the concept

the concept

The idea came from some friends, Lucy Jason & George, who were back home briefly & raved about a chef in London's East End...http://fridaynightakeout.blogspot.com/
I thought it was such a good idea, the best thing to do would be to bring it to life here where I live in New Zealand.
So...I'm also a freelance chef, each week I cook a different dish, depending on what's in season, what's good now, or just how I feel. Lately I've been cooking a lot of my mother's dishes

Dish descriptions will be posted here online early in the week, recipes later over the weekend, with links to:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Pabloskitchen/130053437081945 & http:/twitter.com/#!/pabloskitchen

As I play with the idea through the week, the dish maybe evolves a little, but that's half the fun. Meals will be priced at $20, incl delivery & orders can be made anytime up to roughly lunchtime Thursday, which is when I go shopping. Simply get in touch, email or txt, you can order as many as you like!
Afternoon Friday I'll deliver dinnerboxes warm/cooling/cold, locally in & around my base, which admittedly does change a bit - currently I'm north of Auckland, living by the beach in Mangawhai (just let me know where you are when you get in touch).

tel: 021 676 123
email: pabloskitchen@yahoo.com

I've recently included an email subscription option at the bottom of this page &, while I have no idea how it works, the hope is that it automatically sends to subscribers email notifications each week about the dish...so, sign up!

disclaimer:
From time to time, when the wanderlust takes over, I hit the road & disappear in search of dishes, tastes & ingredients elsewhere. Then this blog takes on a different kind of persona; a travelling recipe book of notes, pics & stories, ideas to inspire & for me to return to, once I get back home.

Monday, 28 January 2013

fri01feb2013: chicken parmigiana, saltimbocca potato, red summer slaw

This week's fridaynightdinnerbox dish, Chicken Parmigiana, basically crumbed breast meets tomato & cheese gratin, served alongside saltimbocca potatoes,  little baby ones wrapped in sage & proscuito, brushed with olive oil & garlic, then pan roasted. There'll be some chutney for the potatoes & a coleslaw style salad.

Your part is simple: get in touch by thursday afternoon, cos that's when I go shopping, & tell me how many dinnerboxes you'd like.
Drop-offs from 4pm onwards, to the office/site/home just let me know what suits.

To order, contact me by txt or email:
txt: 021 676 123
email: pabloskitchen@yahoo.com (subject heading: “fridaynightdinnerbox”)
& I’ll confirm your order when received.

talk to you soon…

cheers - Pablo

Sunday, 27 January 2013

recipe: risotto, goat's cheese & proscuito

fridaynightdinnerbox 
main item accompaniment + salad = three noodle boxes; a meal in three parts
The idea is simple enough, the meal packed in carry bags, paper towels for wiping fingers, no dishes required, dropped at your door on Friday afternoon to take the hassle of coming home to cook dinner, just pick up a bottle of vino on the way home, choose a good movie, & curl up on the couch. Job done.

In sitting down to type up the recipe, I thought I'd write about this aspect of fridaynightdinnerbox, the make-up I mean, because a lot of thought goes into choosing three items that can be regarded as separate dishes which also work in combination. Also, this week's combination was particularly good, so deserved mention because it was so tasty. The main item I like to serve plain, in this case the risotto. Delicious on its own anyway, the other ingredients are there to be added as required. The result is still a meal of your own making, but all the pieces are there for you to simply reheat & bring together the way you like them.
By way of constructing a dish descriptor then, this week's fridaynightdinnerbox contained:
#1) plain risotto, made with onions & garlic, thyme, white wine & chicken stock
#2) goat's cheese & roasted garlic potatoes (hasselbach), spring onions, proscuito, cranberries
#3) salad of mixed lettuce, toasted pumpkin & sesame seeds, lemon zest & cracked peppercorns

