Hi. My name is Dahlia.
I grew up in New York in a typical Jewish immigrant family where home entertaining was the norm rather than the exception. Our dinner table regularly sat twenty guests from all over the world and was often elbow-to-elbow full. During the Jewish holidays, my parents adopted the literal meaning of the biblical words, “All whom are hungry, let them come and eat.” It was a festive fiasco of wine goblets clinking to the word “L’Chaim,” silverware clanking, a table overflowing with familial rice dishes center stage to the polyglot ensemble. This multi linguistic home represented the intricate tapestry of my family who were scattered all over the world. I am a product of this ensemble and these dishes are my effort to fuse my ancestral ties to my contemporary sensibilities. More specifically, I am of Central Asian descent, which still probably does not help you understand where that it. Well, I am part Afghan and part Bukharian (southern Muslim republic of Russia) and a lot in between.
These dishes are an ode to the ancient silk road, however has been integrated into our contemporary lifestlye utilizing local ingredients still retaining the authentic flavor. The diversity in the dishes has to do with the spices that were indigenous to the country and the produce that were seasonally available. Keeping that in mind, I have aimed at eating rhythmically to the seasons to remain interconnected with the environment to appreciate the change of foods with the change of seasons. It is also noteworthy that a meat based diet along the Silk Route was a luxury, because of the expense and the scarcity of animals. Most animals, chattel to be specific were used as laborers and on special occasions for consumption. So many of the dishes from the region are vegetarian based that is a collage of Asian, African, Russian and Mediterranean cuisine fused into a unique new cuisine that most Westerners have never tasted. You can read more about my plight to vegetarianism when I adopted my cocker spaniel, Flynn.
I am not a trained chef, however learned through my mothers' fervor for cooking, who fearlessly combined spices and a lot of love into her recipes forming groundbreaking unique flavors. So, if I can cook these dishes anyone can.
So glad to have found your site/blog! First recipe I tried was the quinoa and veggies. I manipulate most recipes to suite my family. Jewish vegans here as well. I cook for 10 each meal these days standard but can be found hosting twice that many feeding them dishes from India to Japan, from Korea to Israel, Poland to American and points in between. Everything is enjoyed. Okay so we did freak out the new guy when we served faluda for desert. He came back though. lol Love your recipes!
ReplyDelete10 people for each meal! wow- you have a little soccer team there. Good on you! Reach out to me if you need any modifications for recipes. Always glad to help.
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