Nutty Chickpea and Pumpkin Fritters

2 October 2025

With autumn upon us once again, it’s time for pumpkin to make a return to the table. This versatile memeber of the squash family makes for perfect comfort food for the longer, chillier nights. KCC’s back catalogue features a number of pumpkin dishes – try this cousin of lasagne made with chickpeas and mixed greens and this roasted pumpkin with halloumi for starters.

A nutty chickpea and pumpkin fritter served with a lettuce, pear, pomegranate and walnut salad

This time, we’re using the pumpkin in a fritter made with chickpeas and fine bulgur wheat. Recently, we recieved some walnuts from a friend of a friend’s dacha outside Almaty, here in Kazakhstan, which are ideal for adding a nutty edge to these chickpea and pumpkin fritters. We also added some walnuts to a fruity salad made with lettuce, pear and pomegranate seeds to accompany the fritters. Dress it with equal parts of balsamic vinegar and extra virgin olive oil.

This year’s walnuts fresh from the dacha in Almaty, Kazakhstan

Ingredients (Makes 4 fritters)

  • 200 g pumpkin
  • 150 g chickpeas
  • 25 g oats
  • 20 g fine bulgur wheat
  • 25 g walnuts
  • One teaspoon dried oregano
  • One teaspoon dried thyme
  • One teaspoon cumin seeds

Method

Continue reading “Nutty Chickpea and Pumpkin Fritters”

A Simply Divine Stuffed Coconut Roti

3 April 2025

If you’re looking for a quick and easy yet filling snack, then look no further than KCC’s stuffed coconut roti. This dish is inspired by Sri Lanka’s coconut rotis, that are served with a fiery coconut sambal and a gloopy red lentil dhal.

KCC’s coconut roti with a dhal filling

We decided to combine the roti and dahl in one package. The rotis are easy to prepare, the dough just needs a few hours to rest, so it can be made in advance. It can be kept in the fridge, but needs to come to room temperature before using. If you only want a coconut roti, then skip the filling stage – just roll out the roti and cook it on both sides.

Coconut roti with pol sambol and dhal in a cafe in Sri Lanka

As for the filling, you don’t need anything special. We used some leftover dhal – it always tastes better after being left overnight, and added some fesh lentil sprouts to add a bit of crunch. Here are some ideas for the filling from KCC’s back catalogue – here’s a rhubarb dhal or how about a classic red lentil dhal or even some bulgur biryani – the choice is yours.

Ingredients (makes four rotis)

  • 200 g bread flour
  • 75 g dessicated coconut (unsweetened)
  • 60 ml coconut milk
  • 60 ml cold water
  • Salt to taste

Method

  • Combine all the ingredients together. Knead until you get a smooth dough – if it’s too sticky, add a touch more water.
  • Leave the dough to stand for a few hours before using. The dough can be kept for a few days in the fridge – remember to let it come to room temperature before using.
  • Split into four parts and roll the dough as thinly as you can on a lightly floured surface. Place the filling on one half of the roti and then fold the top over. Press the edges together with a fork.
  • Add a few drops of oil to a frying pan and then cook the roti on both sides until it turns a golden-brown colour, adding a few more drops of oil if needed.

Almond Party Time in Datça

12 February 2025

Almonds are on the agenda in KCC’s spiritual home of the Datça Peninsula this weekend as the Turkish seaside town hosts its annual Almond Blossom Festival.

The festival, which celebrates the blossoming of the peninsula’s almond trees, takes place between 13-16 February. Alongside live entertainment, with local faves Rampapa performing on Thursday and Anatolian psych rock legends Moğollar headlining on Saturday, there are cookery competitions, sports events and a speedy almond cracking contest.

Datça’s tasty almonds, badem in Turkish, are rightly famous all over Turkey – I remember sitting on a terrace in Istanbul’s Beyoğlu district, back in the days when it still had tables on the street, when a guy came round selling ice-chilled Datça almonds.

Bademli havuç tarator (carrot and almond tarator)

In Istanbul and along the Aegean coast tarator is a yogurt-infused meze made with carrots or courgettes and walnuts (recipe link here). Tarator started life in the eastern Mediterranean as a tahini-based dipping sauce for falafel. In Ottoman times it referred to a sauce made from walnuts, breadcrumbs and lemon juice (often served with kalimari), before it took on its yogurt iteration in the modern day. In Bulgaria, Tarator is the name of a yogurt-based, cold soup.

