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Posts Tagged ‘Hani Khouri’

Cherokee Purple, Amish Paste, Mortgage Lifter, Brandywine. If you missed out on grabbing heirloom tomato plants last weekend, you have one more chance. Redland Organics will be at Ramble, Fairchild Garden’s annual festival of food and plants, on Friday Nov. 20, Saturday Nov. 21 and Sunday Nov. 22.

In addition to tomato plants, Farmer Margie will be selling smoked organic eggs (my favorite high protein snack), fresh organic eggs, herbs and various seasonal fruits. You will find it all at Slow Food Miami’s Greenmarket Tent. Don’t forget to try cas guava, the latest flavor of goat milk ice cream from Hani Khouri of Redland Mediterranean Organics. And, Martha Montes de Oca, of Sous Chef 2 Go, will be cooking up Hispanic dishes with an organic twist.

In addition, there will be several cooking demos. Hani will hold a goat cheese-making workshop on Sunday at 2pm. CSA member Hunter Reno and chef Adri Garcia will give their cooking demo, “What’s in Your Lunchbox?” on Sunday at 11 am. Saturday’s demos are at 11 am with Thi Squire and 2pm with chef Dawn Fine.

Admission is $20 for adults, $15 for seniors, $10 for children 6-17, and free for children 5 and under and members of the garden. Go to the web site to get a coupon for $5 off event admission.

Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden
10901 Old Cutler Road
Coral Gables
305-667-1651

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Arazá! What a wonderful name! Too bad the fruit is so tart…. But Farmer Margie told me that Hani Khouri of Redland Mediterranean Organics was going to make ice cream with it. Robert Barnum confirmed he had sold some fruit. Hot on the trail, I spoke with Hani and he promised that arazá ice cream would be available at the Edible Garden Festival at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden.

Arazá ice cream

Arazá ice cream

So I braved sporadic rain showers on Saturday, sidled up to Hani’s tent and asked, “Got arazá?” Yes, he said, and his son Jad handed me a container from the cooler. The only ingredients are arazá, agave nectar, and fresh goat milk. The ice cream is pale yellow in color, sweet and tart at the same time, with a “yogurt-like flavor in the back as a finish,” as Hani described. From the first spoonful I was in a swoon, lost in the blend of sweet-tart-tangy flavors and the smooth, creamy texture. Almost forgot to photograph it, that’s why there’s some missing in the picture. It’s now my new favorite flavor. Sorry, mango-orchid. Sorry, papaya.

Hani started heating organic safflower oil in the big fry pan to make falafel, and I realized that a) I hadn’t had lunch and b) I hadn’t eaten his falafel in ages. Time to remedy that.

First came the flatbread, smeared with a dab of tahini sauce green with mint. Then three golden nuggets of falafel were topped with amba, fermented pickled green mango flavored with fenugreek and mustard seeds. “It’s spicy,” Hani warned, adding a small amount. (He claims that Farmers Margie and Gabriele are addicted to his amba.) I like how it added an exotic bite. Then came pickled turnips (bright pink from beets), thinly sliced cucumber and chopped tomato. Uniquely flavorful, this style of falafel is lighter than what I’ve tried elsewhere, and was told those particular toppings are quite popular in Israel.

Making falafel

Assembling falafel with pickled turnips

Redland Mediterranean Organics has teamed up with Sous Chef 2 Go and is sharing a tent at the Jackson Memorial Hospital farmers market. It happens on Thursdays in front of the Alamo building. Go look for their tent at lunchtime. The arazá ice cream is waiting to meet your taste buds. Also new on the menu is chicken roll — chicken seasoned with sumac (which gives it a cinnamon-like taste), rolled in dough and baked. And don’t forget the goat cheese!

[Note: Hani Khouri called me on Nov. 11 to tell me that he’s no longer selling at this market due to a sharp increase in vendor fees. He and Sous Chef 2 Go are partnering in a new lunch menu at the shop in Kendall. Look for my review coming soon.]

The Jackson Memorial Foundation Green Market @ Alamo Park
1611 NW 12th Ave., Miami
Inside the JMH Campus
Open Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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Robert Barnum, the owner of Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery, was testing and fine-tuning his recipes for weeks before The End of Summer Brunch. He’s a self-taught chef who has developed a long list of interesting dishes with unique tastes and texture combinations, using tropical fruits that grow in his nursery. He’s also created The Possum Experience, which includes dinner and tour of the grove. The Brunch was similar to the Experience, in case you were wondering.

Robert Barnum, The Cantankerous Chef

Robert Barnum, The Cantankerous Chef

Robert was up at 3:30 in the morning the day of the brunch, making last minute preparations along with his assistants. Farmer Margie and her crew came over at 7:30 to help. The oven in the main kitchen gave out, so roasting mixed root vegetables was moved to the wood burning oven and smoker outside. It was puffing merrily when I arrived at 9:30. Cheesemaker Hani Khouri also came by, and that was his goat cheese and labneh that you ate. A long table with chairs was placed under the trees, set with centerpieces of basil, carambola and red ginger aka shampoo ginger. Nearby was the tent with beverages — a blend of cas, passion and carambola juices, lemongrass tea, a pitcher of honey-water to sweeten the tea, and water for the timid.

On the porch, a buffet was set up with all the dishes, and guests lined up to be served. The menu has been blogged elsewhere. The guests enjoyed themselves, and the scene under the trees looked like something from a French film. My favorite dishes were the broiled avocado with scrambled eggs, allspice muffins with honeyed labneh, and the fruit salad. That salad had a happy jumble of ingredients — carambola, longan, banana, red grapefruit, mango and jakfruit. (Have been getting the smoked eggs all summer, and they are great for egg salad with celery and sweet onion.) For nibbles, there were boiled jakfruit seeds that tasted like chestnut. Robert simmered them four times at 45 minutes each time, which made them quite edible, the result of another happy accident in the kitchen.

