Bulgur
Place the ingredients in a small saucepan and cover. Cook over low heat until the liquid evaporates. Remove from heat and cool at room temperature for 10 minutes. Place into another container and refrigerate.
Make kibeh like chef Tomás Kalika from Mishiguene in Buenos Aires.
Chef Tomás Kalika honours Argentina’s Jewish immigrant heritage by reinventing Ashkenazi, Sephardic, Israeli and Middle Eastern cooking at his Mishiguene restaurant in Buenos Aires.
Here the chef shares the recipe for his take on kibbeh: tasty quenelles of spiced Middle Eastern ground meat and cracked bulgur wheat served with a creamy labneh.
The dish was featured during the second edition of the S.Pellegrino Destination Dining series, a multi-culinary exchange of restaurants' recipes between the U.S. and Latin America, when it was cooked by chef Michelle Bernstein at Café La Trova in Miami.
Learn how to make kibbeh like chef Tomas Kalika from Mishiguene restaurant in Buenos Aires in the step-by-step recipe below.
Place the ingredients in a small saucepan and cover. Cook over low heat until the liquid evaporates. Remove from heat and cool at room temperature for 10 minutes. Place into another container and refrigerate.
Char the skin of the peppers over direct heat. Reserve in a plastic bag and allow the steam to facilitate the peeling process. Peel the peppers with the help of water if needed, and chop them roughly.
Julienne the red onion. Let it sweat in olive oil until transparent. Add garlic and spices and toast them for 1 minute, stirring constantly to avoid burning. Add the tomato and the pulp of the chilli peppers and cook over medium heat for a few minutes. Deglaze them with the broth and reduce to dry. Blend and emulsify with olive oil until obtaining a smooth and shiny paste. Sift and set it aside.
Mix all the ingredients and allow them to marinate in the fridge for two hours.
Place all the ingredients into a bowl. Mix well until they are totally integrated. Rectify flavour if necessary with seasoning. This procedure must be done when serving the dish.
Chop the herbs very finely and mix them in a container.
Blend the ingredients until you get a smooth, silky and homogeneous sauce.
Place the yogurt and goat cheese into a bowl. Whip them with a whisk to dissolve any lumps. Add a little of the yogurt whey if necessary until you get a full-bodied sauce, both shiny and light. Season with the salt and olive oil. Set it aside.
Smear the yeast with part of the water and the olive oil. Let it stand for 15 minutes.
Place the dry ingredients into a bowl and add the water and the previous ferment. Knead until you get an elastic dough.
Ferment the dough covered with plastic wrap until it doubles its size.
Form 100 gram buns and set them aside again until they double their size.
Stretch with a rolling pin and form circles 3 mm thick. Arrange on floured plates and bake on a tray directly in an oven preheated to 230 ° C for 2 to 3 minutes or until the dough is puffed up like a sphere.
Cut the ends and separate into two layers.
Fry the layers over medium heat until both sides are browned.
Season with za'atar, sumac and salt on both sides. Reserve in an airtight container.
Make a large quenelle with the kibbeh mixture and place it in the middle of a deep plate. Place the tomato coulis on the left side without overflowing the edges. Place in labneh on the right side in the shape of a large dot and make a groove in it with the back of a spoon. Place olive oil and ground black pepper in the groove.
Place the herbs forming a crest on the quenelle of kibbeh. Place the pine nuts on one of the ends and place the green oil around the plate.
Serve with the laffa bread in another container.