We adapted the recipe to make it vegan by replacing the yogurt with almond cream and gave it more of a Datça vibe by using almonds instead of walnuts and throwing in some local capers to give it an umami kick. The resulting dip had a thicker consistency than the yogurt version – it came out more like a savoury carrot halwa, but was still delicious.

Ingredients

  • 100 g blanched almonds
  • 50 ml cold water
  • Two teaspoons apple cider vinegar
  • 20 capers (with brine)
  • 150 g carrot
  • One or two garlic cloves (optional)
  • Pinches of herbs and spices of your choice (e.g. oregano, black pepper, salt, sumac, red chili flakes)
  • One teaspoon nigella (black cumin) seeds

Method

  • If your almonds have skins on, then pour hot water over the almonds and leave for a minute or two. Drain off the water and peel the nuts between your fingers. Set aside 20 g of the nuts. Cover the remaining almonds with cold water and leave to soak overnight.
  • Drain the almonds and put in a blender bowl. add the vinegar, capers and water and blitz to a smooth cream. Add more water if needed (10 ml at a time) to get the required creamy consistency.
  • Heat the oil in a heavy-based pan, grate the carrot and saute it in the oil for ten minutes over a medium heat. Add diced garlic (if using), the remaining almonds (crushed with a rolling pin or wooden spoon) and pinches of herbs and spices (as needed).
  • Allow the carrot mix to cool and then blend with the almond cream. Garnish with nigella seeds and some unblanched almonds. Serve as part of a meze set or as a dip.

A Smashing Alternative to Avocado

23 January 2025

Here at KKC we’re big fans of smashed avocado, but in Kazakhstan it can sometimes be difficult to find the ideal fruit when needed – they’re either underripe and too hard to use immediately or gone mushy with grey stringy bits. Another problem is that most of these fruit that make their way here are grown in Israel and Colombia. So, a less well-travelled alternative is needed – look no further than the humble garden pea.

Move over avocado, here come the smashed peas!

Smashed peas can be used replacement for avocado, and involve a lot less food miles. We combined our peas, from a tin as there were no frozen peas in our local supermarket, with some unsalted cashews and chopped celery to make a great substitute for the alligator pear.

There could be a solution in the offing to the problem of sourcing avocadoes in Kazakhstan. An enterprising farm in the south of the country, near Shymkent, has started growing bananas in greenhouses. This is quite a feat in a country with a sharp continental climate with hot summers and freezing winters.

Get ready to smash those peas…

This year’s banana crop will cover around 5% of demand in Shymkent and the commercial hub, Almaty. And in the coming years, GenGroup Qazaqstan hopes to add mangoes and avocadoes to the supply chain of locally grown fruits, significantly reducing the food miles clocked up for these treats.

Ingredients (makes four servings)

  • 250 g peas
  • 75 g celery
  • 25 g cashew nuts
  • 15 ml olive oil
  • One teaspoon cumin seeds
  • One teaspoon mustard seeds
  • To garnish: a handful of beansprouts
  • One teaspoon sunflower seeds (per serving)
  • One teaspoon pomegranate seeds (per serving)

    Method

    • Heat the oil in a heavy-based frying pan and add the mustard and cumin seeds,. When they start popping, add the chopped celery and stir fry over a medium heat for two minutes and then add the cashews and continue to stir fry for another few minutes until the cashews start to brown.
    • Turn the heat down and add the peas. When the peas are warmed up, turn off the heat and use a potato masher to smash all the ingredients together. Spread the smashed peas on wholemeal bread or toast and garnish with pomegranate seeds, sunflower seeds and beansprouts.

Bulgur Biryani

15 November 2024

Turkey meets India this time round on KCC as we cook Turkey’s beloved bulgur wheat in in Indian biryani style. Bulgur, parboiled, dried and cracked wheat, is a quick-cooking alternative to rice that works really when combined with spicy vegetables.

