Tag Archives: what to do with tahini

‘Bout That Sauce

Grilled corn on the cob served with a dazzling tahini chimichurri sauce.
Grilled corn on the cob served with a dazzling tahini chimichurri sauce.

Will apologies to Meghan Trainor, I am all about this sauce.

No doubt, you will be, too.

If you love the bright and tangy herbaceousness of Argentinian chimichurri sauce and the way it livens up anything it touches, then you will go crazy for this Persian-influenced one that adds tahini for a richer, creamier body.

Slather it on ordinary corn on the cob to turn it into something extra special.

“Grilled Corn with Tahini Chimichurri Sauce” is from the new cookbook, “Bitter & Sweet” (Weldon Owen), of which I received a review copy.

It’s the debut cookbook by Seattle-based Omid Roustaei, an Iranian-American chef and culinary instructor, who has quite the background, having worked in the biotech industry and now also happens to be a psychotherapist.

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Swirled Sesame Tea Cake Made With A New Artisan Tahini

The taste of sesame galore in this tea cake made with a new artisan tahini.

The taste of sesame galore in this tea cake made with a new artisan tahini.

 

Just as all peanut butters aren’t created equally, neither are all sesame seed pastes.

Otherwise known as tahini, the vital ingredient in hummus, now’s there’s one that not only makes you sit up and take notice with its robust flavor, but also its mission to cross cultural divides.

New York-based Goni Light and husband Yonatan Sela created SoCo Tahini a year ago. The two are no stranger to business endeavors — or to tahini. They both grew up in Israel. Sela received an MBA from the Wharton School of Business, and worked for a venture capital firm before becoming chief business officer of YouNow, a live broadcasting-based social network. Light earned a master’s of science at New York University before working for years as a finance manager at Proctor & Gamble.

SoCo Tahini.

SoCo Tahini.

When they came to the United States, Light and Sela were dismayed that they couldn’t find any decent tahini. So, they sourced their own, first selling it at a stand at Burning Man, before establishing a bona fide company last year, Seeds of Collaboration or SoCo for short.

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