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Tomato and Chickpea Shakshuka

I usually keep a few canned things on hand. Sardines, tuna, and tomatoes, are constants youโ€™ll find in my cupboards. I also have oddities that Iโ€™m not sure what Iโ€™ll use them for, but keep them around anyways, like smoked sugar, butterscotch chips, coffee-flavored salt, Vietnamese coconut syrup, and a kit someone gave me for making queso blanco which does, indeed, work. Iโ€™ve discovered theโ€ฆ

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Shakshuka Bread

I wasnโ€™t always friends with no-knead bread, partially because I like kneading, and find those five minutes out of my day become the least-stressful activity that I know of. Although I worked at a bread bakery one night because I thought it might be interesting to become a bread baker. By the time we finished up, very early the next morning, my aching legs, back,โ€ฆ

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Shakshuka

Iโ€™ve been meaning to get into the Shakshuka groove ever since I had it for breakfast at Nopi in London, and on my trip to Jerusalem, where this North African dish wowed me โ€“ and my taste buds โ€“ every morning. Although various versions abound, the most widely known Shakshuka involves eggs softly cooked in a hot skillet of spiced tomato sauce. Iโ€™ve had plentyโ€ฆ

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Breakfast in Israel

Iโ€™m not at my best in the morning. Actually, Iโ€™m not at my best until at least 2pm. (Although actually, some might argue itโ€™s even a little later.) To me, breakfast is meant to be enjoyed in monk-like solitude. Itโ€™s a time where questions are prohibited and talking should be kept to an absolute minimum. Travel, of course, is fraught with all sorts of waysโ€ฆ

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