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| Tiale |
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Joined: Jan 22 2009 Posts: 855
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 2:41 am Post subject: kube |
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How do I make kube from bulgur? I have the dry grains (whole? I think) from the health food store. I have ground beef? How do I make it? what's a good side dish and/or veggie dish to go with it? TIA _________________ Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the difference.
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| chanchy123 |
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Diamond Member


Joined: Sep 29 2008 Posts: 4068 Location: Gush Ezyon, Israel
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 2:52 am Post subject: re: kube |
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I'm also interested in a good recipe. _________________ גשם, גשם בוא!
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| Tiale |
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 9:19 am Post subject: |
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| Good morning America! Any ideas on this one?
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| Shopmiami49 |
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Diamond Member


Joined: Mar 09 2008 Posts: 2566 Location: Jerusalem, Israel
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 9:42 am Post subject: re: kube |
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Real kubbeh made with bulgar is the fried one...is this the one you want a recipe for?
Otherwise, you need semolina for the dough for kubbeh in soup. _________________ For every minute of anger, you lose sixty seconds of happiness.
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| mominisrael2 |
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Gold Member


Joined: Jan 26 2009 Posts: 1481 Location: Ma'ale Adumim, Israel
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 9:55 am Post subject: re: kube |
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I have a great recipe for the soup kind, let me know if that's what you're looking for... _________________ DD1: July 2, 2001
DD2: April 29, 2004
DS: November 20, 2009
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| ra_mom |
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Joined: Dec 09 2008 Posts: 18453 Location: NY
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Joined: Jan 22 2009 Posts: 855
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 11:59 am Post subject: |
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I love kube. Period. I bought bulgur for taboule salad so I was reminded about kube.
Thanks ra_mom!
I'd love both kinds if possible I thought to make the one with bulgur for dinner tonight but I looove the other one so if you have the patience/time... ;)TIA!
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| ray family |
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Joined: Jul 07 2009 Posts: 1727
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 12:26 pm Post subject: re: kube |
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there's kube (Syrian) and Kuba (Iraqi)
the one made w/ bulgar is kube. if you'd like I can post the recipe from aromas of allepo later tonight bli neder
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| Tamiri |
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 12:27 pm Post subject: Re: re: kube |
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Thanks for saving me the trouble!
There is individual bulgar kubbe. Rice kubbe. Semolina kubbe. Pesach matza-meal kubbe. But for those who want an easy life, there is Tamiri's kubbe!
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| yo'ma |
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Joined: Mar 09 2008 Posts: 10642 Location: american living in argentina
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 2:27 pm Post subject: |
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A friend of mine makes the individual kind and she says it takes her so long, she does the meat part one day and another day the putting together. She also makes a lot at a time because it just makes sense for a pain in the neck thing. I buy them from the store .
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| ray family |
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Joined: Jul 07 2009 Posts: 1727
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 3:57 pm Post subject: re: kube |
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From Aromas of Alleppo
(my grandmother recently taught me how to make this for the first time. we did not use matzah meal- only bulgar and flour. nor did we use cumin, paprika or the red pepper in the crust)
3 c bulgur- rinsed and drained
1 c matzah meal
1 c flour
2 T cumin
2 t paprika
1 1/2 t crushed red pepper
1 T kosher salt
3 T veg oil plus more for frying
Filling
1 lg onion chopped
1 T oil
1 lb ground beef
1t allspice
1/4 c pine nuts
1 t Kosher salt
saute onion in oil until soft. add the meat and continue sauteeing constantly breaking up the meat..let cool add spices
for the shells
combine the ingredients mix. gradually add 2 3/4-3 c lukewarm waterin a thin stream as needed. make a firm but moist dough.
shape the dough into balls 1 inch in diameter- work w/ damp hands so the dough doesnt stick- burrow your finger into the middle of the ball push your finger against the wall while turning the ball- forming a torpedo-like shape. use a narrow spoon to fill the shells. lay them on a tray and freeze
when ready to eat deep fry until golden.
alternatively you can spread half of the dough in a pan place the filling on top then the rest of the dough. score the top of the crust diagonally making diamond shapes
drizzle oil on top and bake
serve w/ techina
enjoy
ps it takes practice and patience to get the torpedo shape
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| Shopmiami49 |
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Diamond Member


