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I sometimes dream about being a supermommy. I am not talking about the type that flies after her kid in a tight colorful suit and rescues it from all evil. No, web rather the boring type that for example plans elaborate birthday themes.  I blame the damn blogs I read. It seems like the Internet is full of people that are able to pull it off. I blatantly ignore the fact that most of them are stay-at-home moms that don’t have to waste time on things like long commuting and working. Throw in a dash of procrastination and you have Mission Impossible on your hands.  P.S. I think my super hero name is SuperInsaneMom because I gave it a shot.

This year I wanted to make a Pippi Longstocking themed birthday party for my daughter’s third birthday.  She likes Pippi and we even visited her at Astrid Lingrens World this summer in Vimmerby Sweden. I recommend it as it was a really nicely made park! Of course my daughter decided at the last moment that she wanted a princess birthday party instead of a Pippi party and in the light of the theme I felt I had to accommodate. Pippi’s mantra is that she really just does what she wants. So we ended up with a Pippi Princess fusion…

It was a hetic last week before the birthday to put it mildly. You don’t really get much done in the 2 hours after your daughter goes to bed until you have to get to bed yourself.  Then there were some cake failures delaying me even further and it didn’t help that I was trying some new things. But I kept reminding myself that Pippi always says: I have never tried that before so I am sure I do it!

So I didn’t get time to do half of the things that I wanted to do but I managed few things that I really feel like documenting.

 

Pippi and Annika Princess Cake

Pippi and Annika Princess Cake

This is the only cake I was happy with keeping in mind that it was my first attempt at making something with fondant. It is to be noted that Pippi is technically a princess as her father is a King over the Kurrekurredutt islands so this wasn’t as far off theme as I originally thought.

Pippis gold coins

Pippis gold coins

Pippi has truck loads of gold coins that she can spend as she likes. Pretty sure my daughter appreciated these cookies with gold royal icing on more than she would have enjoyed real gold coins.

Pippi Princess Cupcakes

Pippi Princess Cupcakes

Because there is no birthday without cupcakes!

 

Herr Nilson

Herr Nilson – Pippis monkey

Ok, so Herr Nilson looks a little bit insane (and with some resemblance to a bear but oh well).

 

Silja washing the floor Pippi style

Silja washing the floor Pippi style

Pippi cleaning brushes. Made with two broom brushes, an old belt and one of those heavy duty stablers. My little daughter was very eager to try them and ran and got some water to wash the floor with. Maybe I have a maid now?

 

Sleeping the Pippi way

Sleeping the Pippi way

Pippis bed, she always sleep with the feet on her pillow.

We also made a little track in the garden where you were supposed to stay on the things and not touch the grass.  Forgot to take a photo of that one.

Villa Villakulla

Villa Villakulla

And last but not at least the sign, labeling our house as Villa Villekulla (which is the name of Pippis yellow house). Probably made the neighbours wonder.

Silja

Silja

I think the little miss 3 year old was quite happy and she really couldn’t wait to eat the cakes.

Palak Paneer – Beta

I am looking for beta testers!

You can have those for a recipe can’t you? My engineering background has a tendency to kick in sometimes even when it comes to cooking. There is even an if statement and while loop in this recipe. I guess there is still a mediumgeek in me. Anyways, lets discuss what is important, Indian food!

My all time favorite Indian is a vegetarian spinach dish called Palak Paneer. This is a creamy, spicy, spinach dish with cheese cubes in it that tends to cause severe overeating and me ending belly up on the sofa.

Palak Paneer

Palak Paneer

I used to live right next to a restaurant in Oslo that sold the most delicious version of it. Shortly after I moved it was closed and the Indian restaurant we live nearby now doesn’t quite live up to its greatness (at least not when doing takeaway). In pure frustration I promised myself I would manage to recreate it at home despite every previous attempt of cooking Indian having failed miserably.

It took quite a few rounds of debugging. All the versions I had tried were just too boring and were missing the richness of the restaurant versions you get. That all changed when I started pouring in copious amounts of butter and cream. And here I had been thinking I was eating healthy vegetarian…

One of the most frustrating things with making Indian is the mess you tend to make and the stress involved in keeping track of all the ingredients. I have tried to set up this recipe in such a way that decreases stress.

I haven’t quite perfected the method of making the cheese so I do it the brute force way (yeah that was the geek in me speaking). It works but I am sure there are more elegant, accurate ways of making it. Try googling it if you want to do it the right way. You are however welcome to come back here if it fails and try to resurrect it following the instructions from the *.

