Cooking
Welcome to LW Cooking, a community for discussing all things related to food and cooking! We want this to be a place for members to feel safe to discuss and share everything they love about the culinary arts. Please feel free to take part and help our community grow!
Taken a nice photo of your creation? We highly encourage sharing with our friends over at !foodporn@lemmy.world.
Posts in this community must be food/cooking related. Recipes for dishes you've made and post picture of are encouraged but are not a requirement. Posts of food you are enjoyed or just think like food are welcomed as well.
Posts can optionally be tagged. We would like the use and number of tags to grow organically. Feel free to use a tag that isn't listed if you think it makes sense to do so. We encourage using tags to help organize and make browsing easier, but you don't have to use them if you don't want to.
TAGS:
- [QUESTION] - For questions about cooking.
- [RECIPE} - Share a recipe of your own, or link one.
- [MEME] - Food related meme or funny post.
- [DISCUSSION] - For general culinary discussion.
- [TIP] - Helpful cooking tips.
FORMAT:
[QUESTION] What are your favorite spices to use in soups?
Other Cooking Communities:
!bbq@lemmy.world - Lemmy.world's home for BBQ.
!foodporn@lemmy.world - Showcasing your best culinary creations.
!sousvide@lemmy.world - All things sous vide precision cooking.
!koreanfood@lemmy.world - Celebrating Korean cuisine!
While posting and commenting in this community, you must abide by the Lemmy.World Terms of Service: https://legal.lemmy.world/tos/
- Posts or comments that are homophobic, transphobic, racist, sexist, ableist, or advocating violence will be removed.
- Be civil: disagreements happen, but that doesn’t provide the right to personally insult others.
- Spam, self promotion, trolling, and bots are not allowed
- Shitposts and memes are allowed until they prove to be a problem.
Failure to follow these guidelines will result in your post/comment being removed and/or more severe actions. All posts and comments will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis. This means that some content that violates the rules may be allowed, while other content that does not violate the rules may be removed. The moderators retain the right to remove any content and ban users. We ask that the users report any comment or post that violates the rules, and to use critical thinking when reading, posting or commenting.
view the rest of the comments
I personally don’t like mjaddara but if you at all want to try the more traditional preparation you need to put way less rice next time. This looks like a rice dish with lentils and not a lentil porridge with rice giving it consistency. You want the rice to soak up way more liquid.
As an adult making lentils I never add rice at all. Lentils are plenty of carbs as it is. You can go more soupy or more porridgy. Funny how it’s cheap comfort food now but as a kid I pretty much hated it.
If you don’t want to caramelize onions, you don’t have to. My rough, zero thought, not strictly traditional, lentils recipe is more like this:
Wash/soak some lentils for 20 minutes to an hour. 300 grams dry red lentils as an example quantity
Chop up a small onion, any kind, finer is better, rougher is fine Slice up a whole head of garlic (or less if you’re less garlic inclined) Lentils go into a pot, with enough water to cover them once over (I just eyeball it). I have an electric kettle so I pour in boiling water. You can start with cold water, it’s fine. You can add water to get it more soupy or let it become chunkier later. Just throw the onions and garlic in. They should cook annd soften over time. If you really really like garlic you can add it a bit later so less of the kick cooks off. In my case I just add more later lmao
I usually use red onions and watching them lose their color is a decent indicator of getting closer to completion. Stir so it doesn’t burn.
And here you just wait. You can add some extras if you want here, but you just do dishes and stuff until the lentils become soft. I don’t know what to say here except let them cook until they’re done.
I sometimes add tomato paste here, or any leftover leafy greens (kale, spinach, sorry grandma I never have chard on hand), I’ve thrown in like a tablespoon of dried oats before, it’s really just a flexible base for different ideas. Mjaddara is the variation with rice. I’ve once blended my lentil soup with an immersion blender for a very different texture. It’s just a base.
I eat this pretty regularly. If you’re on hard times you can eat a lot of this stuff for very cheap and it’s pretty nutritious and low effort. Lots of fiber and protein in there as well.
The most important thing taste wise is probably the seasoning. I appreciate you probably can’t run out and buy the standard Lebanese Seven Spice blend, but you can absolutely throw it together yourself. And that’s what will make it taste like what I know from my childhood. It’s very allspice heavy. I once ran out while cooking something else and used about half “garam masala” and half allspice and it was a bit fennelly but a reasonable substitute.