Joined: Mar 09 2008 Posts: 2566 Location: Jerusalem, Israel
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Posted: Sun, Jun 26 2011, 4:05 pm Post subject: Re: re: kube |
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| ray family wrote: | From Aromas of Alleppo
(my grandmother recently taught me how to make this for the first time. we did not use matzah meal- only bulgar and flour. nor did we use cumin, paprika or the red pepper in the crust)
3 c bulgur- rinsed and drained
1 c matzah meal
1 c flour
2 T cumin
2 t paprika
1 1/2 t crushed red pepper
1 T kosher salt
3 T veg oil plus more for frying
Filling
1 lg onion chopped
1 T oil
1 lb ground beef
1t allspice
1/4 c pine nuts
1 t Kosher salt
saute onion in oil until soft. add the meat and continue sauteeing constantly breaking up the meat..let cool add spices
for the shells
combine the ingredients mix. gradually add 2 3/4-3 c lukewarm waterin a thin stream as needed. make a firm but moist dough.
shape the dough into balls 1 inch in diameter- work w/ damp hands so the dough doesnt stick- burrow your finger into the middle of the ball push your finger against the wall while turning the ball- forming a torpedo-like shape. use a narrow spoon to fill the shells. lay them on a tray and freeze
when ready to eat deep fry until golden.
alternatively you can spread half of the dough in a pan place the filling on top then the rest of the dough. score the top of the crust diagonally making diamond shapes
drizzle oil on top and bake
serve w/ techina
enjoy
ps it takes practice and patience to get the torpedo shape |
The real authentic way to make the dough is to substitute 1 c. semolina for 1 c. matzah meal or flour. My MIL always puts chopped parsley in the meat as well.
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| Shopmiami49 |
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Diamond Member


Joined: Mar 09 2008 Posts: 2566 Location: Jerusalem, Israel
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Posted: Thu, Jun 30 2011, 3:51 pm Post subject: re: kube |
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I just want to tell you that I made fried kubbah tonight and I tried half my MIL's way and half this way.
The spices in this recipe are INCREDIBLE! I also added the spices to the dough and it was really really good.
However, I just want to point out that you really need to soak the bulgar first in warm water after rinsing it. You pour it into a bowl and put 3x the amount of water and let it soak up. And THEN you add the flour and start filling. In the first batch I made, I used bulgar and semolina and they were awesome and crunchy on the outside, chewy on the inside. In the second batch, I used bulgar (not pre-soaked) and flour. When I fried them, the kubbah kept absorbing the oil as the liquid (since it had no water to absorb), plus they kept cracking as they absorbed the water in the recipe. These ended up more soggy than crunchy.
Just wanted to tip you all off in case you make this. DEFINITELY keep the spices in - YUM!
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| Mrs Bissli |
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Joined: Sep 01 2008 Posts: 6262 Location: Galut, UK
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Posted: Thu, Jun 30 2011, 4:04 pm Post subject: re: kube |
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One more VERY important thing. Bulgher you use for kubbeh is FINE one, not the coarse grainy one you use for tabboule. They are not interchangeable. If you use the coarse one, your kubbeh will crumble. Also for the meat you use for the shell, normal ground meat is too coarse. It's better to whizz them in food processor briefly. Another way to cheat and minimise the risk of shells cracking is to add a bit of beaten egg as a binder (again this is clearly a cheat).
Rather than those exploding torpedoes, it's easier to do the baked version--basically shells divided into bottom and top layers, with the meat filling sandwiched.
I do have recipe for kibbeh which uses ground rice flour and ground meat for the shell.
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