DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

This Easy Dinner Merges Histories (and Fish and Couscous)

June 4, 2025
in News
This Easy Dinner Merges Histories (and Fish and Couscous)
494
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Peter Frankopan’s “The Silk Roads” has been on my night stand for some months now. It’s a hefty presence, nudging me whenever I reach past it for my phone and lighter sorts of entertainment. It’s a book with such intellectual weight that it invites both eagerness and a sort of low-grade anxiety. There is something about reordering your entire view of world history at 9 p.m. that feels … ambitious.


Recipe: Spiced Couscous With Fragrant Steamed Fish


And yet I keep picking it up. Frankopan tilts world history eastward, and the ancient routes of Central Asia become the center rather than the periphery. He traces how these pathways carried not just luxury goods but ideas, religions and diseases, connecting far-flung kitchens and cultures long before we started talking about “globalization.” Among all the accounts of silk merchants and military campaigns, I’m drawn to the ones of barley, wheat and millet, traveling in saddlebags across mountains and deserts.

It’s the kind of book that makes me ask questions that haven’t occurred to me before. Who first decided to mix cardamom with rice, or cinnamon (originally from China) with tomatoes (from the Americas)? What possessed them? What were they looking for? Who first tasted the result and declared it good?

We have a tendency to draw history in straight lines. We want clear origins, neat progressions, definitive end points. This came from there, traveled here, became this. But life is rarely that tidy, is it?

And slowly, I realize that every time I cook, I’m standing at these ancient crossroads.

Take what we broadly call “couscous” — semolina pearls that appear in different forms all over the world. I grew up in Jerusalem eating giant couscous simmered in tomato sauce. My father would make those and serve them with whatever he had around: white beans, a slice of fried fish, simple meatballs seared in olive oil with a sprig of rosemary.

Later I discovered this wasn’t the only way. In North Africa, fine-grained couscous steams over stews of vegetables and lamb. Travel east to Lebanon, and there’s moghrabieh — larger pearls simmering with warm spices and chicken that falls apart. Cross to Sardinia, and there’s fregola, swimming in briny clam juices. In Palestinian cooking, it’s maftoul — hand-rolled and slightly irregular — that makes a bed for roasted eggplant or squash.

I realize that every time I cook, I’m standing at an ancient crossroads.

The same messy reality shows up in cooking techniques. When you leave the couscous undisturbed against heat for a while, a golden crust forms at the bottom of the pan. It reminds me of the foods in other cultures that celebrate this crusty tendency of another grain, rice: Persian tahdig, Spanish socarrat, Korean nurungji.

Maybe there are some universal truths about what tastes good to us humans, regardless of geography or history. Most of us seem to add something sharp and bright at the end of cooking — a squeeze of lemon, a handful of herbs, a drizzle of good olive oil. In this recipe, the finishing touch of hot garlic oil over the fish is borrowed from Cantonese cooking, where ginger and spring onions are an essential part of the mix. The oil hits the fish with a gentle sizzle, the skin tightens slightly and the flesh beneath takes on the flavor of the aromatics.

I find myself wondering now about the hands that have passed these techniques along. We’re all cooking on the shoulders of countless others, most of them entirely unknown to us. It’s a strange kind of inheritance, passed not through bloodlines but through the universal acts of feeding.

This is what keeps drawing me back to Frankopan’s book, I think — this recognition that our kitchens are, in their way, as much products of ancient exchange as our religions or languages or art. When I reach for cinnamon to add to a tomato sauce, I can only assume that I am part of a chain that stretches back hundreds of years and thousands of miles. There’s something both humbling and liberating in that. My cooking isn’t truly mine — it’s just my particular iteration of a much longer story.

I’ll finish “The Silk Roads” eventually, probably in the same piecemeal fashion I’ve been reading it so far. For now, I have this: couscous crisped at the bottom, fish steamed on top — my offering at the crossroads where we all cook.

Yotam Ottolenghi is a writer and the chef-owner of the Ottolenghi restaurants, Nopi and Rovi, in London. He is an Eat columnist for The New York Times Magazine and writes a weekly column for The Guardian’s Feast Magazine.

The post This Easy Dinner Merges Histories (and Fish and Couscous) appeared first on New York Times.

Share198Tweet124Share
Mayor Karen Bass says she has reached a deal to restore police officer hiring
News

Mayor Karen Bass says she has reached a deal to restore police officer hiring

by Los Angeles Times
June 7, 2025

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has reached an agreement with City Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson to find the money to ...

Read more
News

Ex-police chief and convicted killer who escaped from an Arkansas prison has been captured

June 7, 2025
News

Florida family says dog survived alligator attack in their backyard

June 7, 2025
News

Kilmar Abrego Garcia is back in the US, charged with human smuggling as attorneys vow ongoing fight

June 7, 2025
News

Arkansas death row inmate dies in prison of unknown causes

June 7, 2025
Elon Musk’s X Posts About Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Disappear

Elon Musk’s X Posts About Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Disappear

June 7, 2025
How to Watch Finland vs Netherlands: Live Stream FIFA World Cup Qualifiers, TV Channel

How to Watch Finland vs Netherlands: Live Stream FIFA World Cup Qualifiers, TV Channel

June 7, 2025
I’m a mom of 4, and there’s no winning in parenting. People complain if kids are playing outside or if they’re looking at screens.

I’m a mom of 4, and there’s no winning in parenting. People complain if kids are playing outside or if they’re looking at screens.

June 7, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.