Injera
#1
Posted 08 May 2004 - 04:00 PM
I cut it in thick strips and fried it, and have plans to dip it in hummus if there happens to be any left over. I keep wandering into the kitchen to snag a strip and munch. Thin, crunchy, sour... its really quite divine.
Has anyone ever tried this? I fried them in the same oil that I used for frying vada, so the oil imparted some lovely flavors.
#2
Posted 09 May 2004 - 06:22 AM
#3
Posted 09 May 2004 - 12:02 PM
Haven't tried frying it yet, but the addition of tomatoes and chilies is similar to fit-fit, a salad great for leftover injera. Chop it up with chopped red onion, jalapenos, tomatoes and garlic, and mix with lemon juice, melted butter and salt and pepper, let sit for a bit to let the flavors sythesize, and eat.
Pat
Edited by Sleepy_Dragon, 09 May 2004 - 12:03 PM.
#4
Posted 09 May 2004 - 12:38 PM
Pat
#5
Posted 26 June 2004 - 07:19 PM
#6
Posted 27 June 2004 - 12:52 PM
While I loved the fried injera, it was realllllllly oily, so I think I'm going to lightly oil and season the strips next time and bake them or broil them. I'm thinking they will be stellar with baba ganouj.
#7
Posted 27 June 2004 - 11:47 PM
I posted a recipe in an earlier thread out of one of my books, towards the bottom.
Pat
Edited by Sleepy_Dragon, 27 June 2004 - 11:49 PM.
#9
Posted 28 June 2004 - 08:49 AM
Injera is an Ethiopian flatbread made out of a fermented teff flour batter. They are very thin, moist and flexible. Here it is quartered. You can see the bubbles, thats the top side. They are cooked only on one side, the bottom lacks the lacy look. They are typically cooked in these huge skillets and are used instead of utensils to scoop up food and sauce.
Very sour flavor, and just delicious!
#10
Posted 28 June 2004 - 01:46 PM
Very interesting, it looks like the Indian Dosa. Honestly, I have never had Ethiopian food. I think we have a restaurant in Houston, so I might check it out.My pleasure to do so, Elie!
Injera is an Ethiopian flatbread made out of a fermented teff flour batter. They are very thin, moist and flexible. Here it is quartered. You can see the bubbles, thats the top side. They are cooked only on one side, the bottom lacks the lacy look. They are typically cooked in these huge skillets and are used instead of utensils to scoop up food and sauce.
Very sour flavor, and just delicious!
Thanks
Elie
E. Nassar
Houston, TX
My Blog
contact: enassar(AT)gmail(DOT)com
#11
Posted 28 June 2004 - 01:51 PM
#12
Posted 28 June 2004 - 02:08 PM
#13
Posted 28 June 2004 - 02:09 PM
#14
Posted 28 June 2004 - 02:13 PM
#15
Posted 28 June 2004 - 02:15 PM
#16
Posted 28 June 2004 - 04:15 PM
Definitely check out that restaurant. Ethiopian food, when done well, is on par with any other nationality of cuisine.Very interesting, it looks like the Indian Dosa. Honestly, I have never had Ethiopian food. I think we have a restaurant in Houston, so I might check it out.
If there's Ethiopians eating in the restaurant you go to, watch carefully the way they use the injera to make packets of food by pressing the food into the injera rather than just scooping it up and making a mess. In the hundreds of times I've dined at Ethiopian restaurants I have never seen an Ethiopian ever get food on themselves. Westerners, on the other hand, have a tendency to be complete slobs
It's all in the technique. Concentrate on getting the injera around the clump of food so a little pocket is formed. Ethiopians I've watched have an interesting rhythm. Presspresspresspresspresspressclose eat. It helps if the food isn't too watery or too chunky. The real secret is getting the most of the main dish with as little bread as possible. That will come with practice.
#17
Posted 28 June 2004 - 04:28 PM
milletis also a millet i think.i like ragi too.
For many years, food writers included millet as the key ingredient for the Ethiopian bread "injera", but now only about 5% of all injera is made from millet. Most utilize a grain that closely resembles millet, called teff.
Edited by gingerly, 28 June 2004 - 04:52 PM.
#18
Posted 28 June 2004 - 08:59 PM
Typically, in areas which may-or-may-not get enough water for other grains, maize will be attempted first, with millet and then teff as the fall-back crops. I'm assuming that this would be due to the relative yields of the crops; and the relative difficulty of milling teff given its tininess.
I think I have a little bit left in my cupboard as I write this. It's bloody expensive stuff, about $13/lb when I bought it last. Remarkably tasty stuff, though.
#19
Posted 29 June 2004 - 05:33 AM
Anyway, an odd thing happens to me! Every time I make dosas, I get something pretty soft which doesn't look that much like the dosas I know and love
On the other side, the only time I tried to make injera I got perfect dosas!
But, even admitting that this result wasn't serendipitous
Since it's unlikely that I can find teff here in Genoa, where Ethiopians are few, which type of grain could I use? Some recipes I found suggest half white wheat flour and half maize flour, does it make sense? Am I supposed to add a leavening agent (some recipes call for natural yeast) or the batter must ferment by itself?
Another question: can I cook injera into a nonstick pan?
TIA!
Pongi
#20
Posted 29 June 2004 - 03:10 PM
Do you have any Ethiopian restaurants near you? A restaurant will usually sell you some teff.
By the time you factor in shipping it's outrageously expensive, but here is one online source that ships internationally:
http://lib1.store.vi...s/tfcatalog.htm
#21
Posted 29 June 2004 - 05:02 PM
That's not true. Teff injera is the staple but it is also made with other flour.I cringe when I see non teff injera recipes. Without the teff,it's not injera.
Since it's unlikely that I can find teff here in Genoa, where Ethiopians are few, which type of grain could I use? Some recipes I found suggest half white wheat flour and half maize flour, does it make sense? Am I supposed to add a leavening agent (some recipes call for natural yeast) or the batter must ferment by itself?
Another question: can I cook injera into a nonstick pan?
1. I would recomend trying to track down some Teff. I you do a google search there a several vendors listed that might ship internationally if you email them. Buckwheat injera is also good. Keep in mind that Ethiopians usually roast grains like buckwheat before grinding them.
2. In my family the batter is always left to ferment on the kitchen counter like you would a sourdough.
3. My mother has a large electric clay injera maker that she brought back from Addis for my wedding but I don't think she has ever used it. Her tool of choice is a large round non-stick electric griddle that I believe is marketed as a lefse (or maybe crepe) maker. Any flat (or slightly convex) round pans will work fine
#22
Posted 05 July 2004 - 02:04 AM
#23
Posted 05 July 2004 - 10:12 AM
My ESL class is mostly Ethiopians and I have enjoyed their cooking many times. They have tried to tell me their recipe, but we still have a language problem
www.hillmanweb.com
#24
Posted 23 July 2004 - 03:45 PM
I found the following thread with lots of sources of recipes.
http://forums.egulle...showtopic=36956
I had an idea for your ESL class. Maybe you could have a cooking class where the students show you how to make injera and you take good notes and measure what they are using. Then show them some quick American or British food, like french fries, grilled cheese, eggs, something easy. Then you could work on a recipe book that shows measurement. I know that most countries use the metric system but it might be a good experience for your students to see that some countries still persist in keeping their identities through old forms of measurement.
Good luck.









