Ingredients
Kibbeh:
- ½ cup (125 mL) raw bulgur wheat
- 1 cup (250 mL) cold water
- 1 lb (450 g) Beef Top Blade Steak (flat iron or chuck tender)
- 1 medium onion, minced
- ¼ cup (60 mL) finely chopped fresh mint
- 1 tsp (5 g) salt
- 1 tsp (3 g) ground cumin
- ½ tsp (1.5 g) ground allspice
- ¼ tsp (1 g) ground cinnamon
- ¼ tsp (1 g) ground black pepper
- 1 large egg
- vegetable or olive oil, for frying
Harissa Mayo:
- ½ cup (125 mL) mayonnaise
- 1 Tbsp (15 mL) fresh lemon juice
- 2 tsp (10 mL) dried harissa blend, or fresh harissa paste
For assembly:
- 12 mini pitas
- cucumber slices
- radish slices
Instructions
- Place the bulgur in a bowl, cover with the cold water and let sit for 30 minutes. Drain the bulgur well and put this into a large mixing bowl.
- Trim away any silverskin from the beef and cut into slices WITH the grain about ½-inch (1.25 cm) thick. Lay this on a plate, cover with plastic and place in the freezer for 5-10 minutes (this makes them easier to slice). Slice the beef now ACROSS the grain as thinly as possible (this is called emincée) and add to the bulgur. Add the mint, salt, cumin, allspice, cinnamon, pepper and egg and use clean hands to really mix this well, until well-blended and it holds together when squeezed. Use a large ice cream scoop or divide the mixture into 12 portions and firmly shape them into a ball (meatball-sized)and then flatten to a mini patty. Place these on a palte and chill until ready to cook, or cook reight away.
- Heat a heavy-bottomed or non-stick skillet on medium high heat and add the oil. Drop in the kibbeh patties in the pan, leavina little space between them and then reduce the heat to medium. Cook the patties for about 4 minutes on each side, and keep warm until ready to serve.
- For the harissa may, stir the mayonnaise, lemon juice and harissa together.
- To assemble, split the mini pitas in half, place a kibbeh patty on one half and top with mayo, a few cucumber and radish slices and top with other half of the pita. Serve immediately.
Notes
* Preparing the beef by cutting it by hand is called emincée. This is not at all difficult to do by hand and allows you to control the cut and fat content of the beef you are using. As well, because you are cutting the beef by hand, you can also cook the kibbeh to medium if you wish, not well-done if you were using ground beef. In fact some styles of kibbeh are served raw, so hand-cutting the beef is a part of the traditional preparation.
* Spice pastes and blends are popular right now, so harissa (dried or in paste form) can be found at many grocery stores, not just specialty stores. Harissa contains, chilis, cumin, coriander, caraway, garlic and lemon, so when stirred into mayo, it adds a nice red hue.
* If you’d rather, you can use Labneh or Greek yoghurt in place of the mayonnaise