Palak Paneer

Adapted from Dishesfrommykitchen

Paneer Cheese Hack
3 liters whole milk
3-4 limes

Pour the milk in a pot and cook it right up to the point it boils (stir lightly so it doesn’t stick to the pot) and then take it off the heat. Add the juice of 2 limes and stir. If you are lucky it will start curdling at the first try. The final result should be that you have almost pure yellow-ish liquid (whey) and bunch of little white dots.

(*) If I don’t get this on the first try I simply repeat the process of bringing it to the boil, taking it off the heat and adding the juice of half of a lime. I keep repeating this until I get the result I want (usually two or three times).

Now put a clean cloth in a strainer and pour the curdles in there. Be careful, this is really hot! Preferably wait a little while for it to cool before you try straining off as much of the liquid as you possibly can. Put it in something that can preferably form it into a square cube with something heavy on top but it also just works dropping it in a small bowl with a plate with something heavy on top. Let it sit in the refrigerator for few hours.

Spinach mixture
400 grams Spinash, frozen
30-40 grams coriander
2 green chilies
Butter
3 tsp Green chili paste

Fry the frozen spinach and green chilies in butter until it is no longer frozen. I find it better when you overcook it a bit. Put the spinach mix, green chili paste and coriander in a bowl and run a hand mixer on it until it is pureed. Put aside.

Spice mixture
1 ½ tsp cumin
2 tsp coriander
½ tsp chili powder
2 tsp garam masala
1 tsp turmeric powder

Take all the ingredients of the spice mixture and mix then in a bowl. Put aside.

Rest of ingredients
Butter (or ghee) for frying
1 tsp cumin powder
2 onions, finely chopped
3,5 tsp ginger paste
8 cloves garlic, crushed
5 roma tomatoes, finely chopped
½ tsp sugar
2 tsp fenugreeks leaves, crushed (you can use your hands)
2,5-3 dl water
1,5 dl cream
A dash of lime juice
2 tbsp butter
Salt

Prepare all the other ingredients according to the listing above and make sure they are in easy reach. Also, make sure your sofa is clear in case you severly overeat…

Prepare the cheese. I like frying it a little golden in some sun flour oil. Cut the piece you have into approx. 1-2 cm thick slices. Fry it slightly golden on both sides. After frying, cut it into cubes. You can of course cut it into cubes and fry it like that but I find that this drains my patience and is really not needed.

Fried Paneer

Fried Paneer

Put butter in a pan and heat (make sure you don’t do it at highest temperature if you are not using ghee as it will brown). Put the cumin powder in there and let it bubble for few seconds. Add the onions and fry until they are light golden. Now add the ginger and garlic and fry until the raw aroma disappears.

Add the tomatoes and fry them for couple of minutes. Then add the spice mixture and stir and fry until it is well blended. Add the spinach mixture, the sugar and mix well. Then add the water and salt (according to taste).

Add the cream and let it come to boil at medium heat.

Add the cheese cubes, butter, and dash of lime and let it cook for couple of minutes.

Sprinkle with some sliced red onion and serve with rice and nan bread.

Palak Paneer or Spinach Cheese

Palak Paneer or Spinach Cheese

Tell me how it turned out and by all means send me some bug fixes!

It has gotten to a point where my little girl refuses to wear anything other than a dress. Preferably a pink one! I am really not sure where she is getting all those girly genes from, maybe they were just silent in my generation? Winter will be tough for her when you have to wear those nasty wool clothes to survive (or tough on the parents that have to force her to wear it).

The dress addiction was a good excuse though to make her a dress from a fabric I have been saving for a long time. Saving here really means I haven’t had time to use it but saving sounds nicer… It felt like a perfect choice for me since it was yellow and I am sick and tired of everything pink. I picked the new pattern my all time favorite sewing blogger just released. The Junebug dress. Nice, simple pattern that comes with easy visual instructions. It was excellent for someone like me that usually doesn’t have more than half an hour at a time to sew. My only complaint is that the dress is a little bit difficult to get off even if it is still a little bit big.

Truth to be told, she refused to wear the dress when I had finally finished it. I tried showing her all the princesses I could find that wear yellow dresses but little miss stubborn wasn’t sold on the idea. It wasn’t until I caved in an offered bribes that she calmly stated: “I can try” like she had never really been opposed to the idea. After she put it on, she was sold and even asked if she could wear it for her first day at a new Kindergarten tomorrow. So sweet of her!

