Now that I have it I would like to use it. As I have found it being sold in supermarkets in the UK (no mention of goats though) people here in the UK must be using it. I have also seen some US recipes but they all tend to be a bit boring as they tend to use it as a drizzling oil only (is Argan oil the new Truffle oil?). I though of a Robert May medieval grand salad thing might be good with Argan oil. Any further suggestions
Argan oil
#1
Posted 17 October 2001 - 01:14 AM
#2
Posted 17 October 2001 - 07:34 AM
(From the Times 3/1/01)In Morocco, argan oil is used mainly as a finishing touch for tagines and sometimes for couscous. It is combined with lemon juice -- never vinegar -- to make a salad dressing, and mixed with honey and yogurt for breakfast.
American chefs are taking argan oil well beyond Berber dishes. At Local, Franklin Becker prepares vinaigrettes, using the toasted oil and the cold-pressed variety with red wine and Champagne vinegars, honey and beet juice. The dressings are used for a wheat berry and baby beet salad with Bleu de Bresse cheese and candied walnuts. Gerry Hayden, the executive chef at Aureole, drizzles it over a soup of pureed Jerusalem artichokes seasoned with preserved lemon, and he plans to use it with venison.
#3
Posted 17 October 2001 - 05:02 PM
#4
Posted 18 October 2001 - 03:37 AM
#5
Posted 18 October 2001 - 05:45 AM
#6
Posted 18 October 2001 - 06:16 AM
#7
Posted 18 October 2001 - 06:55 AM
#8
Posted 18 October 2001 - 08:05 AM
Best regards
Adam
#9
Posted 18 October 2001 - 08:50 AM
What is it good for?
Absolutely nothing . . .
-Steven "Springsteen" Shaw
#10
Posted 28 December 2001 - 08:45 AM
L'Espadon, at the Ritz in Paris -- Fine tarte aux truffes noires parfumee a l'huile d'Argan, doucette de Xeres (thin-crusted tart with black truffles flavored with argan oil). Argan oil was used very sparingly in this dish.
Meneau's L'Esperence -- Brochettes de petoncles au sesame (skewers of a scallop-like item with sesame). This dish utilized quite a lot of argan oil, but the sesame somehow offset the stench of the oil. This dish was part of four decent-sized appetizers called "Les Petits Plats Nouveaux" (new little dishes). The others were:
Caviar a la puree d'oignons (caviar with onion puree)
Langoustine rissollee au curry (langoustine browned with curry)
Pomme de terre, puree de celeri et truffes (potatoes with celery puree and truffles (black))
#11
Posted 28 December 2001 - 05:11 PM
#12
Posted 12 January 2002 - 06:27 AM
www.exoticaoils.com









