Cobb salad with beef strips. - Photos from the book
It truly warmed one’s heart to see My Halal Kitchen: Global Recipes, Cooking Tips, and Lifestyle Inspiration among an elaborate display of newly published cookbooks. Amidst the mandatory works on French and Italian cuisine and the inevitable tomes on gluten-free and vegan fare, was this beautifully laid out and immaculately printed hardcover volume on halal food, with colour photos and easy-to-follow recipes. Especially pleasing was the fact that the recipes found within are not for conventional Muslim foods (Pakistani, Lebanese, Moroccan, etc.) but rather the focus is on North American fare, as well as some popular European, Latin, Korean and Thai dishes.
The author, Yvonne Maffei, is a popular Chicago-based food writer whose blog My Halal Kitchen boasts over 1.2 million followers. Inspired by the blog, her book provides more than 100 recipes that have been modified to suit the halal diet, but without altering the taste too much. Cobb salad, Hawaiian pizza, pulled beef sandwiches, paella, classic meatloaf and spaghetti carbonara are all here. The entries for coq without the vin and penne without the vodka illustrate the halal goal best and provide a moment of hilarity to boot.
Born in Ohio to a Sicilian father and Puerto Rican mother, Maffei describes her food-oriented childhood which included observing grandmothers from both sides of the family working in the kitchen to create their traditional dishes. Her earliest culinary education, however, took place at Ohio University where she studied alongside international students from countries such as Malaysia, Qatar, and South Africa. Through the friendships she developed with these students, she learned to appreciate and cook diverse foods from around the globe.
A half-Sicilian, half-Puerto Rican chef from Chicago serves up popular Western foods with a decidedly halal touch
After becoming Muslim, her focus turned to what can be described as the “halalification” of well-loved foods including tamales, eggs benedict, and shrimp pad thai. By tinkering with foods from a variety of culinary traditions, she proved that halal meals can be full of diverse flavours. An equivalent amount of unsweetened grape juice may be used when a recipe calls for wine, ideally using red grape juice in place of red wine and white grape juice instead of white wine. For bacon she recommends widely available turkey and chicken bacon. Beef strips can also be used. The added advantage of using these alternatives is the lower fat content. And sausages, particularly chorizo, may be replaced with similar deli meats made by Turkish and Lebanese producers.