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Blog Posts Europe Fall Herbed Pastas, Grains and Legumes Mint

Mint & Turkish Manti

October 22, 2019
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Mint & Turkish Manti

OCTOBER 22CND, 2019

This time of year, with the onset of colder wetter days, my garden seems to burst with tender shoots of mint. This vibrant bumper crop, as they call it, always feels unexpected and yet deeply appreciated.  With it, I start to see the full potential of mints warming and comforting qualities within my own cooking, especially as fall pulls and seemingly forces me into eating warmer, heavier and more comforting foods. Mint’s hidden talent of encouraging the fresh and healthy in any dish draws me in further.

I have just started experimenting more in depth with this idea- the warming qualities of mint, so I suspect you will see more of the results in the months to come as well as next fall. For now, I can share some of the ideas and tinkering’s that are happening in my kitchen as well as give you a recipe for the best example I know and love already- that showcases mints fresh and comforting qualities, Turkish Manti.

Before we get into the manti, I should admit mint, being comforting, is not a totally new idea to me. The idea originally was planted in my head about 20 something years ago, in something I saw in Martha Stewart’s magazine. That idea lead to a recipe I have been making since- Roasted Brussel Sprouts, Apples and Mint. This dish has a permanent spot on my Thanksgiving table, as I reference when this recipe was recently published in the Fall 2018 Edition of Edible Marin & Wine Country. I describe the idea as weird and have always, yet since creating this recipe I take notice to mints complementary behavior toward falls heavy meals, techniques and ingredients.

Spending a lot of time over the years in Israel and other parts of the middle east, like Turkey and Tunisia, I have also taken notice to mint use in their cuisine, they use it in savory concoctions much more than we do. Many of these recipes or notions I have long been incorporating  into my own food and eating. Steamed potatoes with olive oil, salt and mint is something I picked up in Tunisia, as was the idea to put fresh mint into my first harissa recipe. While  the Israelis were key in teaching me to use the leaves in my salad as I would parsley. Twelve years later, you can’t come to my house and eat a salad without mint leaves in it.

Probably the best comforting mint dish I have ever had and the one that I’ve again been obsessed with as of late, is Turkish Manti. Manti are a simple style of dumpling, commonly found (in variance) throughout Eastern Europe. In Turkey the variance is typically lamb stuffed and topped with tomato sauce, brown butter sauce and garlic yogurt sauce. Depending on where you are in Turkey (it’s a big place) the recipe varies.

My favorite version, which I had in a sweet little village located on the south western Çeşme peninsula along the Aegean sea, called  Alaçatı, was made with ground beef, which I prefer. This version also showcased fresh mint, liberally a strewn throughout the meat as well as the many layers of sauce- tomato, butter and garlic yogurt.  Often times you see manti made super small and dried. The manti I had in Alaçatı was large and bulbaceous and made with fresh soft fresh dumpling dough.  It was fall and there was a slight chill in the air and the end of tomato season was producing super sweet and juicy tomatoes, of which the small tavern made a lovely fresh sauce, simply by melting them down. This was and is the ultimate comfort dish, in my mind.

My version, some would say cuts corners, I merge the tomato butter sauce into one and I do insert mint into every layer. I forgo making a garlic yogurt sauce and add garlic to my tomato butter sauce. I realized recently that what I do so often in my recipes is not actually cutting corners — its cooking with the skills, knowhow, equipment, ingredients and time that I have, based on all that I know. I have been blessed to have learned to cook all over the world in the ordinary homes of the most extraordinary cookers. I continue to merge the information and insight and do things that fit with my own intuition as a creative cook- creating tasty and healthy food that uses fresh ingredients with ease –void of anxiety.  Joy filled, herbaceous cooking is what I do.

Turkish Manti with Minted Tomato Butter Sauce

I love adding a little sour cream to my dumpling dough, although it’s Russian in style and not authentically Turkish; it makes the dough way more manageable and I’m a fan of ease. You can just as easily omit the sour cream, in which case you can add olive oil.

Makes about 35 – 45 dumplings

Ingredients

For the dough
3 room temperature eggs
2/3 cup room temperature water
2 tablespoons sour cream or two tablespoon olive oil for a vegan version
1 teaspoon salt
3 ½ cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting

For the dumpling filling
1 pound ground beef
½ cup grated white onion
1 tablespoon finely chopped parsley leaves
1 tablespoon finely chopped mint leaves
1 teaspoon cumin powder
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground or freshly grated nutmeg

For the sauce
2 tablespoons butter, plus an extra tablespoon reserved
1 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
3 large big juicy red tomatoes, preferably heirlooms, chopped small (16 oz. canned chopped tomatoes totally acceptable)
1 teaspoon Aleppo pepper
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon chopped mint leaves

For serving
1 cup thick Greek yogurt
¼ cup fresh mint leaves, finely chopped
Maldon Salt

Directions

For the dough
In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the eggs, sour cream or olive oil, water and salt until well mixed. Slowly stir in the flour, ½ cup at a time, until all the flour is incorporated and the dough begins to come together. Turn the dough onto a well-floured surface and gently knead it with your fingertips, turning the dough and literally dropping it onto the floured surface, a technique often used with more delicate doughs. After gently kneading for about 3–5 minutes, the dough should be smooth and elastic on the outside, but still slightly sticky on the inside, which you can determine by poking the dough with your fingertip.