Bulgur biryani

Biryani belongs to the family of layered rice dishes that includes Uzbekistan’s plov and other pilafs. The name is from the Persian barian, which translates as ‘roasted’.

The dish was originally brought to the Indian sub-continent by travellers from Iran and has developed into a number of regional variations, with the Hyderabadi one, served with a yoghurty raitha, being the most famous.

As bulgur is parboiled, it cooks really quickly. It takes around 15 – 20 minutes to cook – the total prep time for this dish is less than an hour from start to finish and it is cooked in one-pan, so less washing up to worry about.

Ingredients (for two servings)

  • 100g coarse bulgur
  • 100g diced carrot
  • 100 g courgette
  • 150 g cooked chickpeas
  • 25 g tomato paste
  • 25 g pepper paste (we used tatli (sweet), if you want it hot, use acili)
  • 20 ml olive oil
  • 1 stick of celery (approx 25 g)
  • 2 spring onions (approx 10 g)
  • 1 green pepper (approx 30 g)
  • 250 ml vegetable stock
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 1 teaspoon each of mustard seeds, cumin seeds, turmeric, fenugreek, chilli powder
  • 25 g fresh coriander

Method

  • Heat the oil in a large frying pan and add the mustard seeds. When they start to pop, add the chopped spring onion and celery and cook for two minutes. Then add the chopped green pepper and diced carrot and cook for two more minutes. Add the courgettes and cook for another two minutes.
  • Add the spices and stir well and then add the cooked chick peas and the vegetable stock. Stir in the tomato and pepper paste, bring to a boil and then reduce the heat to a gentle simmer. Add the bulgur in a layer over the veggies. Put a lid on the pan and cook over a low heat for 15 – 20 minutes until all the liquid is absorbed.
  • Turn off the heat and allow the mix to rest for ten minutes or so. Stir well and then serve. Garnish with chopped coriander.

Courgette GrillFest

24 July 2024

With the rain finally relenting here in Almaty, Kazakhstan, it’s time to hit the great outdoors for the BBQ season. Courgettes, zucchini to our North American friends, are in their prime at the moment and this versatile vegetable makes a great addition to a barbecue platter.

One thing about courgettes is that they contain a lot of liquid, so before cooking you can remove some of the excess by cutting the courgette into two slices down the middle and then use a knife to cut diagonals into the fleshy side. Sprinkle with salt and leave for 30 minutes then squeeze out the excess liquid.

Pour some olive oil over the courgette halves into the diagonal cuts and then cook on the grill, turning to brown both sides. These courgette slices can also be baked in a hot oven (180 c) for 30 minutes or fried in a pan until browned. We served them with some parboiled new potatoes, finished on the grill, and a slab of char-grilled halloumi. Add a green salad for a great outdoor meal.

Flower Power Börek

18 June 2024

If you’ve ever been to Turkey, or eaten in a Turkish cafe, then you’ll probably be familiar with the börek, a tasty treat consisting of wafer-thin sheets of yufka (filo pastry) brushed with lashings of olive oil, stuffed with cheese or vegetables and sprinkled with black seeds.

Flower Power Börek

Börek is found in all corners of Turkey and comes in a variety of shapes – sigara, like a cigar, gül, like a rose, triangle-shaped or as a layered pie, tepsi böreği, among others.

As for the fillings, alongside the more familiar white cheese (beyaz peynirli), spinach (ıspanaklı) or potato (patatesli), it’s worth looking out for the lesser-spotted leek filled version, known as pırasalı börek in Turkish, and the elusive kabaklı, prepared with courgettes. (Veggie warning – there are meat-stuffed ones too).

Ingredients for the filling – makes 2

100 g radish leaves

100 g spinach

25 g parsley

25 g walnuts

25 g olives

25 g capers

50 ml olive oil

One teaspoon of dried rosemary, cumin seeds, sumac, nigella seeds

Four big sheets of filo pastry (approx 30cm x 50 cm)

Ingredients for yufka (Filo Pastry) – makes 4 sheets

300 g all-purpose flour

100 ml olive oil

20 ml vinegar (apple or white wine)

150 ml warm water

Method

To make the filo pastry, combine the sieved flour with the olive oil and vinegar. Slowly add the water a bit at a time and mix it all together with a wooden spoon until the dough forms into a smooth ball. Knead for 10 minutes on a lightly-floured surface to make the dough more stretchy. Separate into four tennis-ball sized pieces. Lightly coat with olive oil, cover with clingfilm and leave for an hour at room temperature.