A walk on the beach

A walk on the beach

Back of yellow dress

Back of yellow dress

Sun gazing

Sun gazing

It has been pretty insane at work lately. I have been doing my job plus filling in for someone else and have had to rush off to both Amsterdam and Paris on short notice. I haven’t had many exciting dishes lately thanks to lack of time but I did manage to get in both frog legs and snails in Paris! Despite that my taste buds are screaming for something more exciting than the quick dinners I have been making lately. This brought in mind a quick meal that is actually simple enough to throw together quickly if you have all the ingredients at hand and yet good enough that I sometimes serve this to guest.

I remember trying Chicken Ceaser Wraps at a restaurant called Jordbærpikene at Storo shopping center shortly after I gave birth to my daughter. They are etched in memory together with memories of intense happiness and haziness of the first hectic days of having to watch someone every second of the day.

I set out to recreate these and am pretty happy with the result. Prepare all the different parts and then let people assemble things themselves. Or if you want them to experience the full blown greatness don’t allow them to be picky and assemble it for them with all the goodies stuffed in there.

Ceaser Wraps

Ceaser Wraps

Chicken Ceaser Wraps

Chicken & Marinade

2 Chicken breasts
2 cloves garlic, crushed
Olive oil
Salt
Black Pepper

Filling
½ red onion, in slices
Ranch croutons (I prefer Chatham Village® Large Cut Ranch Croutons)
Sun dried tomatoes
Lettuce
Ceaser dressing (I prefer Svansø Ceaser Dressing)
Parmesan cheese, grated

1 package bacon
Tortilla

Balsamico-Honey Vinaigrette

¼ dl olive oil
¼ dl honey
½ dl balsamico vinegar
½ tsp dijon

Start by marinating the chicken. Crush the garlic and mix it together with the olive oil. Coat the chicken and let it sit for an hour or longer if you have time. Season with salt and pepper before frying.

Now make the Balsamico-Honey Vinaigrette. Simply put all the ingredients in a jar and shake well. Tip: If you need to measure in another measurement cup start by pouring in the olive oil and balsamico vinegar and do the honey on top of that. This way you get less sticky honey that you need to scrape out of the measurement cup.

Now prepare all the ingredients for the filling.

The Sides

The Sides

Fry the bacon. Then fry the chicken in the fat from the bacon on each side. Cut them in slices right before they are thoroughly cooked through and fry the strips just enough so they are fully cooked. This way they are juicy and not dry.

Warm the tortilla wraps.

Fill the tortilla with a little bit of all the ingredients and wrap it together like a burrito. Pour a little bit of Honey-Balsamico vinaigrette on top for decoration.

unwrapped_wrap

 
Yeah, it is a question for you! Which cuisine is the one that has so much garlic and chili that it requires you to have a toothbrush at hand all the time. Even in the office and so easily available that you trust your co-workers not to mess with it when you leave it in a jar in the public toilet at the office?

The answer is *drumroll*

South-Korean cuisine!

I got reminded of South-Korea yesterday. Probably had something to do with the busy weeks I have had at work. It reminded me of my hetic business trip to South-Korea back in 2009.  I am just grateful that in Norway you don’t have to wait until your boss leaves to be able to leave the office yourself! It feels so much better to work late from your couch…. I think that is better at least 🙂 .

Why Korean cuisine hasn’t conquered the world is beyond my understanding. I had never really heard about Korean food before I visited South-Korea back in 2009 on a business trip but I was indeed blown away.

There seems to be culture for eating in South Korea. There were restaurants everywhere and the food was often made on a grill or a pan in front of you. When you walked the back streets you saw food being cooked everywhere. Not all of them were to sanitary standars but it felt good to be surrounded by people that enjoyed food (and it was delicious food!).

Backstreet food - full of chilli!

Backstreet food – full of chilli!

Thankfully I had some very nice colleagues that spoke Korean and could help me order or otherwise I would have been lost.  I did order myself couple of times and to be honest, I am not sure what I got… it was tasty though.

The food in Korea is very spicy and very garlicky and not for the faint of heart. There are quite a few fermented things served as side dishes that can probably considered acquired taste. It shocks your taste buds and breath, hence the toothbrushes in the office bathroom.

