d o c t o r a n d m a m a

Linda Shiue

Linda Shiue
Location
San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I am a physician and spend my free time with my husband and kids, reading everything in sight, eating, traveling, and cooking meals inspired by my travels. These days I'm spending more time at my food blog, spiceboxtravels.com. Please visit me there and follow me on Twitter @spiceboxtravels. Disclaimer: Health information presented here is not intended nor recommended as a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your own physician or other qualified health care professional regarding any medical questions or conditions. © 2010-12 Linda Shiue. All Rights Reserved.

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MARCH 6, 2011 10:57AM

Eating Out of House and Home

Rate: 22 Flag
 
pomegranates and walnuts by Linda Shiue 
 
I have a travel tic.  No, not the plastic bags I carry along because they come in handy.  While I travel to explore the unfamiliar, the first thing I always do when I arrive is to make myself at home.  Whether it's a room in a hostel, a fancy hotel, or a vacation rental, we're barely five minutes in the door before I start unpacking.  I transfer clothes from suitcase to drawers and clotheshangers.  Dopp kits get emptied and my toiletries take their places in their new temporary home.  A scented votive gets placed on the bedside table, which is where I will also stack my reading materials.  It must be a fear of displacement, even when I've chosen it, that drives me to nest.

So it was especially jarring to me when the vacation rental in London our friends and I had booked over the internet turned out to be different than promised.  The converted church looked just as it had in the photos; that was not the surprise.  It was just that our "Vacation Rental By Owner" was more of a "Vacation Rental With Owners."  Our friends and I had already chosen which rooms we were going to take.  Harriet, our host, took us on our tour of the space, and I wondered why there seemed to be one less room than I remembered.

"Where is the light blue room with the fuschia settee?" (That was the one I had been eyeing.)

"Oh, I didn't think you would need that space," Harriet said, not missing a beat as she unlocked a door.  "Won't all the [five] children just stay in one room together? No worries, let me just remove my belongings from there."

That was surprise number one.

"My partner and I will just stay in the choir loft," she said.  "Don't mind us; just pretend we are not here."

But it was impossible to pretend when, while attempting to stretch out in the living room that was below the open loft, we'd hear Harriet and Lee's exaggerated whispers. When we'd return late at night, which should not have been anyone's business but ours, Harriet would loudly toss and turn and sigh, irritated from being woken up at night.  We felt more like houseguests in a stranger's home than tenants, free to come and go as we pleased.

Further surprises came along.  One early morning, we were awoken by loud sounds downstairs.  There were at least a dozen people busily moving furniture, laying out lamps and doing hair and makeup.

Harriet eyed us.  "You should probably eat your breakfast quickly so that the film crew can start working." (Film crew?) "Isn't it exciting," she said breathlessly, "Mandy Moore is filming her movie here! I hope you have a full day planned so that you won't interrupt the filming."

Mandy Moore? Filming? Wait a second-- what about the naps our exhausted kids were counting on having? And was our rent subsidizing Mandy Moore's film? I snuck a peek at the blond-wigged woman whose face was being made up for what seemed like hours.  That was not Mandy Moore.

Another day, our breakfast was again interrupted by an unexpected visit.  "Sorry about that, " Harriet said, "These people are probably going to buy the house."

"Is it for sale?" I asked.

"Yes, but I don't know too much of the details.  The owners are in charge of that."  Turns out, Harriet and Lee were not even owners, but staff of the owners... if even that.

As a seeker of routines, I felt very unsettled.  While I exulted in the randomness of our daytime explorations, I needed to come home to the familiar, where I could kick back.  I needed some comfort.

Around the corner from our over-occupied vacation rental was the main drag, where you could get everything but English food.  There were Thai, Brazilian, Caribbean and Persian restaurants.  We tried them all (it was hard to cook in the kitchen, since Harriet and Lee seemed always to be there), but our favorite was the Persian place.  We went there for at least half of our dinners that week.  The door opened to the view of an open wood-fired oven where lavash and nan were freshly baked.  We gorged on kebabs and the classical khoresht, or stews, that are typical of Persian cuisine. To cope with the unending surprises in what was supposed to be our home away from home, we found comfort by eating the same meals over and over.

I didn't tire of those exquisite dishes, and since that time have been waiting for the opportunity to explore cooking Persian food.  I am particularly enamored by the dish known as fesenjan.  It is a dish of chicken or duck stewed in a sauce composed of the unusual ingredients of pomegranate molasses and ground walnuts, served with fluffy basmati rice.  The flavors are rich and exotic to the uninitiated.  But they remind me of home.

*     *     *
Fesenjan (Persian Chicken in Walnut and Pomegranate Sauce)
 
 fesenjan by Linda Shiue
 
This dish combines the creamy richness of the slow-cooked ground walnut sauce with a sour-sweet undercurrent of pomegranate molasses. It's savored on special occasions.  I'll be making it again on Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which is celebrated on the first day of Spring, which falls this year on March 20th.

Serves 6 to 8.