Halfway through the meal, Robert realized he needed to set out his homemade wine. He dusted off several jugs of bignay (or antidesma) fruit wine he made himself. It tasted like a fruity merlot, and later I combined it with cass juice for and incredible taste of deep sweet and bright tart. The bignay tree is native to Africa (according to Robert) and grows well here. The wine was made from its berries, which grow in clusters and is one of the few fruits that starts green, turns white, then bright red to purple-black as they ripen.

Tour of Possum Trot

Tour of Possum Trot

After the meal came the tour of Possum Trot. Most of the guests took a lap around the 40 acre property with Robert pointing out various kinds of trees growing there, and other interesting things. (I couldn’t help but notice that he was walking around in bare feet!) He has several macadamia nut trees (a favorite of squirrels), carambola, canistel, mango, avocado, citrus (now dying from greening disease) and plenty others. When I walk through his grove I think this is what the Garden of Eden might have been like… maybe. A tropical vine has infested a section of the grove and covered trees. Robert sure could use volunteers to pull the vines out. If you want to come and help — and most likely get fed a fabulous lunch– let him know!

So I waddled home with a full belly and a sack full of basil recycled from the centerpieces. There was plenty left, and I’m surprised that people didn’t ask to take it with them. Whipped up a big batch of pesto, and it’s going on the smoked eggs and other things I’m eating this week.

Reservations for The Possum Experience:

Robert Barnum
The Cantankerous Chef
Possum Trot Tropical Fruit Nursery
14955 S.W. 214 St.
Miami FL 33187-4602
305-235-1768

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The spread in Sunday's Outlook section

The spread in Sunday's Outlook section

Did you happen to see the article about local farmers in Sunday’s Sun Sentinel? Margie Pikarsky, Hani Khouri and Gabrielle Marewski, among others, were interviewed by Jaideep Hardikar, a journalist from Nagpur, a city in central India. His beat is rural India and agriculture. Jaideep is here in South Florida finishing up a six month fellowship through the Alfred Friendly Press Fellowship program. He is one of 10 fellows selected this year to work in American newspapers. He also met up with us at the Small Farms Conference earlier this month.

Note: Jaideep’s article The Farmers Among Us has been removed from the Sun-Sentinel online archive. Discovered that on Oct. 13, 2009.

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Hani Khouri says "Cheese!"

Hani Khouri says "Cheese!"

Hani Khouri, owner of Redland Mediterranean Organics (and the latest grower to join Redland Organics), makes cheese and ice cream from goat milk. Wait a minute… what’s that… goat milk ice cream? Um, how does it taste? Like really, really good ice cream. And when was the last time that you experienced a flavor like papaya-wild orchid or mango-wild orchid, fruity and sweet with a perfume-y finish. No goat flavors in the ice cream, no worries. How Hani does it is a secret, he says, and I’ve tried to find out.

The ice cream flavors run towards the tropical. There’s jakfruit, mamey, and plain mango, from fruits sourced locally in Redland and subject to availability. For traditionalists there’s vanilla bean, chocolate (to die for), peach, raspberry and strawberry. All flavors are sweetened with agave.

Hani also makes two kinds of cheeses. One is a firm cheese with texture like feta but less salt and no goat-y flavor. It’s

Labneh with olive oil

Labneh with olive oil

one of my favorites. I’ve put it in sandwiches and salads, goes great with arugula. Last Saturday I sampled Hani’s latest offering — labneh, a soft cheese with the spreadability of cream cheese, and with the familiar tang of goat (but not too much). Labneh, Hani explained to me, begins as goat milk yoghurt that is drained and salted. No fan of typical goat cheese, I hesitated before sampling the it with olive oil on whole wheat pita — and was pleasantly surprised by its flavor — a mild goat presence, but not too overwhelming — nice!

Also on the Redland Mediterranean Organics menu is hummus, tabouli, falafel and baba ganoush. They’re all super fresh. When I dropped by Hani’s tent last on a rainy Saturday afternoon at the Coconut Grove Organic Farmers Market, he was finely chopping organic mint to stir into the tabouli. (The mint was picked at Bee Heaven Farm just the day before, and so were the scallions.) The invigorating aroma of mint floated into the air and drew people to the tent. “What’s that you’re making,” they asked, and hung around waiting for him to finish.

Stirring mint into fresh tabouli

Stirring mint into fresh tabouli

“So what is local food?” Hani asked as he chopped and stirred. “How far do you go to get locally produced food?” The boundaries of a local food area could be set at 100 miles. Or it could be 400 miles. Hani quoted the Farm Bureau as saying local for Miami is anywhere from Florida. Or it could be 7 hours by truck or plane — now wait a minute, that’s pushing it! But where does local food come from — a warehouse, or the field or orchard? And how does it get to the market — airplane, truck, goat cart or walking? Hani asked again, “How far can local food travel and stay local?” I replied, “Redland Organics CSA sources food from 150 miles or less.” Hani gets his goat milk even closer than that — about 50 feet from his kitchen door to the Nubian goats that he raises. He laughed and said proudly, “I’m a local producer who’s also a chef.” He also sells what he makes, and eats what he sells.

Hungry yet? Find Hani Khouri and goodies from Redland Mediterranean Organics at the Saturday farmer’s market in Coconut Grove on Grand Ave. and Margaret St. (just west of 32 Ave.), or at the new greenmarket by The Alamo at the Jackson Memorial complex on Thursdays around lunchtime. Enjoy!

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