat.
Having never attempted a single Ethiopian dish before, I was a little nervous. I looked at more than one hundred recipes, and here is what I came up with:

For those of you unfamiliar with Ethiopian food (shame on you) the brown tortilla sort of bread is called injera. It is a spongy, slightly sour, bread made mostly of Teff flour. There are lots of places to pick this up in Minneapolis including African grocery stores, the Seward Co-op, and Everret's Foods on 38th and Cedar. It is tasty, even with good old American food.
The bright pink food is a beet and potato salad with a lemon dressing.
To the right, the yellow mush are lentils called Misr Allecha. These were amazing.
To the left of the picture is Chickpea Wat.
All three of these recipes I followed pretty much exactly. They were all good, but the lentils were particularly good.
On the bottom of the picture is Doro Wat. This is my favorite Ethiopian dish and this was my attempt to recreate it, though Robert did a lot of the work. We combined a few recipes to get to what we thought was a good recipe. It ended up being VERY spicy, almost too much. But it was VERY GOOD.
This dinner was great. I will definitely be making more Ethiopian food in the future. It was pretty easy, it just takes some time.
Having never attempted a single Ethiopian dish before, I was a little nervous. I looked at more than one hundred recipes, and here is what I came up with:
For those of you unfamiliar with Ethiopian food (shame on you) the brown tortilla sort of bread is called injera. It is a spongy, slightly sour, bread made mostly of Teff flour. There are lots of places to pick this up in Minneapolis including African grocery stores, the Seward Co-op, and Everret's Foods on 38th and Cedar. It is tasty, even with good old American food.
The bright pink food is a beet and potato salad with a lemon dressing.
To the right, the yellow mush are lentils called Misr Allecha. These were amazing.
To the left of the picture is Chickpea Wat.
All three of these recipes I followed pretty much exactly. They were all good, but the lentils were particularly good.
On the bottom of the picture is Doro Wat. This is my favorite Ethiopian dish and this was my attempt to recreate it, though Robert did a lot of the work. We combined a few recipes to get to what we thought was a good recipe. It ended up being VERY spicy, almost too much. But it was VERY GOOD.
This dinner was great. I will definitely be making more Ethiopian food in the future. It was pretty easy, it just takes some time.

3 Comments:
At November 24, 2008 7:38 PM ,
Tisha said...
Wow! That looks fabulous. Ethiopian food has become cold weather comfort food for me.
At November 27, 2008 10:41 PM ,
LAP said...
The chickpea dish look especially fantastic to me, but I will always go for lentils without remorse.
At December 4, 2008 7:36 AM ,
rew said...
I have a large bag of Berbere spice I haven't used since I feel like you need more than two people to really enjoy. We should have a party and throw a feast.
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