Heat 25 ml of olive oil in a heavy-based pan over a medium heat. Add the cumin seeds and fry until starting to pop. Reduce the heat to low and add the chopped greens (radish leaves, spinach and parsley), rosemary and sumac. Stir fry until the leaves are wilting. Stir in the toasted, chopped walnuts, capers and minced black olives.

Roll out the filo sheets as thinly as you can using a rolling pin or the palm of your hand. They should be around 30 cm by 50 cm and become clear in places. Brush one sheet with olive oil and then place another on top.

Add half the filling along the shorter edge. Roll up the mixture into a long cylinder and then roll around in a spiral to make the rose shape. Brush liberally with olive oil, sprinkle nigella seeds over the börek, then bake for 20 minutes at 200 c until they turn a golden-brown colour. Serve hot or allow to cool – they taste great both ways.

More Adventures with Asparagus

24 May 2024

It’s that asparagus time of year once again. These tasty green spears are a harbinger of the warmer months of Spring and Summer – the first tips are ready for harvest shortly after the ground temperature hits 10°C.

Asparagus and chickpea pasta

Here in Almaty, Kazakhstan, locally-grown asparagus is currently having its moment in the sun, with many restaurants offering seasonal dishes featuring these flavour-packed spears of goodness.

Asparagus from Kazakhstan

Over the years, KCC has featured a number of asparagus dishes, such as a bulgur pilaf with asparagus (KCC’s first ever recipe), Mr Alan’s Top Tips, and in a stir-fry. This time round, after tracking down some locally-grown asparagus in Almaty, we’ve cooked it with chickpeas, capers, walnuts and tagliatelle:

Ingredients (for 2 servings)

  • 150 g asparagus
  • 175 g chickpeas 
  • 30 g walnuts
  • 20 g capers 
  • 50 – 100 ml aquafaba (chickpea cooking liquid)
  • 25 ml olive oil
  • 150 g dried taglaitelle
  • One teaspoon fresh or dried rosemary

Method

  • To make the green sauce, blitz 50 g of chopped, raw asparagus in a blender with 75 g chickpeas, the chopped walnuts and capers and olive oil. Keep adding aquafaba slowly until the sauce had a creamy consistency, 
  • Cook the pasta according to the packet instructions in a pan of boiling, salty water. Slice the remaining asparagus into 3 mm slices and cook with the pasta for the last five minutes. While the pasta is cooking, add the remaining chickpeas to the green sauce in a heavy-based pan, warm over a low heat and stir in the rosemary. 
  • Drain the pasta and asparagus, reserving some of the cooking Waterloo to loosen the sauce, if needed, and add to the green sauce and chickpeas, combine well and serve.

Getting Back to our Roots

25 April 2024

Recently, Knidos Cookery Club was back in its spiritual home on the Datça peninsula in Turkey, getting back to its roots in the place where its culinary journey began eight years ago.

Getting back to our roots… carrots, celeriac and kohlrabi

This blog was named after the ancient Greek city of Knidos, the ruins of which are located on the tip of the peninsula. KCC started out exploring the veggie and vegan dishes eaten around this point where the Aegean Sea meets the Mediterranean Sea.

Since 2016, it has expanded its exploration to Central Asia and many other corners of the globe, seeking out new dishes to tickle your tastebuds!

Now, in addition to its WordPress blog, KCC is making its debut on Substack, where a regular newsletter will keep you up to speed with KCC’s latest culinary adventures, along with updated posts from the archive.

Zeytinyağlı carrot, celeriac, kohlrabi and leek with rice

After spending the winter in Kazakhstan, it was a treat to get back to Turkey with its wider choice of ingredients – it was time to move on from the winter staples, such as pumpkin and potatoes, and dig up some root vegetables that are less seen in Central Asia.

The local market turned up trumps with celeriac, kohlrabi and leeks on sale, perfect for making a zeytinyağlı (with olive oil) dish, so-called as these dishes are prepared with lashings of olive oil.

