Friday, April 03, 2015

Leek Fritters

It's Passover Eve! Hurrah! And we are invited to celebrate this holiday of spring, freedom, and questionable historical existence, with our good friends of 15 years from the East Bay!

Our friends are having the entire meal catered, and we were told not to worry about food. But I assume most of the invitees are not vegan. On one hand, I don't like disrupting other people's plans for the meal; on the other, I don't want to just bring clandestine tofu blocks for the two of us and ignore everyone else around the table. Also, in the off-chance that anyone around the table eats kosher under the Ashkenazi rules, I don't want to flood the table with soy or other beans. I've come up with two solutions and I plan to do both!

Solution 1: bringing a "cheese plate" of Miyoko's Cheeses. YEAH!

Solution 2: making amazing leak fritters!

Ori Shavit's wonderful blog is full of terrific vegan recipes, with an entire section devoted to Passover that I'm sure I'll be using for years to come. I used her leek latkes recipe with a few minor substitutions. For non-Hebrew readers, it's as follows:

5 leeks, white and light green parts
4 tbsp matzo flour
1 large onion
4 garlic cloves
1 large fistful parsley
1 large fistful cilantro (I substituted oregano and sage)
celery leaves from 5 stalks
1 tsp salt
1 tsp black pepper
1 tsp Hawaiiej  (I have the real deal, but you can substitute with cumin and cardamom)
safflower oil and potato flour for frying

Cut each leek into three pieces. Place in a pot, cover with water, boil and simmer for 10 mins. Drain.
Then, place cooked leeks and all other ingredients into food processor and process until smooth.
Heat safflower oil in a large pan.
Place spoonfuls of the mix into the pan (you can dip them in potato flour to assist the frying) and fry a few minutes on each side, until firm and golden.