While I ate my salad separately, I did pick out the baby spinach leaves & add some toasted pinenuts to my risotto, just cos I could, though in theory, all three boxes could be mixed together, the hot creamy texture & flavour of the rice, sweet meaty proscuito & salty goast's cheese, the crunch of toasted seeds & the bitter green of salad leaves, with the slight zing of lemon at the end. Just think about that for a moment. Imagine all those flavours & textures & colours one by one & side by side, in your mouth, as you munch...nice aye?
While combination ingredients for both accompanying dishes is simple enough, I mean you add more of the things you like, less of those you don't, the hasselbach potatoes do need a little instruction & the risotto, although simple, requires attention to make sure it comes out just right. 
Ingredients: Hasselbach potatoes:
agria (roasting) potatoes, 
garlic, salt, olive oil
Method:
*set oven to 220
*crush garlic & infuse with olive oil, warmed for a few minutes for example
*whole baby potatoes or slice in 1/2, cutting it a thinly ridged back, as with garlic bread
*liberally brush the potatoes with garlic oil, separating the cuts where possible & season
*roast for 15 minutes, then give the pan  shake & rebrush oil everywhere, putting back into the oven for more roasting, timing will depend on size, but keep an eye on them, they are ready when golden brown outside & soft & steamy inside
-I broke these down further once roasted & tossed with baby spinach, together with the chevre & proscuito, which in turn was combined with the risotto, a splash of cream, lemon; yummy

Ingredients: Risotto:
aborio rice 
garlic/onion
butter/olive oil
thyme/bay/salt
white wine/chicken stock
Method:
*bring white wine & chicken stock to the boil, reduce to a simmer
*sweat the onions & garlic in olive oil & butter, thyme & bay, be generous with your oil
*add the rice, stir until the rice goes a little translucent, give it a cpl of minutes
*pour in a cupful of simmering stock/wine, & stir the rice
*when it's absorbed, repeat the process, until whats left is a creamy, separating type rice
*make sure the rice is al dente firm to the bite

From here, at home, I like to throw together a sauce then combine the risotto, cooked blanc & left in the fridge. It's a quick dinner. For me, the quality of the risotto is all important.  If the plain old risotto is actually amazing all by itself, well that's the place to start, isn't it?.

Monday, 21 January 2013

fri25jan: risotto, goat's cheese with proscuito

This week's fridaynightdinnerbox dish, a risotto, with two of my favourite ingredients, proscuito & goat's cheese. The addition of parmesan, definitely, a little fresh parsley & mint, a squeeze of lemon. Broad beans would be nice, or peas, have to wait & see what turns up at market before making that call.

On the side, one of my favourite vegetable dishes: hasselbach's potatoes, some sauteed spinach >spinaci saltati, & roast red capsicum also, with a light vinaigrette.

Your part is simple: get in touch by thursday afternoon, cos that's when I go shopping, & tell me how many dinnerboxes you'd like.
Drop-offs from 4pm onwards, to the office/site/home just let me know what suits.

To order, contact me by txt or email:
txt: 021 676 123
email: pabloskitchen@yahoo.com (subject heading: “fridaynightdinnerbox”)
& I’ll confirm your order when received.

talk to you soon…

cheers - Pablo

recipe: chicken onion & olive pie

Beginning stage, when the dish takes form, a gathering of ideas, stream of consciousness:

