At a party about a week or so ago we were having a discussion with friends about cooking. It was mentioned how fortunate my husband is to be the recipient of all my cooking creations. This particular friend didn’t overly enjoy cooking and was frustrated with the same dishes. Even more so, she was frustrated when she put in the time and things didn’t turn out well.
It was at this point that I took the opportunity to say that while I enjoy cooking my creations aren’t always especially delicious either. I have about a 60/40 success rate. Sixty percent of the time I end up with something that tastes and looks good and 40 percent of the time something is lacking. It might be the flavor, the appearance, or both.
Sometimes I mention my failures here, but to be honest I have limited time to edit photos and write up posts. So why would I concentrate on all the bad things I make? No, I put up all the great things! It isn’t about being dishonest; I just think most people would like to see things they can recreate that will taste good.
So just know it isn’t all roses in Lori’s kitchen. Sometimes I have difficulty keeping the ugly weeds from popping up.
Let’s use Israeli couscous as an example. I am completely new to it. I read the directions carefully including the part that said – cook the couscous in a skillet over low heat, but do not let it get brown. Ooops!
This is a dish I was able to save in the end with lots of flavorful toppings, but if you look closely, pieces of the couscous are definitely brown! Some almost burnt. Better luck to me next time, but you can recreate this with no problem at all and hopefully you won’t burn the couscous like me.
I’ve never cooked with lamb before (look at that, two new ingredients in one post!), but for the first time I am now in an area with a local producer, Windhover Farm. We picked up a pound of ground lamb at the Farmer’s Market a few weeks ago and I hope to buy more in the future because it was delicious.
I first started out with lamb patties, but soon realized that crumbled lamb works better in this dish. You can use either. I seasoned the lamb, topped it with all kinds of fresh stuff and came up with one tasty dinner in a bowl!
Spiced Local Lamb over Israeli Couscous
3 cups Israeli Couscous, cooked
1 lb ground lamb
½ tsp ground allspice
½ tsp ground coriander
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tbsp onion, grated
½ tsp salt
¼ tsp black pepper
2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
¼ large onion, thinly sliced
8 slices of tomato
Sauce:
½ cup plain Greek yogurt
¼ cup cucumber, finely chopped and squeezed dry
1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
Salt and pepper to taste
Combine the ingredients for the sauce in a small bowl. Cover and place in the refrigerator.
In a skillet, brown the lamb. When it has been cooked about ¾ of the way through add the allspice, coriander, garlic, onion, salt and pepper. Continue cooking until done and stir in the parsley.
(If making lamb patties add the spices to the raw, ground lamb and mix well. You might also want to add a couple tablespoons of bread crumbs. Shape into four patties and cook in a skillet about 4 minutes on each side or until cooked through.)
Divide the cooked couscous into four bowls and top with one-fourth of the ground lamb. Add onion and tomato slices followed by 2 tbsp of the yogurt sauce. Enjoy! Serves 4.
I’m the same way, I often have missteps but I just don’t always show them to people. We had Israeli Couscous out last night & were saying how we needed to make it at home.
I absolutely love Israeli couscous, and the Italians also have something similar called Fregola Sarda, it’s awesome for pasta salad. I usually sauté some chopped onions and 1 minced garlic clove with some olive oil, in a skillet then when the onions are translucent I add the couscous. So the bed of onions don’t let the couscous burn and I get an extra flavor too. But your looks delicious regardless. The lamb is a yummy idea.
I tried Israeli couscous on Delta air when I requested Kosher meals and it was wonderful…where do you get yours?
Looks like it worked out. I don’t eat lamb, but I do eat Israeli couscous.
My husband has said before when i make dinner that one night it will not work out so well and we will need to make a frozen pizza instead. So far, I have been lucky, but it hasn’t been easy. I cook only vegetarian, so that helps.
People say similar things like that to me all the time! I rarely post my kitchen meltdowns either…but they definitely do occur! Part of cooking though is figuring out how to rescue an almost-disaster….which you have definitely mastered! I love this dish. lamb is a total favorite of mine.
I reached the same decision as yours when I found the recipe not satisfactory to myself also considering that it might not benefit my readers if I got it posted.
Although I’m not a fan of lamb, the whole dish sounds flavorful.
At least you’ve tried making Israeli couscous! 😎 I also pick and choose what I put up; even if it turns out well, it may be such a humdrum dish that I really can’t write an exciting post around it (ok, TN, that was a nice BLT, but . . .) Don’t you find that other times, the food tastes great but defies all attempts at attractive photography?
Quite frankly, I couldn’t tell that this dish wasn’t anything but perfectly delicious. There’s nothing wrong with a little toastiness! As for lamb, I would eat it every if I could; it’s fattier than lean ground beef but the flavor is spectacular!
I tend not to post my fails too – butternut squash pudding…tried it three times hoping for something post worthy and it never happened. I also get bummed when things taste so great, but look awful when pictured, most recently my raspberry scones so they get no blog time.
I actually like my israeli couscous a bit on the toasty side!
Lori this lamb dish looks delicious. specially with Israeli couscous…nice combination 🙂
This sounds amazing! I have yet to try Israeli couscous!
I think it is good to have recipe “fails” (that is what I call them at least) every once in a while – otherwise how are you supposed to learn?
Failures are definitely part of the experiment! It happens to us all. 😀 I think people (like your friend) end up giving up too easily because it might be something they don’t want to really do in the first place.
I’m only so-so with lamb but I’ve never had Israeli couscous before and I definitely want to give that a try!
kat – I tried it for the first time recently so I was excited to try it. Not difficult at all. Well, if you don’t burn it. Ha!
Anna – Thanks for the tip! I’ll try that next time. I’m glad to know about that other variety too.
momgateway – I bought it at our local International market which is basically an Indian market. I got the Lebanese version, Maftoul.
Melinda – I enjoy experimenting so I guess it is worth a few mistakes. 🙂
Joanne – It is definitely a good feeling if you can save a dish!
TasteHongKong – Yeah, I just don’t see a reason to feature a huge mistake. 🙂 Mention perhaps, but not the point of a post.
TN – Oh yes, lots of what I make looks awful in a photo. Ha, ha! I really like the flavor of lamb when it is mixed with other ground meats. It is really unique.
gastroanthro – Actually I did like the toasty flavor. I’m disappointed that there will be no butternut squash pudding. That sounds great! My failures seem to happen most often with my baking and sweets.
Juliana – Thanks, I really liked the combo.
emily – I definitely agree. Try it when you get the chance. It is a nice grain/pasta to switch things up.
Andrea – Yeah, that is likely the case. I’m really liking the couscous right now. Definitely give it a try.
I don’t know anyone that bats 100% success. I think part of the process is learning from the booboos. for the life of me I cannot take a good food photo so good bad or otherwise it all looks the same. Your dish sounds divine.