When I want to come up with the Ethiopian menu, I always ask my wife Maya for her take. Truth is, I'm not even allowed in the kitchen at home when Maya and her sisters are cooking Ethiopian food. Her sisters and cousins, who fly in from DC, Toronto, and London, think what I do is "cute." No matter how long I've been cooking, they don't consider me an Ethiopian chef who cooks Ethiopian food. And every time we are in Ethiopia, Maya's mom stuffs our bags with food, because she doesn't fully believe we have real food in America. Butter, cheese, it's all crammed inside our suitcases, and I'm the one who's nervous about going through customs at JFK. Her mom just looks at me and says, "What's your problem? Get on board."
On big days and special occasions, even Maya has to step aside to let her older sister Alema set the record straight in the kitchen. Kitfo is an Ethiopian beef tartare, cooked lightly or eaten raw. It is a specialty of the Gurage people, Mya's tribe of Southwest Ethiopia. Maya and her sisters make kitfo with enormous pride for special occasions, family gatherings, feasts, and holidays. The word means "finely chopped," and it is true to its name, a mixture of finely diced beef, spices, chili powder, and warm butter. Minced raw beef recipes like steak tartare aren't only enjoyed ind Europe. Kitfo has been around for centuries.
Niter kibbeh is a staple of Ethiopian and Eritrean cooking. A seasoned clarified butter, niter kibbeh is similar to Indian ghee but infused with spices before the dairy solids are removed. That aromatic flavor is imparted to whatever is cooked with it—seared fish or meat, or stirred into legumes or a stew like doro wat. It can take high heat without burning and ferments well. The longer it sits, the better it tastes.
Adapted slightly from THE RISE by Marcus Samuelsson with Osayi Endolyn. Recipes with Yewande Komolafe and Tamie Cook. Copyright © 2020 by Marcus Samuelsson. Photographs by Angie Mosier. Used with permission of Voracious, an imprint of Little, Brown and Company. New York, NY. All rights reserved.
Hear more from Marcus on getting booting from his own kitchen—what he calls "the best comedy show"—on Food52's food-meets-music podcast Counterjam. —Marcus Samuelsson
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