Restoranda:
Ben: Urfa kebap nasıl? Güzel mı?
Garson: Evet, çok güzel.
Ben: Peki, bir tane Urfa kebap.
Sonra öğle yemeği...
Garson: Seviyor musun?
Ben: Evet, seviyorum. Ama, bence, Adana kebap daha lezzetli.
And this is how exciting my life is now; that I'm thrilled to bits when I can have a mini conversation with a waiter about whether or not the Urfa kebap is any good or not. And to recap, he said it was good so I ordered it and after I ate he asked if I liked or not; to which I replied that I did but in my opinion the Adana kebap is tastier.
Oniony goodness |
So speaking of food! I managed another semi successful Turkish recipe; the all important (red) lentil soup. I have become rather enamored of the various lentil soups here. I knew I liked Indian lentils so I guess it's not such a stretch that I should like them in Turkey.
Bet the teapot never thought it would be used for this. |
I feel like going into this recipe I was already set up to at least partially fail. Although I feel that I used this as an opportunity to demonstrate my flexibility and creativity. For example, I still have only the one pot and since the onion, potatoes, and carrots were occupying it I had to find a different way to soak the lentils.
The addition of potatoes and carrots makes it a very hearty soup |
That worked out alright though so yay me. What didn't work out alright was actually using as much water as the recipe called for. So I tried (and failed) to pour off some of the water. It worked for about half a minutes before an extremely hot pot coupled with a lack of pot holders caused the lid to slip off the pot. I lost about half the ingredients into the sink.
Woops |
Recipe:
1 cup red lentils, washed
1 large potato chopped into small cubes
1 large carrot chopped into small pieces
1 medium-large onion chopped
3 TBS tomato paste
3-4 cups water
2 TBS olive oil
Saute the onion in a sauce pan with half the oil. When the onion softens, add the rest of the oil with the potatoes and carrots. Once those are softened (3-5 min), add the water, lentils, and tomato paste. And a lot of salt. I swear the salt here just isn't very salty. Bring to boil and let simmer until all the vegetables are soft.
If you have a standing or immersion blender, go for it. If you're like me and you don't have those, whisk as best you can. Serve the soup with a lemon wedge. I know, it seemed weird to me at first but trust me; it's good.
I have to visit your blog more often. It brings back wonderful travel memories- especially Turkey!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Bella! We'd love to have you stop by our blog more often :)
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