Ok, if I relax & let my thoughts roam with the idea of,,,home. An overgrown garden>fruit trees full of yellow plums yellow honey flavoured apricots quince apples figs lemons>yellow flowers>bees>sun>long grass>hot muggy days & warm nights>the beach>the surf>sand between toes>pohutakawas>cold beers...
Focus on the food! The food! ...crisp fresh simple hearty is what I want.
Starting point then, the veg: yellow & red & green are the colours of summer>carrot ribbons, curly corn on the cob, broccoli spears, asparagus discs...butter lemon salt & black pepper, blanched & tossed>shape flavour colour texture contrasts>veg sorted.
Hero of the dish: chicken. Slow cooked, initially covered & cooked as a braise, then finished uncovered to brown>caramelised onions>saltiness from olives...with...hmmm the Marabella the other week was pretty tasty...on a bed of onions with prunes & capers, olives, & a glass of white wine, bay & pepper, a splash of pomegranate molasses if you have it, & I'm adding a spoonful of quince paste, just cause I can.
So then, a chicken braised in its marinade, finished uncovered to caramelise>chicken sorted.
Pastry. Now I come to think of it, yes: absolutely.
A pastry lid over  proper pie dish>crimped whole>lattice cut>cooked with a pastry base>possible to finish cooking in oven at home say 15mins>think dishes>think bother factor>pie in a dish better>oven 5-10 mins o heat thru enough>chicken pie sorted.
Salad to start/finish/combine: something green & crisp>spinach, baby spinach, whole leaves>alfa sprouts>zest & segments of tangelo>juice to dress & olive oil>almonds toasted>salad sorted,
....
yea, that works for me.
For cookery of the chicken, refer to my earlier fridaynightdinnerbox recipe for Chicken Marbella, as I took the Marbella idea & cooked a very similar chicken this time around too.
Ingredients: the chicken
1 whole chicken, quartered, on the bone
2 onions/a carrot/3 or 4 garlic cloves
1 lemon, cut in half/handful of olives/capers/prunes
dollop of quince paste & a drizzle of pomegranate molasses
a glass of white wine & a pinch of salt
method:
*put all in a casserole dish, marinate for 2 hours/overnight
*set oven to 220°
*cover with foil & braise the chicken for 30 minutes
*lower oven to 180°
*uncover (discard foil), sit the casserole on a lower oven shelf , cook another 20-30 minutes
keeping an eye on the chicken to see it doesn't burn or dry out
*eat as is, Marbella style, or allow to cool before ripping the chicken from the bone, discarding the bones & the lemon
* what remains is mixed together & ready to be used as pie filling.
Ingredients: the pastry: rough puff
500g flour/500g cold butter/350ml iced water/pinch salt
Method:
*chop the butter in small cubes & place in a large mixing bowl with the flour & pinch of salt
*rub in for a moment or so, just to take the corners off really
*make a well in the middle, add the water, combine gently, without kneading
*roll out to a rectangle shape, roughly - it will be chunky & lumpy still, thats fine
*fold pastry rectangle into three, turn 90 clockwise, roll out again
*repeat twice more & rest the pastry for 1/2 an hour
*then repeat that stage another 2 times 
*rolled, folded & turned x3 in all, with a rest between each time
*this is called 3x3 book turns & creates layers of pastry which rise in the cooking stage.
*check out the link for more detail on making puff pastry, slightly different (mines a cheat)
Ingredients: assembling the pie
pastry/chicken filling
eggwash- 1egg & splash milk beaten in a cup with a fork
Method:
*roll out the pastry, not too thin, for the lids
*I experimented with different sizes & pastry lid types, whatever works for you is best, for me I chose  large round ramekin type dish & a flat lid, which I decorated with pastry bird cutout
*brush pasty disc cutouts with eggwash & the underside edge, then lay over pie dish (filled already)
*crimp or pinch the edges, the eggwash is like glue & creates a seal when baking
*bake at 200° for 15-20 minutes, pastry should be golden
In a bowl, steamed summer vegetables, crunchy, bursting & with flavour. Rip off the flakey pie lid & all the sweet wet loveliness of the chicken onions prunes & olives comes wafting out...was that.the sound of a cold beer being opened somewhere in the background?? 

Monday, 14 January 2013

fri18jan2013: chicken onion & olive pie

Making the journey north to Mangawhai this week, to the house in the country where the memories of  my mother dwell. The bush & the beach, clean air, starry starry nights, rain water in the tank...the best of what it means to be in New Zealand for summer...& in my mother's house, where I feel her spirit everywhere. My centre, my happy place. Hers is a kitchen made for cooking.
After cooking like crazy since Christmas came to town, friends & I, & all three of us chefs, will escape Auckland for Mangawhai to relax & make the most of it. My agenda, for this week's fridaynightdinnerbox, a dish to reflect the comfort of being at home again in the country. My thoughts are for a country style pie, free range chicken, olives, a nice puff pastry crust, some summer vegetables, a garden salad...
Your part is simple: get in touch by thursday afternoon, cos that's when I go shopping, & tell me how many dinnerboxes you'd like.
Drop-offs from 4pm onwards, to the office/site/home just let me know what suits.
To order, contact me by txt or email:
txt: 021 676 123
email: pabloskitchen@yahoo.com (subject heading: “fridaynightdinnerbox”)
& I’ll confirm your order when received.
talk to you soon…
cheers - Pablo