Ingredients
1/4 cup butter or oil 
2 pounds chicken legs or thighs, bone-in, cut into serving sized pieces
1 large onion, sliced thinly
2 cups walnuts, finely ground with a mortar and pestle or in a food processor 
1 1/2 cups chicken stock or water
2/3 cup pomegranate molasses 
1/2 tsp ground cardamom
1 tablespoon salt, or to taste
pepper to taste
optional: sugar to taste 

Technique
1.  Heat butter or oil in a large, heavy-bottomed pot over medium flame. Add the chicken pieces and brown on all sides. Remove browned chicken and reserve on a plate.
2.  Add the onions to the pot and sauté until translucent.
3.  Stir in the ground walnuts and stock or water and return the browned chicken pieces to the pot. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low, cover and simmer for 20-30 minutes.
4.  Stir in the pomegranate juice, cardamom, salt and pepper. Simmer for another hour until the chicken is tender, the sauce is slightly thickened and the walnuts begin to release their oil. Adjust seasoning to taste, adding sugar if desired, and simmer for 10 more minutes.   Serve with plain white basmati rice.

Notes
Pomegranate molasses, sometimes called pomegranate syrup, is available in most Middle Eastern and health food stores.  It has the color and consistency of molasses but is simply reduced pomegranate juice, without added sugar.  If it is unavailable, you can substitute 2 cups of fresh pomegranate juice, and use only 1/2 cup of stock or water.
 
Recipe adapted from this one
 
© 2011 Linda Shiue 

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Comments

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Great story. I mean, awful, infuriating story, but well told. And you stay so calm! This sort of thing would have given me an coronary.
Traveling affords interesting memories, Linda, like the one you wrote about here, and time puts them in a tolerable perspective. One remembers better things like the foods one tasted.

This is a good recipe in which the acidity of the pomegranate molasses balances the richness of the nuts and chicken fat.
♥R
I like to settle in the same way you do. Good thing you found some lovely food to help counterbalance. I think those same people have rentals dotted throughout the world. :) Rated
the food looks delightful, the accommodations, less so.

Knowing me like I do, someone would have been kicked out. Not saying who, but in that situation, somebody needed to go. It must've been like having cuckoos in your nest!
Man! That would have sent me right over the edge. You're a better woman than I !
The dish looks scrumptious.
This dish looks wonderful.
Hope you reported this to VRBO. They actually try to keep tabs on things like this with their rentals. Recipe looks wonderful!
A story as good as "Bread Man!" Very fun post. And another wonderful recipe.
Good Lord..that would have driven me crazy!! The recipe looks amazing and I am thinking about making it for Easter,it sounds exotic and wonderful!!!
Great story/ We
ve used VRBO before but nothing happened like this. RRR
Your writing always inspires me!
This is so funny, Linda! You took it all in great stride, and now you have a great piece of writing out of it as a reward. R
Your travel anecdotes always make me laugh, Linda! I can relate to this somewhat, having just come back from an "interesting" weekend renting a house in Tahoe... although not as interesting as your trip! I think I'll have to try this for the Persian New Year.
The frustrations of travel have inspired you to comical heights, Linda.
Where to next?
Linda, this story is so well told. I almost thought there wouldn't be a recipe at the end, but you didn't disappoint. Gorgeous (and frustrating) post! ~r
Aah, those English. Space at a premium and presumption galore. Good thing you were in an ethnic neighborhood, otherwise you'd have had to escape into mushy peas and spotted dick. I've loved Persian food ever since my visit to Iran in the old days. You made me hungry for that dish alongside a hillock of their fabulous rice. Very good post. r
I'm afraid that is the strange English ways, we're very ecentric. I and my former wife stayed at one even worse than this in cornwall, he would only lend us a teaspoon whilst he waited to take it back! I'm sure he went through our bags when we went out. The recipe looks very interesting...I will give it a go and let you know how it went. Great post thank you
You're a better woman than I. Lord, I would have been out of there in 15 minutes. However, the recipe looks scrumptious, and I won't wait until Nawruz to try it! Thanks.
Let me take a wild guess. Were you by some chance dining on Bishop's Bridge or Westbourne Grove in Notting Hill section of Bayswater?

I used to know that street very well because my friends have a house right around the corner on Chepstow, and I've eaten in the Persian restaurant there several times. I miss fesenjan but the GF doesn't like sweet meat dishes.

Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
Thanks for all of your nice comments.
If it were not for all the kids in tow, we probably would have found other accommodation! I checked recently and it's no longer on VRBO-- I think it actually was sold (that much was true!) All I can say is that it made for more adventures and stories to remember.

@sagemerlin-- not far from there (but further than promised)--Kensal Green.
Comedy is described as 'tragedy plus time.' An infuriating vacation let down certainly considering what it costs to go to London, but hopefully, you'll laugh later on. And the dish sounds delicious! The last time I was in London with my mother, we found eating all our meals at ethnic restaurants was a form of self-preservation. The English people we met on that trip were friendly, helpful and incredibly kind. I liked everything about them EXCEPT their cooking--which was truly dreadful.

rated
Wow -- those people are just awful! How did you ever stay so calm?

Sorry that happened, but it made a good story!!!

And the dish looks fantastic. I am going to try to make it.

Andrea
That's the kind of vacation surprise you'd delight in if you were 18 and childless, but....OH MY! Traveling with kids? No so much. Persian food isn't something I've ever even considered. It hasn't made any appearance at all in this neck of the woods, but something about a sauce made of walnuts and pomegranate molasses -- well, that sounds amazing.