Dates go with rice, salads, pancakes, milkshakes — everything
Dates can be sustenance (one or two will curtail my hunger) but can also replace a sweet treat. Alicia Gonzalez of the Bautista Family Organic Date Ranch says she likes them “with coffee instead of doughnuts.”
During Ramadan, dates are the first food that many people eat when they break the long day’s fast. As Anissa Helou, who specializes in cooking and writing recipes for Mediterranean and Middle Eastern cuisines, writes, “Its high sugar content, up to 70% by weight in a fully dried date, makes it an ideal breakfast after so many hours without any food or water, supplying the necessary rush of energy while easy on the empty stomach.”
Smooth, sweet shakes, tart lemon bars, crunchy slaw and an aromatic chicken braise — these are just a few of the wonderful recipes utilizing the unique sweetness of dates.
Her first memory of enjoying dates? “When my father came back from Iraq, [where] he worked on roads and bridge projects, he would bring us a gigantic basket full of the most delicious dates. When I say huge, I mean huge. Practically as large as an armchair. We also ate fresh dates during the season, both red and yellow.”
Traditional Middle Eastern uses include muhammar, “where rice sweetened with date syrup is served with grilled fish or on festive occasions, or with roast lamb,” Helou says. Assida, a thick porridge enriched with butter, is often sweetened with dates. Jellab is a crushed ice drink sweetened with date syrup; it also may have nuts like pistachios or pine nuts and golden raisins.
Bob Harrick of Woodspur Farms in Coachella likes to chop dates and add them to pancakes or make his own spin on the classic date shakes that you find in the Coachella Valley. At Shield’s Date Garden in Indio, owner Heather Raumin adds date crystals — which are, essentially, nubbins of dried dates sweetened with date sugar — to her shakes.
Date tours, date shakes, date docs — why you need a road trip to the desert.
At restaurants such as Kismet in Los Feliz, dates can simply be served with mezze. At Botanica in Silver Lake, dates are sauteed until warm and served with cheese. At Dune in Atwater Village, dates are soaked in rose water and served with olive oil and sea salt — resulting in a dish that activates all the senses. It’s sweet, savory, floral, and feels distinctly Californian.
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