Sunday, 23 December 2012

recipe: smoked salmon & mascarpone ravioli, roast red pepper sauce

In recent months I've blogged from all over Europe, relishing the opportunity to travel & cook & eat in some really cool places. This Friday night just gone, at home in Mt Eden, sitting around the back in the courtyard, a bottle of wine half drunk & about to try my own serving of this week's fridaynightdinnerbox dish, I looked up through the pergola & saw the moon resting above us, in a blue blue evening sky supported by the Pohutakawas that grow on Maungawhau's western slopes, just over the back wall. As nice an evening as any for the world to end, I thought, & there's no place I'd rather be. As for the dish itself, raviolis of smoked salmon, home made pasta, a puree of roasted capsicums, steamed broccoli & green beans, a baby spinach & toasted walnut salad. I think it fair to say one of the nicest so far.
Smoked salmon is tricky to cook with, I guess because it is usually the hero & as such is served as itself, rather than as an ingredient. Rather than take a fillet & smoke it myself, as I did in a recent post on this blog, I decided to use what most people get when they buy smoked salmon - the finely sliced cold smoked version that comes in a packet. Admittedly not exactly the cheapest choice of ingredients, nevertheless this was my starting point this week. I bought the Regal brand, which to my mind is as good as any available on the shelves here in New Zealand. Truth be told, sliced cold smoked salmon is a convenience item I don't like my refrigerator shelves to be without, certainly it's always good to have on hand for emergencies if it comes to that, though usually I lavish it with toasted bagels, cream cheese & capers for breakfast, whenever I feel the need. Anyway, having a supply for breakfast the morning after the end of the world is nothing if not being prepared for an emergency!

To the recipe - there are three parts to the dish: the sauce, the pasta, the filling. Regards the order of things, the sauce takes longest so is started first. While sauciness happens, the pasta is mixed, rolled & rested. While pasta rests, the filling is blitzed in the blitzer & set aside...then its simply a matter of forming the raviolis & cooking them off. As an aside, because I suffer from siege mentality I like to make extras & freeze them in zip-lock bags, for a rainy day.
Ingredients: roast red pepper sauce:
3 onions sliced, 3 cloves of garlic sliced, sprigs of thyme & oregano, bay, salt
about a kilo of ripe tomatoes, cut in half
3 red capsicums, a little olive oil over them
olive oil & butter for cooking
 
Method:
*set the oven to C220°
*warmed cast iron pan, onion/garlic/herb bundle/salt/knob of butter & drizzle of olive oil 
*heat the pan hot, cover, put into the oven for 30 mins
*check every 10 mins after that, without shaking the onions about, until nice & caramelised
*same oven, tomatoes cut side down, oiled pan, top shelf at the back, pan roasted 10-15min
*same oven, red capsicums rub with olive oil, top shelf, turned when blackened 10-15min
*when done (see pics) remove the bay leaves & herb sprig sticks, push the skin or of the tomatoes, wrap the capsicums in a towel til cool then slip the skin off & scoop out the seeds, putting pulp & juices into a bowl with onion mix & tomatoes & purée (blender/stick blender)
 Ingredients: fresh pasta:
300g flour, 3 larger eggs, splash of olive oil, salt
*mix all together in a bowl, making a well in the flour for the eggs
*the dough, once formed, should rest about an hour under a damp cloth
*divided into manageable portions, roll each out flat for your pasta machine, starting wide & adjusting the settings by degrees to the finest, folding & stretching the elasticity of the dough as you go
-in the absence of a pasta machine, a rolling pin works ok, though it is a little more work
*rolled out, the pasta is ready to be cooked at this point, cut in strips for tagliatelle or spaghetti, in sheets for lasagne. The pasta dries quickly, so it's best not to roll out the sheets for ravioli making until the filling is ready.
 