One of the dishes I remember pretty well was at one of those restaurants where they cooked in front of you. A pan full of vegetables, meat, and chili paste.  I remember getting a plastic apron and having to stir the thing myself. The restaurant had a cheap feeling to it but the food was absolutely delicious!

I couldn’t forget the dish after I went home and I was able to make a decent copy using the ingredients I had stuffed my suitcase full with.  I have found the chili paste in supermarkets here in Oslo but the original was served with some kind of rice cakes in it and those I haven’t been able to find here. Not a big deal, it is delicious without it. I wont claim this is authentic but at least it is good!

So if you like spicy and garlicy I recommend that you give this one a try. If still in doubt consider the fact that there is a city called Chuncheon that does an autumn festival dedicated to this dish.

Dak Galbi

Recipe is adapted from My Korean Kitchen

Prepare meat

Two chicken breasts
2 tbsp Mirin (refined rice wine)
1/4 tsp ginger powder
Black pepper

Cut the chicken into small pieces. Mix together the mirin and ginger powder. Add the chicken and black pepper and stir. Let it marinate for approx 15 minutes.

Chili marinade

3 tbsp Korean chili paste (gochujang)
5 cloves crushed garlic
1 tbsp Korean chili powder
1 tbsp Korean (or Japanese) soy sauce
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 tsp Korean yellow curry powder
1/2 grated onion

Mix all ingredients together. Mix in the chicken and let it marinate for an hour.

1 sweet potato
1-2 carrots
1/3 of a cabbage head
12-15 average sized perilla/sesame leaves
1/2 onion
1/2 yellow cheese

Slice the potato , carrots, and onion into thin slides. Slice the cabbage and chop the perilla leaves (only roughly). Grate the cheese.

Pre-heat a wok and add oil. Put all the vegetables in the wok and add the meat on top. Stir while it is cooking.

Dak Galbi stacked in a pan

Dak Galbi stacked in a pan

It is ready when the chicken is cooked through and the carrots and potato have become soft.
Pour 1/2 cup yellow cheese over at the end for a rounder taste. Cook until melted. Eat and enjoy!

Dak Galbi

Dak Galbi

Norwegian shopping tip: You can find the Korean chili paste, mirin and perille leaves in A-Market downtown Oslo. I haven’t found the Korean curry powder or chilli powder in Oslo yet but if there is a will there is a way (aka as online shopping).  I am pretty sure it can be bought somewhere in Oslo and I would love to hear about it if someone has found it.

I have a tendency to get over ambitious ideas. Last year’s idea was to make my own national custom. Not only did I get the idea, I was stupid enough to post a goal for myself on Facebook to get it finished before 17th of May this year. I am pretty sure there was a beer or two involved in this status and I have repeatedly wished I could go back in time and slap some sense info myself before I said this out loud.

Facebook status

17th of May is the national day in Norway and is really a wonderful day. The otherwise quiet, humble Norwegians that are afraid of being proud of their national heritage go all out with flags, parades, and national costumes called Bunad. Each district has their own variant and most of them are absolutely beautiful. Given the price of (8000 to 70 000 NOK ) of these costumes it is amazing how many people actually own them (55% of women and 7% of men).

I have always felt a bit left out on 17th of May just wearing a normal cheap dress. I have been wanting to have one for years but since I don’t have any strong roots to a particular place in Norway it was difficult to know which one I should get (plus they are ridiculously expensive).

So I started thinking about Icelandic costumes and I got this genius idea that I would make my own to save some money…

That was a really insane idea given the fact that I didn’t have a proper pattern, had never really seen one up close, and is a new beginner at sewing. In addition to all of that I have had a really tough year with my daughter not sleeping which in turn made me sick and then to top all of that I started a new job in February (and this blog)…

So I didn’t actually finish but I made it close enough that I could hack some parts (the apron), use a store bought shirt, skip the belt and some silver and live with some loose ends… literally… There are things that I am not too happy with but I guess that was to be expected given the previously stated facts and that I rarely had more than half an hour to spare at a time to work on it.

Upphlutr

Upphlutur (no I don’t like having my picture taken)

So the plan for next year’s 17th of May is to finish it up…. there I did it again, said it a loud which means I have to at least attempt it.

This particular type of Icelandic costume is called Upphlutur. Unlike Norway where most of the costumes are district related, Iceland just has few different types that aren’t related to a particular place.

The front

The front

My mom knit the cap part which is called skotthúfa and she also gave me the only inherited jewelry for it which makes it even more special. Takk mamma!