Cover the dough in plastic (I use compostable Ziploc-style bags) and allow it to rest for about 30–45 minutes. You may also refrigerate the dough at this point, for later use.

For the filling
Mix together all of the filling ingredients in a large mixing bowl until thoroughly combined. Refrigerate about 20-30 minutes so the mixture is very cold when assembling the dumplings.

For the sauce
Heat the 2 tablespoons of butter and oil on medium heat, in a medium sauce pan. Add the garlic and sauté about 30 seconds. Add the chopped tomatoes and stir, season with salt and Aleppo pepper. Bring the mixture to a boil and then reduce heat to simmer. Allow the tomatoes to simmer for about 30 minutes, until they melt and break apart. Turn off the burner, stir in the remaining tablespoon of butter and fresh mint, cover and let stand while the dumplings are assembled and cooked.

To assemble & cook the dumplings
Prepare a big pot of salted boiling water.

Divide the dumpling dough into 3 pieces, keep the portions you are not rolling out covered with a kitchen towel. On a lightly floured surface roll one piece of the dough as thin as you can (about a ¼ inch is fine). Cut the rolled dough into 2-inch square with a knife, pasta cutter or pastry wheel.

Place about 2 teaspoons of the cold filling into the center of each square. Seal up the dumplings by gathering each corner into the center over the meat and sealing the edges- making a X shape in terms of the creases or seals. Make sure all the creases are completely sealed. It takes a good deal of thumb and finger work to get the hang of this particular seal, but with just a few practices you will master it. If you can’t master the X shape seal, seal it however you can and move on to cooking and eating! Place the sealed manti on a lightly floured or lined with parchment paper tray, making sure they don’t touch one another.

Place the dumplings one at a time in the boiling water using a slotted spoon. Make sure you have enough room in the pot so they can all move around freely. They will need to cook for about 4-6 minutes in total. Gently move them around using a spoon a few times while they cook. The dumplings will float to the top when they are just about finished. I like to make sure they are all at the top for at least a minute and a half before removing with a slotted spoon.

While the dumplings cook, heat up your tomato sauce.

For serving
Place several cooked dumplings down on a plate style bowl (or bowl style plate). Spoon the tomato butter sauce over the dumplings and dollop with yogurt. Garnish with a little extra fresh mint and finishing or flake salt.

Blog Posts Europe Fall Herbed Pastas, Grains and Legumes Mint

Mint & Turkish Manti

October 22, 2019
October 22, 2019
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I’ve been watching Too Much while running on the treadmill every day (this is also new) and it’s one of the best shows to come around in a while. Kudos to @toomuch_netflix
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New #recipe for @myherbalroots 

Eggplant & Zucchini Summer Bolognese 

Herbal Toots herbs and everything else  from local healdsburg farms. (Except @frankies457foods  pasta and olive oil) Lots and lots of herbs in this one. It’s so fresh and so perfect. 

Recipe forthcoming on my blog.
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I’m pretty sure @gwynethpaltrow needs to try to make one of my grated summer #zuchinni omelettes with mint for her #boyfriendbreakfast - and surely she can get some of the Malabar Spinach spikes right? I’d love to send her some of @myherbalroots salts- for her boyfriend breakfasts - they are missing out. I can probably make one called The Smell of Her Vagina - knowing my creativity. lol. I’m not making fun of her either. What she does has benefited me in learning about my health and wellness including introducing me to many quality sustainable products. She should have some of my herb salts because they are that same kind of magic. 

I used a new one I made for myself and summer—a  Wild cucumber cherry tomato basil and fennel frond- I’m not making a summer collection for sale because I’m focused on my breath these days and preparing to move- I’ll explain all later. It’s fascinating.
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🐈‍⬛ Sapa sitter needed (at his house!)

October 2cnd - 6th
October 16th -25th

This would be in my new house in Healdsburg (Alexander Valley). There is a pool, hot tub, gardens, fruit trees, bocce ball, a weird little tennis court, a creek - lots of other things as well. 15 min from downtown healdsburg. 

The job is fairly simple. Sapa is easy. He has an automatic feeder and robot littler box so it’s really just about loving him and making sure he’s in at night or when no one is home. He likes when people play with him and his toys too. 

