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Her Middle Eastern Food Is Big On Flavor

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  • Her Middle Eastern Food Is Big On Flavor

    HER MIDDLE EASTERN FOOD IS BIG ON FLAVOR
    By T. Susan Chang, Globe Correspondent | September 7, 2005

    Boston Globe, MA
    Sept 7 2005

    Zov: Recipes and Memories From the Heart, By Zov Karamardian, Zov's
    Publishing, 262 pp., $35

    Sign up for: Globe Headlines e-mail | Breaking News Alerts Zov, of
    Zov's Bistro and the recently published "Zov: Recipes and Memories
    >>From the Heart," actually has a last name. She's Zov Karamardian,
    a chef from Orange County, Calif., who has built an institution around
    affordable, accessible pan-Middle Eastern cuisine. But Zov likes to
    keep things simple, on a first-name basis. Her recipes are the same,
    with easy-to-find ingredients, big flavors, straightforward technique.

    Karamardian, an Armenian born in Israel, is heir to the huge variety of
    culinary styles that meet in the Caucasus region. Though her cooking
    centers on flavors from Syria, Israel, Greece, and North Africa, she
    is as likely to prepare a typical Mediterranean pasta salad as she is
    the more eastern pilafs and grilled meats, with their seasonings of
    sumac and Aleppo pepper. But classics like baba ghanouj, stuffed grape
    leaves, tabbouleh, spanakopita, and moussaka also make appearances.

    New England can match the natural abundance of the Fertile Crescent
    (or southern California, for that matter) only in late summer. But when
    our tomatoes, eggplants, and bell peppers are available in profusion
    and the grill's still up and running, these are the recipes you're
    looking for.

    Moroccan salmon with charmoula sauce is thoroughly dredged in a bazaar
    of spices; the charmoula's liberal dose of diced tomatoes and cilantro
    keeps the fish moist and bright-tasting. Rosemary-garlic chicken with
    lemon gets marinated and grilled with its skin, for maximum flavor.

    A massive quantity of thinly sliced onions, patiently cooked to gilded
    brown shreds of sweetness, is the secret to her mujadara, or rice
    pilaf with lentils and caramelized onions. Zov's version uses a more
    than generous dollop of sweet butter, which melds the flavors together
    and gives depth to the onions. For vine-ripened roasted tomato-basil
    soup, plum tomatoes get blasted in a 450-degree oven to concentrate
    their flavor before joining a broth of aromatics and potatoes.

    This is hot-weather food, so it's no surprise that Zov's desserts
    turn toward cool, creamy comforts. Most are favorites, slightly
    tailored. Jasmine rice pudding with fresh berries gets an elegant
    scattering of sliced pistachios. Luscious lemon squares offer just
    enough sweetness in their silken custard to get away with what would
    otherwise be a withering, mouth-puckering tartness.

    In other words, Zov doesn't take any chances when it comes to flavor.

    Why add just a teaspoon of lemon juice to the custard when you can
    use two-thirds of a cup -- and a handful of the grated rind while
    you're at it?

    It's not just the flavors that are big. You'll need to break out your
    largest pots for these recipes, none of which seem to be constructed to
    serve fewer than six; eight to 10 is typical. These are party recipes,
    meant to share with a big family or group of friends. A household of
    only two would be dining on leftovers for a week.

    "Zov" is a heavy, handsome book published outside traditional
    channels. At $35, it doesn't come cheap. Four-color photographs
    fill every spread, large as life and sometimes larger. Those with a
    taste for endless summer will find much to love in it; others will
    thankfully browse its sunlit pages during the long season when sweet,
    ripe tomatoes are just a memory.
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