Supplemental Recipes

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Ingredients:

Carob Pods, Honey, Murri Naqi (Soy Sauce (Water, Soy Beans, Wheat, Salt), Barley, Aniseed, Coriander, Nigella Seeds, Thyme, Creeping Thyme, Lemon, Fennel, White Pine)

Alternate Ingredients:

Gluten-Free Soy Sauce (Water, Soy Beans, Salt) is used, and Barley is omitted


If you want, put some of the first murri in a small jar lined with olive oil and add honey and pounded carob. It will be exceedingly good in taste and aroma, especially for those who put it at the table [as a condiment] while eating, and not cooked in dishes, so know this.

Faḍālat al-khiwān fī ṭayyibāt al-ṭaʻām wa-al-alwān X.8.1

Discussion

This recipe appears as a brief aside in the much larger and more complex recipe for Murri Naqi. To me, it almost reads like the author’s moment to insert a strong opinion about a favorite food that doesn’t entirely fit anywhere else nor deserve its own recipe heading. I gave it the nickname “Córdoba Ketchup” because it has a similar function to ketchup at the modern U.S. table – it’s sweet, tangy, and salty, and goes well with almost anything if you like it to begin with.

Everything I was able to find about this is the excerpt above, so I relied on my own sense of taste and its function as a condiment to guide this recipe. In the course of experimentation, I tried both Carob Powder and whole Carob Pods reconstituted with boiling water. The Pods give a much richer, more complex (also read: markedly better) flavor to the sauce. While it is far more labor intensive to use them, I encourage it.

References

FKH X.8.1


Modernized Recipe
4 oz.Whole Carob Pods
As neededWater
1/3 c.Honey
2 T.Murri Naqi
  • Break the Carob pods into large pieces and place in a small saucepan with just enough water to cover them.
  • Bring it to a simmer and allow it to simmer, covered, until the pods soften. Add more water as needed to ensure the pods remain covered.
  • Once the pods have softened, watch the pot closely and allow as much water as possible to boil away. This will help concentrate the flavor of the Carob.
  • Carefully remove the pods from the pot and allow to cool before breaking them open to remove the large, black, very hard seeds
  • Once the seeds are removed, puree the pods, using a food processor or a mortar and pestle.
  • Pass the puree through a strainer and continue pureeing the remaining pulp until everything passes through.
  • Slowly stir in the Honey, followed by the Murri Naqi
  • Allow the condiment to sit overnight and stir again before serving.

Process Photos