These are both paid jobs ( he inherited Incas budget- and we all know Inca was a guy with big tastes and thus a big budget) 🤫

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No matter what this new world order brings- dumb AI recipes and food ideas. Influencers that could care less about food, more processed goods (just somewhat healthier and smarter than the last wave of manufactured foods - but not really. ) business’s more concerned with scale than ethics, environmental destruction et and doing food for communities- or you know saying you’ll do good things later, once you get rich from taking. 

I’ll (@picoypero ) be here always under the pretense of learning and sharing not just how to cook but how to match what’s grown with what to eat. For me this still the healthiest way to exist if you’re looking at the planet and people as one.  Obviously I’m going to continue to shout about how healthy and flavorful herbs are and how their use allows for less—sugars, fats, salts, processed foods etc- things we generally use in excess. 

Whatever you do, use more herbs. I will continue to be here teaching people how easy they are to use, until the end, I will. 

Here is today’s lesson - a reminder of how fresh fruit in season and herbs create drinks that are better than what you can buy. 

This one inspired by my @frontporchfarmer #blackberries I bought yesterday and smashed some on the way home. 

Blackberry Lemon Verbena Peaceful Spirit Sparkling Ice Tea

5 blackberries
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Juice of one lemon
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2 peaceful spirit tea bags (@flyingbirdbotanicals )
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 Sparkling water 

Blend blackberries, verbena, honey, lemon juice and a little hot water. Pour into a pitcher. Add tea bags and hot water. Steep and allow to cool. Strain. Pour half  full into glass of ice top with sparkling water. 

This concept can be used however you want. Strawberry basil lemon ginger tea, peach bergamot (bee balm) bergamot tea - cherry lime white tea etc etc etc etc etc etc
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One of my favorite recipes for summer cherry tomatoes. Romano Bean, Cherry Tomato Feta Salad. This recipe dates back to my early 20’s in Eugene, OR

It’s so easy slice cherry tomatoes season with salt and torn basil leaves add cooked green beans. Cover let cool completely-dress with a little olive oil and feta. (@mt.eitan.cheese in this case and the last of my Andy 😭

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Believe it or not, these pretty herbs are going into a granola! (Lemon verbena, anise hyssop and French lavender)

If you haven’t had one of my herbal flavored fresh fruit granolas, you are missing out. Today’s is extra heart healthy. 

The main sweetener is the fresh fruit and some maple syrup. The herbs add complexity that alleviates some need for sweetness (replaces sweet taste with interesting) tahini is mixed in with a saucy fruit jam concoction/maple mixture and that’s mixed with rolled oats, quinoa, amaranth, black and white sesame seeds, flax and spices like cinnamon, vanilla powder, mace, malab and cardamom. Freeze dried blueberries and dried currants with almonds and hazelnuts!

When I made the strawberry maple mixture I also added cardamom, vanilla and almond extracts as well as the fresh herbs. 

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A random thought about it led me here- to my marigold sugar - limeade 

It’s so good - the floral vegetal notes from the marigold flavor is really nice. And it has a tang-esque quality to it that is fun. 

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Persian Dill Salt (Spring 2025  @myherbalroots )
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Dried marigold petals. 

Fresh marigold petals can be too pungent for any culinary use beyond minor accent flavor, in my opinion, which is why I like to use them in my herb salts. 

But if you dry them- (which is what happens in my salts) some magic happens- the flavor morphs into an extremely pleasant flavor that has much greater use and versatility. They are so easy to sun dry- these sat outside on a table for a week!

Earthy, floral, slightly citrusy- a little vegetal - as if a carrot and an orange combined—-Peppery and slightly (pleasantly) bitter. 

Add them during sauté phases in cooking  to add flavor and color-  use in baking and syrups- they create lovely deep golden color when used plus the lovely flavor. Lovely in frittatas. 

I’m going to use these in a Calabrian and marigold chili oil for a Crudo as well as a yogurt marinade for chicken. 

I’m working on expanding my herbal salt line to offer  seasonal dried herbs, herb seasonings and dried herb petals and mixes….. 

You’ll be happy! Lots of changes all encircling  my own passions and goals - a nice change of tides.
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Romano beans with basil, lemon basil, lemon and olive oil 

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Recipes (in story) developed back when I live in Bolinas. I grow geraniums ever since just to make this with the blooms - and the geranium black pepper salt on lemon cucumbers - also in story.
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Grilled corn and Pahlavi orzo salad with fresh mint, Romano beans and grilled zucchini with basil and fresh garlic, lemon and olive oil, turkistan oregano Laban, fresh tomatoes, grilled lemon and herb chicken. 

I went to a super nice restaurant in Nashville recently and they didn’t use herbs on anything. What a shame it was.
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It’s hard to enjoy anything while the entire world goes to shit but my lightly fermented herb and fruit sparkling waters and the pool on a 90 degree day makes me feel like I’ve woke the lottery of life. 

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