The e-mail blast from Cooks of Crocus Hill promised an evening tailored to cookware junkies.
Twenty percent off retail prices on select pots, pans, knives and appliances was one lure. But the clincher? Special guest Lynne Rossetto Kasper. The St. Paulite is the splendid voice behind public radio's "The Splendid Table," and she was going to be on hand to discuss cooking traditions, and to share a recipe.
Sold. Of course, being in Kasper's company was bliss, and she chose to embrace the evening's theme — "culinary traditions" — by preparing harira, a soup that has been a favorite of hers for decades.
This inveterate shopper left the building with a fancy-schmancy waffle iron. It's great, but I suspect that it probably won't get nearly as much play as Kasper's cold weather-conquering recipe.
Just as Kasper started to cradle her audience in the palm of her hand, I reached for my iPhone and hit "record." Here she is on ...
Moroccan cooking: "I fell in love with Moroccan food because of a brilliant food writer, Paula Wolfert. Paula had been living in Morocco for seven years. When she published her first cookbook — "Couscous and Other Good Food From Morocco" — in the 1970s, it was the first of its type that we'd seen here in the United States. She started out as a dynamite writer, but Paula also evolved into someone who talked about culture, and how food was placed in an emotional setting, and a cultural setting. That wasn't happening much in the 1970s."
History: "My political statement is that this is from an Arab country, and while we're all hearing about the difficulties in that part of the world, it's also essential that we pay tribute to some of the fabulous things that have come out of that world. Harira is the way the fast of Ramadan is broken, and it's also served a great deal outside of that holiday. What's interesting is that a lot of the food of North Africa, the sweet and savory combinations, really goes back to the Renaissance, and the medieval periods. Look at this soup. As you're eating it, you're mixing savory and sweet. It's savory; it has this little sparkle of pepper, that pepper just sings. Yet you serve it with sweet things: dried figs, dried apricots, baklava, maybe cucumbers."
Tradition: "I often make this soup on Christmas Eve, or certainly over the holidays. But sometimes it's just when the spirit moves me. I'll pull it out of the freezer on a night when I just don't want to cook. You put it out with an assortment of condiments and some interesting bread, and you've got supper. Or it could be a party dish. You put this soup in a wonderful tureen in the middle of the table. Then you fill bowls with lemon wedges, and dried fruits like dates or figs or apricots, and baklava cut into bite-size pieces, and everyone helps themselves. Serve it with a salad where you spread out rounds of oranges with black olives and red onion, you give it a little bit of olive oil and a teeny bit of salt and sugar and some black pepper. You find that salad all through the Mediterranean."