When I find a book I love I want to yell about it from the mountain top. Instead, my friends are the beneficiaries of this enthusiasm, since I typically find every excuse to send them a copy of the new favorite. Last year the book my friends received was The Lost World of the Kalahari by Laurens van der Post. This year it will be The Honey Thief, a beautifully written collection of fictional stories by Najaf Mazari, a Hazara Afghani refugee living in Australia, and his collaborator, novelist Robert Hillman. In The Honey Thief, the authors carry us along, weaving one story into another, like a tapestry, rich in humor and humanity, of a world so different from ours—the Afghanistan we don’t see in the news. At the very end of the book, there is a small collection of recipes, told as if you were right there in Mazari’s kitchen. Here’s an excerpt from the lamb qorma recipe: Okay, the onions. In Afghanistan, we rarely fashion a meal without onions. What the world was like before onions were invented, I cannot imagine. So, the onions, three of them. Peel them to preserve as much of the outer flesh as possible…Once the onions are peeled, chop them up but not too fine. You need chunks of onion, not thin slices. Now heat some cooking oil in a big saucepan. I am serious when I say a big saucepan. For dishes like this, a big saucepan is your friend. Do you want to fill a smaller saucepan to the very brim? No. and later, This is going to take two hours. Read a book. Every fifteen minutes put the book down and stir the saucepan. In this last hour, you are stirring the qorma, and you are reading your book. You started at two-thirty in the afternoon. Now it’s five in the afternoon. Turn off the qorma. If you are of my faith, wash and pray. If you are not, do whatever you must. All of the recipes read like that, many with rough approximations of the amounts. For the following lamb korma (or qorma) recipe, we’ve stripped the recipe down to its essentials, making it easier to follow, but not nearly as entertaining as the original. I do recommend getting a copy of this book just for the pleasure of reading it. Mazari instructs us to serve his qorma with basmati rice. We didn’t have any rice so we served it with flatbread on the side instead. The stew is tangy and spicy and would be great with rice to sop up the extra liquid.
Freezing and Reheating Lamb Korma
If you know you’ll be making this and freezing it, consider leaving the yogurt out and adding it when you reheat it. That way, you won’t risk the yogurt separating during reheating. If you want to freeze leftovers, store them in a freezer safe container or zip top bag. While reheating on the stovetop, do it slowly and stirring frequently, diminishing the risk of separation.
What To Serve With Lamb Korma
Naan Jeweled Rice Salad Indian Style Rice Slow Cooker Orange Almond Rice Pudding Cauliflower Chickpea Curry
The lamb in this dish is traditionally not browned, but if you’d prefer to brown it, add olive oil to a hot skillet. Then add the chunks of lamb, eventually turning so it can brown all sides. Recipe adapted from The Honey Thief, a book of fiction stories from Afghanistan, by Najaf Masari and Robert Hillman. Presented here with the permission of the publisher. Add the turmeric to the onions, and stir to coat. Add the cumin, coriander, paprika and cinnamon. Stir in the ground cloves, cardamom, and peppercorns. Add the crushed garlic and the grated ginger. Cook for 2 minutes.