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Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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Does anyone have any recipes using the Greek spice Mastic? Pistaccia spp.
Just got hold of some and keen to try it. J This mail has been checked by Symantec anti-virus programme, with regular updates. |
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In article >,
"jonathan.west1" > wrote: > Does anyone have any recipes using the Greek spice Mastic? Pistaccia spp. > > Just got hold of some and keen to try it. There is a recipe using mastic in _Soup for the Qan_, which is a very old Chinese cookbook. Mastic appears in medieval Islamic cooking--for instance in Buraniya, Tuffahiya, Naranjiya and Madira, all of which can be found in the webbed recipes from the _Miscellany_ (a book my wife and I self-publish) at: http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Mediev...sc9recipes.pdf Use mastic in very small quantities. -- Remove NOSPAM to email Also remove .invalid www.daviddfriedman.com |
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jonathan.west1 wrote:
> Does anyone have any recipes using the Greek spice Mastic? Pistaccia spp. > > Just got hold of some and keen to try it. A quick search came up with a couple recipes using mastic: <http://tinyurl.com/27qks> Check a confection in English called "Turkish Delight." Also called (by different spellings because it's transliterated) loukoum, lukoum, rakkat loukoum, rahat loukoum... <http://www.recipecottage.com/candy/turkish-delight13.html> <http://www.recipegoldmine.com/glossary/glossaryM.html> <http://www.low-carb-recipes.ws/Halkoum_Turkish_Delight_.html> <http://home.wanadoo.nl/ml.kauwgom/history.htm> Gotta go now, but this has been interesting. Happy mastic... Pastorio |
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