Ingredients: ravioli filling: smoked salmon & mascarpone
smoked salmon slices, mascarpone, garlic chives, 
roasted red peppers in brine, 
sweet paprika, cayenne pepper, Marlborough salt crystals
-in terms of quantity, let taste govern: to 200g of salmon, I used a 120g pouch of mascarpone, 3 finely diced garlic chives, 2 whole red peppers, a little sweet paprika, the same of cayenne
Method: the filling:
*put all together in a blender & pulse in short bursts to blitz, keeping a little texture
- try not to reduce the mix to a smooth paste
*correct the seasoning
Method: bringing it all together:
*put a nice big pot of salted (so it tastes like the sea) water on the stove, bring to a rolling boil
*lay out sheets of pasta on a lightly floured benchtop, brushing lightly with a beaten egg
*lay out little teaspoonful dollops of filling intermittently, keeping it clean & allowing room between each mound for the cutter, as well as room in from each side
*carefully lay the top sheet over, slow;y & gently applying a little pressure to the fold on each side of the little piles of filling
*carefully apply firm pressure around each ravioli, trying not to allow any air pockets, & cut out (or press out) ravioli shapes
-ravioli cutting trays are available, in fact by chance I just now caught an episode of Rick Stein's Food Heroes on tv in which he makes a pumpkin & amaretti biscuit ravioli using a ravioli tray, successfully, & he did look pretty chuffed (& a little surprised) when it worked so well, I guess a much easier method...however, I like my way
*in batches of 20-30, depending on size, drop raviolis in the boiling water; the nice big pot is so that the water stays on the boil at this point
*cooking time is 3-4 mins only, but because mine were packaged into noodle boxes for delivery i gave them 2 mins only then transferred them with a slotted spoon to a bowl of iced water. Cooking would be completed when the noodle boxes were reheated later, with raviolis in their sauce
*once cold, raviolis transferred to another container with sauce, for portioning/reheating
 
To serve, tossed a salad of baby spinach leaves with alfa sprouts & toasted walnuts, all broken up. I layed this in the bottom of my bowl, the raviolis in sauce over the top, walnuts sprinkled over this & a tiny bit of grated parmesan cheese. I blanched spears of broccoli, green beans & peas & tossed them with a little butter, lemon juice, crushed black & red pepper, laying them around the edge of the dish. Frankly, it was sensational.
A strange thing, but I couln't get enough. The fridaynightdinnerboxes each contained 15 raviolis, with sauce enough to coat & cover, but not enough that they were swimming. Little parcels of yumminess. It made for a rich mouthful, & what with veg & salad was just enough, though I found myself wanting more & more. I'm almost ashamed to say I found myself rolling out more pasta later on, the result being that I ate more indeed than was decent...again!

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

fri21dec2012: smoked salmon ravioli

So many things going on at the mo - schools out & the hols have begun, Christmas just round the corner & the shopping frenzy in full swing, & then there's this end of the world business, scheduled for Friday this week by all accounts - sometimes it's hard to keep on top of it all! How happy am I then that my chief concern is this coming up with something tasty for dinner on Friday night. I'm reminded of Carême's quote, painted on the scullery wall at Petit Lyon;
"From behind my ovens I see the ugly edifice of time slowly pass"

For this week's fridaynightdinnerbox dish, I'm pulling out my trusty benchtop Titania pasta machine. It's seen many kitchen campaigns & seems somehow fitting for the occasion. Stocked up with smoked salmon, a range of my favourite soft cheeses, herbs from the garden, my magic box of pickles & spices, I'm experimenting with mixtures to fill ravioli parcels. The ravioli will be accompanied by some steamed seasonal vegetables, dressed with lemon, seasoned with a touch of Dead Sea salt, a garden salad along side also...

Your part is simple: get in touch by thursday afternoon, cos that's when I go shopping, & tell me how many dinnerboxes you'd like.
Drop-offs from 4pm onwards, to the office/site/home just let me know what suits.

To order, contact me by txt or email:
txt: 021 676 123
email: pabloskitchen@yahoo.com (subject heading: “fridaynightdinnerbox”)
& I’ll confirm your order when received.
talk to you soon…
cheers - Pablo

