Recipes and Food

The Gypsy Diet

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Diet was a very important part, not only of health, but also of beauty for the Romanies. Much of the malaise and depression around today stems from a sluggish system. Walking and fresh air help to combat this, but the best way to keep your system clear is to stick to a careful, sensible diet. Eat fruit, plenty of vegetables, salads, stewed prunes occasionally, take butter milk or malted milk. Eat sparingly of rice, pastry, pasta and sweets.

It is a fact that the true Romany only begins to grow old at around the eightieth year. What secrets enable them to keep their youth?

One of them – and this will disappoint meat lovers – is that they do not eat a lot of meat which is not, as is often thought, an essential part of the daily diet. On some days Romanies would make do with nuts, herbs and vegetables and avoid meat altogether, it does the stomach good to have a rest from it.

Eat plenty of cheese – it is full of protein to build strong teeth and bones and to keep the muscles firm. And there is a miracle of nourishment in an egg yolk – vitamins A,D,E,B1,B6, riboflavin, iron and calcium. Milk is also a valuable source of protein, fat and carbohydrate and you get essential vitamins from butter and margarine- butter provides calcium as well. There are foods that, even for the determined slimmers, should always be included in the diet. It can be dangerous to cut out starch completely. Wholewheat bread, for instance, contains calcium, iron, vitamins B1, B6 and E, riboflavin and nicotinic acid. Oatmeal is also a valuable source of these.

Potatoes were always part of the Romany staple diet, usually eaten the healthy way, baked in their jackets in the ashes of a fire. If you are boiling potatoes, don’t peel them, but just scrub the skin. Many minerals that we especially need are directly under the potato`s skin and are completely lost when they are peeled and then boiled. Continue reading

Nettle Soup

Wear gloves when picking the nettle leaves! It is best to pick young tender leaves from an unpolluted area and away from roaming dogs. Also, avoid picking any herbs from the roadside because of exhaust fumes. Make sure you wash the leaves well.

nettles-before-1Ingredients:

 

  • 1 tablespoon oil
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 1 lb potatoes, peeled and diced
  • 8 ozs tender nettle leaves
  • 5 and 3/4 cups water
  • Salt and pepper
  • Grated nutmeg

Instructions:

Heat the oil in a large pan and add the oil, onion and potatoes. Cook gently over a low heat until soft but not browned (approx 5 minutes). Add the nettles, cover and cook for another 5 minutes Add water and bring to the boil. Simmer for 15-20 minutes until the vegetables are cooked Place in a food processor or push through a sieve until smooth. Season to taste with salt, pepper and nutmeg, then reheat just before serving.

From: Journey Folki

Tomato and Lentil Quick Soup

tomato-lentil-soupIngredients:

  • One tin of chopped tomatoes
  • One tinful of water
  • Two handfuls of lentils

Instructions:

  • Add all the ingredients together in a pan and simmer.
  • Add flavours – salt and pepper, a teaspoon of mixed herbs, fresh basil and or a spoon of pesto. Or a teaspoon of curry powder. And/or paprika. Or a bit of marmite.
  • After about 15 mins simmering the lentils should be cooked.

One thing: when making lentil soup of any kind, it’s best to add salt after cooking the lentils, because otherwise they don’t seem to cook properly.

From: Journey Folki

Carrot Onion and Lemon Soup

968810Ingredients:

  • One and a half pints of vegetable stock
  • 1 Carrot finely chopped
  • 1 Small onion finely chopped
  • 2 Bay leaves
  • 2 Sticks of celery chopped
  • Salt and pepper (a pinch of each)
  • A sprig of thyme

Method:

  • Add all this to a saucepan, bring to the boil and then simmer for 20 minutes.
  • Add the scraped rind of a lemon (just the yellow part) to the soup, along with half the juice of a squeezed lemon.
  • Serve straight away with a garlic roll/stick.

From: Journey Folki

Gypsy Toast

img_2010-version-2Ingredients:

  • 2 eggs
  • Pinch of salt & pepper
  • 1 tablespoon milk
  • 2 slices of bread
  • 2 tablespoons oil, butter or lard

Instructions:

  • Beat the eggs lightly and season with salt & pepper
  • Add the milk
  • Soak the bread slices in the mixture
  • Heat the oil, butter or lard in a frying pan and when hot add the soaked bread
  • Fry until crisp, turning occasionally.

From: Journey Folki

Healing Chicken Soup

0d1d92d63a6c8fa1a90a75dafa74e25aIngredients:

  • Quarter of a chicken
  • 2 Pints water/vegetable stock
  • 1 Large leek
  • 1 Onion
  • Half a cup rice

How to:

First, boil the chicken for an hour on a very low heat with salt and pepper. Remove the chicken, then add the leek, onion and rice and boil for another 15 minutes.

The chicken meat can be chopped and added to the soup if you wish. This is guaranteed to get rid of a cold.

From: Journey Folki

Gypsy Style Turkey Soup with Dumplings

turkey_stew_s4x3-jpg-rend-sni12col-landscapeIngredients:

You can use your turkey leftovers after Thanksgiving dinner or even buy turkey drumsticks which are huge and very cheap. If you have any leftover sliced turkey meat add it after you’ve boiled the carcass and taken the meat off of the bones.

How to:

  • Boil the turkey carcass for about two hours,
  • Add salt and freshly ground black pepper.
  • Add herbs (your choice), preferably fresh.
  • Add some pearl barley after the first hour, just a handful or so.
  • Drain the liquid from the carcass and pick the meat off of the bones.
  • Now add the sliced meat (if you have some).
  • Add chopped carrots, and turnips to liquid.
  • Cook for 20 minutes.
  • Make dumplings.
  • Add them and cook for 30 minutes on stove.
  • Add sliced leeks and a handful of frozen peas.

Serve with a loaf of fresh white or brown bread.

Disclaimer: I found this recipe back in 2006 and didn’t make a note of where I found it. If you know the author, let me know so I can give credit and a link.

Sármi

stuffed_cabbage

Mix ground beef or chopped ham with cooked rice, salt, black pepper and jalapeños (or similar hot peppers) into a thick paste. You may add an egg if it’s too thick. Take the biggest leaves from a cabbage making sure not to break or tear them; dip them in boiling water to soften them, then wrap each leaf around some of the filling mixture into a sealed roll. Secure by sewing or simply stick a toothpick through, and simmer for about an hour in tomato soup.

Found at: The Patrin Web Journal

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