It was new and unfamiliar. Both as a food and as a word. Couscous sounds suspiciously foreign... That's my only excuse for letting that bag of couscous sit on the counter and stare at me for 2 weeks. I let it intimidate me.
Until today...
Cooking it can't be easier! You just bring 1 1/2 cups salted water to a boil in a medium saucepan, add a cup of couscous and turn down the heat, cover, and let simmer until all of the water is absorbed. Seriously. That's it.
I used that simmering time to cut up a big handful each of carrots, onion, celery, and tomato and tossed them into a waiting bowl. Then I added a drained can of garbanzo beans and a nice sprinkle of feta cheese. When the couscous was cooled, I scooped it into the bowl and added a couple of shakes of Mrs. Dash and Tony Chachere's Cajun Seasoning. The final ingredient was about 1/2 cup of balsamic vinaigrette. Then just toss it all together.
Light, fresh, and delicious!
Though I think it could benefit from cucumber and some torn mint leaves...
If you like pasta salad, you'll like this Couscous Salad. Couscous, from what I can tell, is just a tiny pearl-shaped pasta. It smells pleasantly wheaty while it cooks.
Still another time I think I'll go a different route with salad and use broccoli florets, dried cranberries, crumbled bacon, sliced almonds, feta, onions, and a raspberry vinaigrette. (Ken's Steak House makes a yummy one!)
Couscous is good for more than just salads, too. A recipe I will only loosely follow makes a Tex-Mex casserole using black beans, salsa, and taco seasoning. Top that with some cheese and bake for a hot dish. That sounds pretty good to me for dinner one day next week! I wonder if this would make an acceptable filling for vegetarian tacos or burritos? Add some shredded lettuce and bit of guacamole to the tortilla...
Perhaps couscous will be more than a novelty in my new plant-based kitchen...
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