The back with silver wire kniplingar

The back with silver wire kniplingar

 

From the side

From the side

 

My daughter has repeatedly asked me if I will sew one for her. Think I need to let some years pass to forget the pain of making this one 🙂 . In the meantime she gets to wear the fake children costumes (festdrakt) they sell in Norway.  Aren’t we lovely?

Me and Silja

Me and Silja 

 

Banana Bread

banan_bread

 

I wont give you some crap about this being the perfect thing to bake when you happen to have few bananas about to go bad on your hands. Seriously, closet housewives with full time jobs and kids know better than to believe it is a realistic scenario that you happen to have the energy and time at that exact moment.

That being said you need some old, brown bananas to make this bread but there are other ways to achieve that than trying to force yourself into baking when you don’t feel like it.

I usually buy some old bananas when I want to bake this bread. Once in a blue moon I can get my sweet tooth worked up enough to make this when I happen to have old bananas but usually I cannot be bothered. Other times I plan ahead for occasions and just make sure my bananas have gone old by then. Problem solved!

It is however all worth it in the end, this banana bread is just delicious. The nuts add the right texture and calling it banana bread takes away the focus that this is really just a scrumptious cake…

 

Banana Bread full of crunch

Banana Bread full of crunch

This is an adapted version from Kitchen confidante. That version had insane amounts of sugar but there was something about the combination of pecans and bananas that dragged me in. I pretty much just cut the sugar in half and use golden cane sugar which gives it a slight caramel hint. Regular sugar works just fine as well.

 

Banana Bread

420 g flour
½ tsp salt
1½ tsp baking powder
1½ tsp baking soda

75 g chopped pecans (walnuts work as well)

220 g golden cane sugar
100 g butter, room temperature
2 eggs
5 – 6 very ripe bananas (brown spots all over them)
2,5 dl plain yogurt

Preheat oven to 150 degrees Celsius. Don’t try to shorten the baking time with a higher temperature. It doesn’t turn out the same.

Mix flour, salt, baking powder, and baking soda together. Add the pecan nuts into the flour mixture.

Beat butter and sugar with a hand mixer or some other kitchen machine until it is creamy. Mix in the eggs one at a time and beat. Crush the bananas with a fork and then add them into the mixture and beat it some more until they are blended.

Add the flour mixture and yogurt gradually alternating between the two until incorporated. Make sure you don’t over mix.

Bake in buttered loaf pans for one hour or until a toothpick comes out clean. Enjoy!

 

Banana Bread with your coffee

Banana Bread with your coffee

Chorizo with Mojo Verde sauce

Chorizo with Mojo Verde sauce

So onto the issue of baking chorizo. Sounds like the most simplistic thing in the world and it really is. Well, as long as you know one simple detail. You have to bake it at a low temperature. I burnt quite a few chorizo sausages (very expensive affair in Norway) before I dug up this detail on some web site long time ago. For the ones that don’t know chorizo is a spicy Spanish sausage. There is another Mexican sausage that exists with the same name but it is not the same thing. The Spanish one is cured. The Mexican one isn’t.

So when you have mastered this you will have a very easy tapas dish in your repertoire  I doubt I am only one that finds it hetic to make a proper tapas dinner. It looks so easy when they serve you with numerous tiny little dishes at the restaurant. At home it is usually results in panic, cold or burnt dishes, and a mount-everest sized pile of dirty dishes spread all over your kitchen.  This one you can just throw in the oven, take it out when it is done, and voila it is ready.

Baked Chorizo

1 chorizo sausage (Spanish only)

Remove the casing and slice the chorizo into thin slices. I prefer at approx. 0,5 cm thickness. Line an oven proof plate with them and put them in the oven at 120 degrees Celcious. This is really important, don’t increase the heat for a shorter baking time, they will get burnt and do not taste as nice. Keep them in the oven for approx. 40 minutes. When there are approx. 10 minutes left I usually pour of some of the fat that has gathered in the plate so they dry up a little close to the end. Take them out and it is ready!

Serve as tapas, appetizer, or just as a snack. It is delicious with some Mojo verde as a dipping sauce.

 

Baked Chorizo

Baked Chorizo

 

Mojo Verde

It is quite common in the Nordic to venture south to Spain on vacation. They even have specific terms for these trips “Sydentur”. Directly translated that would be something like “South trip”. So I was quite old when I went on my first one, well into my twenties and yet my maiden voyage there felt quite exotic. Coming from a place where growing potatoes and cabbages is a victory, being able to see avocados and oranges growing effortlessly on trees was quite an experience.

