Kookoo Sabzi - Fresh Herb Kookoo

  1. Soak parsley, cilantro, dill, chives (or scallion) in cold water for up to 30 minutes to loosen grime and dirt; drain and rinse a few times. Dry completely (but completely, otherwise chopping up the herbs will be a pain) and trim stems and ends.
  2. Soak barberries in cold water for 10-15 minutes and rinse several times (a tea filter would do nicely as a colander ) to clean. Drain, dry, and set aside for now.
  3. Chop the parsley, dill, cilantro, chives (or scallion) and the lettuce leaves as finely as possible. (Note: So that the flavor of one herb doesn't dominate the others, the rule of thumb is to use the same chopped amount of each herb. It also helps to chop all herbs to the same degree of fineness so that the batter cooks evenly.)
  4. Heat 2-3 tablespoons of oil in a skillet (or use a large pot instead that you can use later to also cook the kookoo batter) on high flame. Straightaway, without waiting for the oil to get hot, add the chopped fresh herbs, and stirring constantly, cook for around 5 minutes until the herb mixture reduces in size and is soft and pliant. (The objective of this step is to rid the herbs of excess moisture so as to avoid ending up with a soggy kookoo and to get a fluffy and thick one instead.) Let herb mixture aside for now and allow to cool completely.
  5. Crack eggs in a big bowl and whip lightly with a fork, then add the: dried mint, dried fenugreek, chopped walnuts, 2 tablespoons of barberries, flour, baking powder, turmeric, and the sauteed herbs. Mix well with the fork.
  6. In a big pot, heat at least 4 tablespoons of olive oil. Once the oil is hot enough that a test-droplet of the batter puffs up when dropped into the pot, pour in the entire batter. Lightly press batter with a spatula or spoon to make the surface even. Cook, covered (ideally with a glass lid so you can see the batter,) for 10-12 minutes on medium heat until the bottom of the batter coagulates and is set. Using the edge of a spatula, cut kookoo into 4 (or more) wedges and flip each wedge over to cook the other side. Continue to cook - uncovered this time - on medium heat for approximately 5-7 more minutes until the batter is evenly cooked throughout. (Add a couple more tablespoons of oil at this point if necessary.) You're done. Garnish and serve hot.
  7. For the barberrie garnish: heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a small skillet on medium flame till hot, add 1 tablespoon of barberries and 1/2-1 tablespoon of sugar (sugar is optional, skip it if you like a dominant tangy flavor like we do.) Stir well for just under a minute. (Absolutely no longer than a minute.) Garnish kookoo with a sprinkling of barberries when ready to serve.
  8. Place kookoo wedges on a serving platter, garnish with a sprinkling of sauteed barberries and some walnuts, and serve with bread. Don't forget the yogurt! The combo of this kookoo with yogurt is seriously stunning.

cilantro, dill, lighter, fenugreek seeds, mint, walnuts save, barberries, eggs, turmeric, baking powder, flour, sugar

Taken from food52.com/recipes/18043-kookoo-sabzi-fresh-herb-kookoo (may not work)

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