[Sca-cooks] Ethnic market epiphanies

Gretchen R Beck cmupythia at cmu.edu
Thu Mar 7 11:38:46 PST 2013


I've also found semolina flour at Italian groceries

Our local middle eastern is the only place I know that carries quail (frozen) at a reasonable price.  Both the middle eastern and the indian groceries tend to have both multiple colors of both lentils and chickpeas.  Ditto for reasonably priced fresh mint (and of course the middle eastern grocery often carries a variety of cucumbers, not just gherkins, english seedless, and whatever the ones every grocery store has are)

toodles, margaret


________________________________________
From: sca-cooks-bounces at lists.ansteorra.org [sca-cooks-bounces at lists.ansteorra.org] on behalf of David Friedman [ddfr at daviddfriedman.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2013 2:32 PM
To: Cooks within the SCA
Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Ethnic market epiphanies

Chinese grocery stores carry Opo gourd, which I believe is the white
flowered gourd that was available in the Old World before the New World
squash/gourd/pumpkins came in.

Persian/middle eastern/Indian groceries have sekanjabin syrup, semolina
(also available in many standard supermarkets), verjuice (labeled sour
grape juice), sesame oil from untoasted sesame, and almond oil. Also
often goat. I managed to find mutton at one hallal butcher, but it took
searching, since they tend to use the term to include lamb and goat--at
this one he took me into the freezer to show me the size of the animal
he was cutting a piece off of for me. Edible camphor in an Indian
grocery, but that took searching too. Cubebs in an Indian grocery.


On 3/7/13 8:24 AM, galefridus at optimum.net wrote:
> One of the things that I had to learn fairly early on as I've been playing this game is where to shop for ingredients. Ethnic markets of one sort or another have played a major role in this process. I had yet another ethnic market epiphany this morning: There's a supermarket that I walk past every morning on my way to work. I work in one of Little Dominica neighborhoods of Manhattan, so the supermarkets cater to Caribbean origins of the folks who live there. I had never really explored the place, but this morning I had a bit of time so I wandered up and down a few aisles. I quickly found several items that I'd been seeking for quite a while -- sour oranges, for example; a large selection of goat meat; smaller more "normal" chickens (unlike the 4-5 lb heavy-breasted monsters in most supermarkets). It occurs to me that it could be useful to list the sort of items one can find at various flavors of ethnic markets. The markets I've made use of thus far, together with a selectio
 n
>   of the ingredients that I've found at them, include:
>
> East Asian (fresh/frozen galangal; wheat starch)
> Middle Eastern (old world beans; date and pomegranate molasses; rose and orange blossom waters) South Asian (an assortment of spices unusual to the modern Western palate; ghee)
> Italian (raw uncured olives in season; fresh quince)
> Caribbean (assorted meats and poultry; unusual citrus fruit)
>
> The above list is by no means exhaustive in terms of either ethnicity or ingredients available. I happen to fortunate in that the ethnic markets that I have access to are mostly large, full-fledged supermarkets -- I know that I have barely scratched the surface in terms what they can supply. And a lot of what I find myself doing is learning how to identify items that are described only in languages other than English (East Asian and South Asian markets are the most challenging in this regard, at least to me).
>
> In any case, I'd to like hear about the shopping experiences of others. Maybe we could even build a database of where to look for unusual or hard-to-find ingredients.
>
> -- Galefridus
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--
David Friedman
www.daviddfriedman.com
http://daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/


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