sgt_zim
AH ambassador
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2017
- Messages
- 5,488
- Reaction score
- 21,974
- Location
- Richmond, Texas
- Media
- 33
- Articles
- 1
- Member of
- NRA, Houston Safari Club Foundation, NWTF
- Hunted
- South Africa, Idaho, Texas, Louisiana
So.
I'm sure there must be a thread about recipes for wild game and what-not, but after 5 pages in general chat and not finding any, I figured I'd start a new one.
I simply love to cook, preferably wild game, but I'll cook whatever strikes me as interesting. A number of years ago, my wife gifted me with a Lebanese recipe book that I'd asked for. I had no idea what I'd find, it was just a different path than the Cajun and Italian I'd been accustomed to cooking. "Cinnamon, allspice, and nutmeg for meat???"
So anyway, my Eastern Orthodox parish has a custom of parishioners cooking for families with brand new babies for about a month or 6 weeks so Mom and Dad (especially those who already have kids) can focus on family and not have to deal with cooking.
Friday evening and most of the day Saturday, I prepared Fatteh ma Lahm (layered London broil with garlic yogurt/tahini and pita), tabbouleh, spinach triangles, and Lebanese style baklava.
Word gets around. Now I'm pretty much locked in to cook the same thing for the other 4 young women who are 30 weeks+.
If I were on death row and were asked for my last meal, I'd choose fatteh ma lahm. If I lived in Beirut and had access to other people cooking food like this, I'd weigh 400 lbs.
A little chest-thumping, but mostly curious if there are other epi-curious folks here, and what it is that's off the beaten path you like to cook.
I'm sure there must be a thread about recipes for wild game and what-not, but after 5 pages in general chat and not finding any, I figured I'd start a new one.
I simply love to cook, preferably wild game, but I'll cook whatever strikes me as interesting. A number of years ago, my wife gifted me with a Lebanese recipe book that I'd asked for. I had no idea what I'd find, it was just a different path than the Cajun and Italian I'd been accustomed to cooking. "Cinnamon, allspice, and nutmeg for meat???"
So anyway, my Eastern Orthodox parish has a custom of parishioners cooking for families with brand new babies for about a month or 6 weeks so Mom and Dad (especially those who already have kids) can focus on family and not have to deal with cooking.
Friday evening and most of the day Saturday, I prepared Fatteh ma Lahm (layered London broil with garlic yogurt/tahini and pita), tabbouleh, spinach triangles, and Lebanese style baklava.
Word gets around. Now I'm pretty much locked in to cook the same thing for the other 4 young women who are 30 weeks+.
If I were on death row and were asked for my last meal, I'd choose fatteh ma lahm. If I lived in Beirut and had access to other people cooking food like this, I'd weigh 400 lbs.
A little chest-thumping, but mostly curious if there are other epi-curious folks here, and what it is that's off the beaten path you like to cook.
and vegetables, Sunday dinner.