Monday, 17 December 2012

recipe: cordero al chilindrón (basque style lamb stew) tomatoes & smoked paprika

Lamb cuts #1: scrag end, cut into neck chops for this week's fridaynightdinnerbox. 
This is the cut most commonly found in recipes for Irish Stew, where the chops layered with onions & potatoes then simmered for several hours...(more about this at St Patrick's Day 2013 posting). It requires slow cooking as it is quite tough but this also means there is loads of flavour. Because it is fatty, I like to let the cooked stew sit in the fridge overnight so that the fat can solidify making it easier to skim away. 
Basque cooking is famous throughout Spain & the world over. The food of this region is a part of what gives the Basque country its identity, the people there speak with unconcealed pride about the quality of recipes & skill of Basque chefs. Additionally, there is definition in the way in which food is prepared & enjoyed, an important aspect which both preserves & upholds Basque culinary traditions.
txoko consists typically of men only, gatherings of small groups who form societies who cook & eat together, exchanging ideas, experimenting with recipes, arguing, drinking & playing cards in a home or a restaurant or some other space fit for the purpose. Practising the dish this week, with my regular stream of visitors, many of whom are also chefs working around Auckland, my little kitchen began to feel like it was my own little txoko, nestled beneath the mountain in the shady slopes of Mt Eden. This communal feel to the cooking & eating of these weekly dishes of mine serving once more to remind me that the joy of the fridaynightdinnerbox project is in essence to be found in the sharing of food.
So then to the dish itself. Research is required, but google Basque lamb stew & the result is multiple versions of the same recipe, a delicious sounding recipe I should add, but this is not where my intention lies. A quick email to my Camino sister & good friend Alex, on location for all my fridaynightdinnerbox inquiries in Barcelona, lets me know the dish I want is known as Cordero al Chilindrónplus a link to use as a starting point. An important point to note though: these recipes I post are my interpretation & while the internet research will serve as a guideline, it is the flavours of the dishes I ate in little restaurants & bars, the smells that drifted out from kitchens across the narrow streets around PamplonaPuente La Reina, Estella & the many smaller but no less distinct towns & villages I walked through on my recent pilgrimage the Camino de Santiago de Compostella, which remain with me that will serve here as the true guide for my senses as this week's recipe forms in my mind: wood smoke & grilled meats, the spice of pimiento, the sweetness of onions & tomato, the earthiness of garlic & the pungent aroma of fresh cut herbs all come to mind. Perhaps I will stray unintentionally from the true Basque style dish I seek to recapture here but hey, I'm a kiwi chef! I'll do what feels right.
Ingredients (part1): the marinade:
5 or 6 black red & white peppercorns
2tspn smoked paprika
 1 whole dried red chilli
4 or 5 garlic
a good squeeze of tomato paste
a glass of white wine
2 kg lamb neck chops
Method:
*in a mortar & pestle, grind the spices & garlic together
*mix in the tomato paste, then the wine
*smother the neck chops coating well
*sit, covered, in the fridge overnight.
Ingredients: cordero al chilindrón (basque lamb stew)
olive oil
1tspoon each of sweet & smoked paprika, cayenne pepper
6 small onions, 6 garlic cloves
roast capsicums, 1 per person
red wine, a good spanish red, Rioja is what i like to drink I mean cook with
a squeeze of tomato paste & a can of crushed tomatoes
spring onions, parsley & lemon
Method:
*heat the pan, the oil, & sprinkle in the spices, cooking them out for a few mins
*add diced garlic & onions peeled then cut into 1/4's, saute
*add roasted capsicums, cut into strips, saute further
*remove all from pan & set aside in a deep casserole
* add a little more olive oil, heat, then brown the neck chops on each side
*remove from pan, set aside over onions & peppers
*add tomato paste to pan, allowing it to caramelise a little over a few mins
deglaze pan with a glass of red wine, scraping all the good bits starting to stick to the pan
*add the crushed/chopped tomatoes & cook out for a few mins til liquids begin to reduce
*pour this over the lamb & veg in the casserole, the lamb wants to be mostly covered
*braise this for about 3 hours
(note: I cook this on the stove top, covered, in a big titanium coated pot on a really low temperature, just a gentle bubbling away. In the oven is also possible, covered, on about 180 degrees, basically till the meat falls from the bone)
 
The dish is basically ready at this point. As mentioned earlier, because I used neck chops instead of the shoulder cut, I refrigerated the casserole overnight. This has two benefits, the first being that it allows the flavours to develop & the second that this allows the excess fat to set as a top layer, which I then lifted off next morning. While this fat is very lamby in flavour, there is also a lot of the tomato/pimiento to this flavour; because I hate to waste anything, I see this as a fantastic by-product, for example as a starting point for a fry-up the next day, say eggs & sausies, or to get some albondigas cooking for dinner the next night. 
Earlier in the week I think I may have promised a garlic mash potato with this dish, however  it seemed to me that chic peas were a more suitable choice. I soaked them overnight, draining most of the water away the next day, refreshing it with fresh & some home made chicken stock, a lemon, three or four bay leaves, & cooking it til not exactly soft, but getting there; about an hour. these i tossed with a chiffonade of spinach, some salt crystals, a little olive oil. served separately, I like to mix them together in a bowl. It's a really nice way of bringing together different flavours & textures...as well as, for me, bringing back the memories of travels past...