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« Food for a heatwave III - Broccoli and toasted seed salad | Main | The Salt Yard »

September 15, 2006

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ilingc

oh this looks yummy!! if I didn't read the title and your post I would've thought it was satay! :)

Rethabile

I'm going to try this over the weekend. Sounds to me like it should be markedly different from Satay.

Jeanne, would you happen to have a good and tried scones recipe handy? I'll trade with my favourite persian dish: ghormé sabzi, if trading there must be
;-)

Cheers

herschelian

Oh this post has made me sooo homesick! I havn't had sosaties for ages. Amongst my SA recipe books are two old ones, and in one of them the sosatie recipe begins "beat the mutton well before cutting it into neat pieces for the sosaties" It must be my filthy mind, but beating the mutton sounds rather rude to me. You are right of course, Pick'n Pay have a huge range of sosaties for braai-ing and they are usually excellent. What with global warming making BBQs in the UK more commonplace you'd think Waitrose or Tesco would cotton on to a really good thing and produce decent kebabs for grilling.

johanna

cecil, oh cecil, what a lovely place you have! next time i'll invite myself along, i'll start work on my south african accent right away!

Jeanne

Hi Ilingc
Yes - there are definite similarities in appearance, although sosaties are chunkier than satay that I have had - and the taste is vastly different!

Hi Rethabile
Thanks for visiting - and yes, the tastes differe markedly. Have e-mailed you the scone recipe - do let me know how it turns out :-)

Hi Herschellian
Yup, these are proper homseick food! And as you say, you'd think that the UK would have caught on, but apparently not. I mean, in SA these were a year-round treat. I remember as a schoolchild having chicken sosaties from Woollies on Saturday nights all year round (while watching Magnum, of course!!) And beating the mutton is only rude if you're Australian... :o)

Hi Johanna
Oh, don't worry, we'll smuggle you in next time ;-) And you're perfectly placed to develop a great South African accent, between me and Lyn!!

Cecil

Hi Jeanne,

Fab! So enjoyed reading about sosaties with a view! The deck does look posh!

Love the layout of your site. Radio 4 has just recently done a little series about blogging. Did you catch any of it?

Lots of love,

Cec.

Marge

Looking forward to you braaing lamb sosaties here in sunny SA just after Christmas dear, talented Cec - AND when I'm next in London town! CU soon Marge

kat

This lamb sosatie recipe sounds much like the way my mother taught me to make them, but with two alternatives.
Instead of lamb fat, she used bacon - does much the same job of adding moisture from the fat and imparts a fb smoky flavour and cripsy texture in the bacon pieces themselves.
She also used to use prunes as well as the apricots. Just one or two per skewer does the job, and they taste great once theyved been braaiied and have a lovely dark almost bitter-burnt skin and a hot sweet inside.

Cynthia Thompson

Hi there Ces,
I just want to tell everyone that your sosaties were devine along with the company and the most amazing view. See you on top deck next summer. I am feeling so hungry now after reading all the comments, now want to go and make some cornish pasties, also the family favourite. I am looking for a nice milk tert recipe if anyone has a nice one. I cant seem to bake properly with this flour from the UK or is it me?
Love Cyn

Bellini Valli

A very interesting read Jeanne.Here in Canada you can buy all kinds of kebabs at the grocers. They may call them kebabs, skewers or souvlaki depending on who is selling them.

Christina

I always add yogurt or buttermilk to the marinade too and leave ovenight for really tender meat. Add the apricot baste before braaing. Ina Paarman's website has quite a few great braai recipe videos including sosaties.

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