A particular favorite around Marrakech and in the south, this cooked salad offers a delightful contrast of cold sweet carrots, earthy cumin, and fresh parsley. It’s even better when prepared a day ahead and left overnight to chill and the flavors to fully meld. Set out alongside a bowl of Marinated Olives to nibble on as an appetizer, or serve as part of a spread of salads.
Anything you can serve at room temperature is a gift when you’re taking on a big menu. These beans shine at room temperature and could be done a day in advance. They will hold at room temperature about 2 hours; after that, chill them.
Ingredients
Serve them with Arab flat breads and accompany them with a salad and a choice of mezze.
Rick: Though most people really love meatballs, many versions never hit the top of my list. Until I tasted these meatballs, that is. The sauce may look like everyday marinara, but its taste is brightened with the flavors of cumin, parsley and good paprika, which is why I go back for bite after bite. When we learned to make these meatballs (called ketfu in Morocco) with Bouchra in Marrakech, she told us she sometimes cracks eggs into the sauce to poach alongside the meatballs. I haven't tried that yet, but I can just imagine how delicious the sauce would taste with the poached yolk stirred into it. I'm particularly fond of these meatballs made with lamb.
My friend Didier Frayssou, a wine master who can match any dish to its soul-mate wine, has a quality I adore in French men: a sophisticated palate and a love of his mom's home cooking. I don't think I'd known him five minutes before he started telling me about his mother's farçous, a type of crepe or galette that's loaded with greens, most especially Swiss chard. Didier comes from Laguiole in the Auvergne, but farçous are a staple throughout Southwest France, where all the moms have their own way of making them.