We are absolutely delighted to announce that Claudia Roden will be joining us at GNHQ. Claudia was born and brought up in Cairo and her best-selling books include A Book of Middle Eastern Food and the international award-winning classic The Book of Jewish Food. She has won 6 Glenfiddich awards for her food writing and in 1989 was awarded Italy's two most prestigious food prizes.
She has spent five years researching her latest book - The Food of Spain - which is filled with many amazing recipes passed down through generations. So if you have any questions for Claudia - or are simply after some new ideas for delicious summer dishes - add them here.
I like your Spanish book. Must look for a Jewish one as I had some wonderful food in Israel last year, including a lovely spicy tomato dip. I have no idea what it was. Do you?
Hi Claudia I feel very privileged to be able to "chat" to one of my great culinary heroines so this is a chance to say thank you for all your books, especially Mediterranean Food - the pissaladiere and salade nicoise recipes are amongst our all time favourites. My son and his Spanish wife live in Andalucia so we get lots of chances to sample home-cooked and restaurant food. I have to say that outside of Catalunya I am almost invariably disappointed with restaurant food, partly because I have to stay up past my bedtime to eat it and partly because there always seems to be too much overcooked meat. Do you think that the traditions of home-cooked food have been lost in many restaurants and do you think Spanish cuisine is changing and adapting to meet a taste for lighter food? Much as I love tortilla and patatas pobres, I can see that it really doesn't do my figure any good!
Tomatoes just curious........ why do some recipes including tomatoes state to skin (acceptable) and then to scrape pips from tomatoes leaving just a small amount of flesh, it seems such a waste, I would appreciate your comment, especially as the spanish tomatoes are so tasty and juicy.
I don't know if I am allowed a second question, but this one is from my husband. We have a very productive quince tree in our garden and we have made membrillo, quince jelly, quince and apple pie and quince jam. We have found your lamb with quince recipe, but not tried it yet, but wondered if you had any other ideas what we can do with the many kilos of quinces we get each year?
The Book of Jewish Food by Claudia Roden, published in 1997 is a wonderful, comprehensively researched book. I have loved her writing and her recipes ever since I bought my Penguin copy of the original Book of Middle Eastern Food in 1972. Seem to remember buying it in the Family Bookshop in Ahmadi, Kuwait, shortly after swooning over my first ever taste of hummus and also tabbouleh in the Kuwait Sheraton. I am a brand new member and this is my first ever post. There could be no better place for me to begin than with food and especially Claudia Roden. I watched her demonstrating many years ago at the Covent Garden Food Fair, having sneaked out of a conference I was attending in London at the time (oops!). Was desperate to speak to her but too shy!!
I love the idea of tapas and am thinking of preparing a few dishes for a family birthday celebration in a few weeks's time - a way of getting us all round the table without a formal meal.
Do you have a suggestion for five or six dishes that would work well together? Preferably reasonably simple to make, if I am going to be doing half a dozen different things?
When I was a child, Spanish food was caricatured as chicken and chips, which I suppose is what British people were offered in Torremolinos. There was a general assumption that everything was "greasy" and fried. I was brought up with idea that it was both dull and bad for you. Yet today it is incredibly fashionable and of course a Spanish restaurant, El Bulli, has been supposedly the best in the world for many years. Is it that Spanish food itself has changed, or is it that we have become more knowledgeable (and perhaps sophisticated)?
I absolutely love tortilla - and have experimented with various recipes to make it at home (with varying success). What I would like to know is - a) can I par boil my sliced potatoes first and b) is there a way of cutting down on the amount of olive oil without ruining the taste? Many thanks
I know you have written books on many food cultures including Jewish, middle eastern, Italian and now Spanish...but if you had to pick on as your favourite what would it be and why?
Emergency ideas please - dinner party at the weekend. I need to be able to prepare as much as possible in advance (I don't mind sticking it in the oven on the night but won't have time to faff!). One person allergic to fish, another doesn't eat pork or shellfish. I don't like creamy/cheesy dishes. With eternal gratitude!! Cathy
Hello Claudia. I have a jar of organic lemons I preserved about a year ago. How long will they keep? I would like to use them, but not sure if they will still be ok.
Hi Claudia, ! I wondered if you knew any good matzoh recipes? Thankfully Passover is over, I was suffering from some serous Matzah fatigue! I wondered if you had any ideas for making Matzah a bit more interesting and bearable? Thank you x