Standards include green beans (taze fasulye), artichoke (enginar) and leek (pırası). They are a staple of ev yemekleri (home-cooked food) restaurants, lokanta in Turkish, cheap and cheerful canteen-style eateries.

A selection of zeytinyağlı dishes – green beans, leeks and aubergines, green peppers and potatoes – from Datça’s Korsar/Erkin’nin yeri restaurant, located by the harbour

The last few years have seen the price of the key ingredient, olive oil, soar. This is due to numerous factors, including unexpectedly cold and wet conditions at the start of the growing season and drought and forest fires in the summer, that have led to poor harvests in the main olive-producing regions.

Global olive oil production has dropped by a third in just two years, which in turn has led to higher prices for consumers. However, we think it’s still worth shelling out that bit more for a bottle of extra virgin olive oil, as its fruity, peppery flavour adds so much to a cornucopia of delicious dishes, such as this carrot, celeriac, kohlrabi and leek zeytinyağlı  one:

Ingredients (makes 3-4 servings)

  • One medium-sized kohlrabi (approx 200 g)
  • One medium-sized celeriac (approx 200 g)
  • One bunch of baby carrots (approx 200 g)
  • One leek (approx 200 g)
  • One small lemon
  • 75 ml extra virgin olive oil
  • 100 ml vegetable stock
  • Two teaspoons dried oregano
  • One teaspoon sumac

Method

  • Wash the leek well and then cut it into 2 cm slices. Top and tail the carrots, kohlrabi and celeriac, put the leaves and stems to one side, and then peel off the hard outer skin of the kohlrabi and celeriac and chop both into 1 cm cubes. Slice the washed carrots into 2 mm rounds. Roughly chop the leaves and stems from the carrots, kohlrabi and celeriac.
  • Heat 50 ml of olive oil in a heavy-based pan over a low heat and then add the leeks. Stir fry for five minutes and then add the carrots, kohlrabi and celeriac and cook for another five minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the chopped leaves and stems and cook for another five minutes, continuing to stir every now and then.
  • Add the vegetable stock, the juice of the lemon and oregano and cook over a low heat for 15 minutes until all the vegetables are soft but still holding their shape. Stir in 25 ml of olive oil, garnish with sumac and serve with rice and some crusty bread to mop up the juices.

Winter Warmer: Cauliflower, Spinach and Tahini Soup

15 February 2024

It’s been a crazy winter here in Almaty, Kazakhstan. It didn’t really get going until after New Year and has seen short cold snaps interspersed with rapid thaws as the temperature creeps into positive territory. This has made it particularly dicey when walking by buildings, as chunks of ice have a tendency to fall from roofs as the temperature rises. Usually, this is a once in a winter event, but this year it seems to be every few days.

A tahini-infused cauliflower and spinach soup

We’ve been getting through a lot of tahini recently, using it as a salad dressing, a pasta/noodle sauce, in variations on hummus, and, in this case, as an earthy, nutty base for a thick soup – he intermittent cold snaps call for a comforting bowl of hearty, seasonal goodness.

Crazy Almaty weather for 15 Feb 2024 onwards

Tahini is easy to make if you can’t find it in your local Middle eastern store – you just need some white sesame seeds, some olive oil and a good blender. Here’s a link to our tahini recipe from a few years ago.

Ingredients (serves 3-4)

  • 500 g cauliflower
  • 150 g spinach
  • 100 g celery
  • 5 g fresh coriander
  • 500 ml vegetable stock
  • 50 ml tahini
  • 25 ml olive oil
  • one teaspoon soy sauce
  • one teaspoon caraway seeds
  • one teaspoon dried oregano

Method

  • Heat the olive oil and then fry the chopped celery and caraway seeds in a large pan. Cook over a medium heat for five minutes and then add the cauliflower, broken into small florets, and the oregano. Stir fry over a medium heat for five minutes and then add the vegetable stock. Bring to a boil and simmer for ten minutes.
  • Put half the soup in a blender, add the soy sauce and tahini and blend until smooth. Add to the other soup in the pan, stir well and add the spinach leaves and cook until the spinach wilts. Garnish with chopped coriander and serve piping hot.