Everything was a discovery and even the cheap tourist restaurants were able to provide me with big culinary experiences. Those days are long gone after having been on few of these trips, now I cannot avoid seeing the cheapness and being annoyed over signs and menus in Scandinavian languages. I wish they would try to keep it more authentic but I guess I am not the typical tourist.

So I came home from my first trip from Tenerife with a cookbook in my luggage and few things on my list I wanted to experiment. One of them was a certain green sauce called Mojo Verde that they served with papas arraguas or what is often called wrinkled potatoes. It is really just potatoes cooked in a lot of salt making the peel all wrinkled and delicious. This sauce however works great as well with fish and as a dipping sauce for baked chorizo. If you stay tuned I might post how you bake chorizo to perfection. Because it really isn’t as simple as one would think (or it wasn’t for me).

Mojo Verde

Mojo Verde

Mojo Verde

3/4 bunch of coriander (approx 50 g)
2 cloves garlic, crushed
2 green chilies (remove seeds)
1 1/2 tbsp white wine vinegar
1 dl olive oil
2/3 tsp salt
1 tsp cumin

Mix all except oil in a food processor and try to get it chopped as finely as possible. Gradually add the oil as the ingredients are chopped and mixed. Alternatively, use a hand blender but then you need to add all at once to get it chopped. You get a purer green color by using a food processor. The one seen here was made with a hand mixer and is a bit more cloudy.

Mojo Verde og Chorizo

Mojo Verde og Chorizo

I posted this recipe on my old mediumgeek blog that I have now retired. I thought I should repost it here since I occasionally get asked for the recipe and it is something that I make again and again and never seem to tire of it. Discovering this recipe has really made my life bearable after moving outside the US. I might be exaggerated a little bit but this salsa was one of the things I miss the most from my college years in Tulsa Oklahoma.

On The Border was my favorite restaurant that served pretty good Mexican food and absolutely heavenly salsa. I sometimes just went there and bought a bag of chips and a big jar of salsa for dinner. I would continue eating until my mouth was too injured from the chips to continue. After I moved to Norway (which was probably a blessing for my waistline) I found myself repeatedly craving for their salsa. After many disastrous attempts I had given up all hope of ever being able to make it on my own.

Until I came across a copycat recipe on some forum that is now long gone that put me on the right track. One of the tricks was to give up on using fresh tomatoes and go for canned. Maybe had something to do with the pale tasteless tomatoes you get here in Norway. They are just to tasteless and boring to work.

I have applied a couple of other tricks of my own to the recipe so it isn’t completely like the original and I have tried the real thing afterwards (in South-Korea of all places) and there is something still missing. But it is enough to get me through the days and it is so good that I am no longer able to eat pre-made salsa from a jar.

Salsa

Salsa

 

On The Border Salsa Copycat

Protip: When I tell you not to run the blender for too long, don’t! The salsa should look red and fresh and not brown and frothy. This really is the key!

1/2 white onion, chopped
Juice of 1-2 limes
1 box canned tomatoes (minus some of the liquid)
12-15 branches fresh coriander
12 slices of canned jalapeño (I prefer Santa Maria’s)
1/2 tsp cumin powder
1/2 tsp dried red chili flakes
1 small clove garlic, crushed
Salt

Marinate the chopped white onion in the lime juice for approximately half an hour. If you don’t have enough juice to cover all the onion, stir couple of times.

Drain the lime juice off the onions (the lime juice is excellent to use in guacamole if you are making it at the same time). Put half of the tomatoes into a blender together with the onion. Run the blender for few seconds until the tomatoes and onions are crushed. Chop the jalapeño and coriander coarsely and add them into the mix together with the cumin, red chili flakes, and garlic. Now add the rest of the tomatoes but try not to use all the liquid or it will get a bit too watery. Run the blender again for few seconds or just long enough to get it all chopped and mixed. Move to a bowl. At the end add the salt, stir and taste until you get the right amount of salt. It should be a little bit salty. It is best to let the salsa sit for half an hour before serving.

Salsa and chips are an excellent match

Salsa and chips are an excellent match

Spice tip:
If you want a salsa that kicks your butt more than this one use 15 slices of jalapeño and 1 tsp red pepper flakes. If you want a milder variant reduce the red chili flakes and jalapeño down to maybe 1/4 tsp and 8 slices.

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