Crisp couscous saffron cakes

I always forget about couscous. It's such a good thing to have around and yet, I don't know, I feel like I overdosed on those Near East packages in college and then I owned a few Paula Wolfert books on Moroccan cooking and was ashamed to have ever even thought about instant couscous, let alone eaten it, and then I moved back to Berlin, where couscous is still relatively exotic, and so I end up using far more rice and millet and quinoa and bulgur than I ever do couscous. Which is too bad, because couscous is good! And after all this time, it feels fresh and delicious all over again.

Last weekend, I served it with a Moroccan vegetable stew and then this weekend, after seeing this article by Yotam Ottolenghi and deciding 30 nanoseconds later that that was how I was going to use up the box of couscous I had in the pantry, I made saffron-flavored, feta-and-raisin-stuffed, mint-flecked couscous cakes. Yes, they were just as good as they sounded, better even. And, well, the moral of this story is that I'll never go couscous-less again.

Couscous saffron mixture

It's silly how easy these cakelets are. All you do is pour boiling water over some saffron and couscous and while the water is plumping the couscous, you gather everything else: feta, some eggs, some sliced chives or mint (I used mint), yogurt. And then, if you're lucky enough to have barberries, you soak them in a sugar syrup to soften their sour bite. If you don't have barberries, you can use currants soaked in lemon juice – I used raisins and they were just fine. You mix all of these lovely little things into the saffron couscous until it's a thick and creamy homogenous mass. Then you portion out little rounds and fry them up – I used olive oil in a nonstick pan, the original recipe calls for butter.

I slid each batch of cakes onto a plate as they finished and we ate them piping hot and then fried more and ate more and fried more and so on. They were so good, so crisp and soft at once, with little sweet-salty pockets of cheese and raisins and the haunting flavor of mint and saffron giving them a sophisticated edge. Afterwards, Max asked me very solemnly to make them again. Each week. He never, ever does that.

By the way, I experimented in flattening some of the cakes with the spatula, but I would advise you to leave the cakes plump – flattening them takes away some of their deliciousness, if you can believe it, and the ratio of crisp to soft gets thrown off balance.

Frying couscous cakes

Yotam Ottolenghi tells you to eat these with a tomato chutney, which sounds like it'd be lovely. We were too hungry to do anything but pop them in our mouths just as they were, but Max ate the leftovers later with some incendiary Mexican hot sauce and declared them delicious. So, do as you like: sauce them or don't, just make sure you make these. They'll be a staple at your table in no time, too, I'm sure.

(Warning: the recipe below is in metric. It was originally published in an English newspaper. If you don't already own a kitchen scale (Salter is a great brand, for example), please consider adding one to your arsenal.)

Yotam Ottolenghi's Crisp Couscous and Saffron Cakes
Makes about 20 patties
Note: If you can't find barberries, substitute currants or raisins and soak them in lemon juice instead of the sugar syrup.

½ teaspoon saffron threads
275 grams couscous
30 grams barberries
4 tablespoons sugar
1 lemon (only if using currants or raisins instead of barberries)
140 grams plain whole milk yogurt
2 large eggs, lightly beaten
A handful fresh chives or fresh mint, chopped
100 grams feta, crumbled into small pieces
Salt and black pepper
About 4 tablespoons clarified butter or olive oil

1. Put the saffron in a large bowl and pour over 500 milliliters of boiling water. Leave to infuse for a few minutes, then add the couscous. Stir with a fork, cover the bowl with a dishtowel and let stand for 15 minutes.

2. Meanwhile, if using the barberries, put them and the sugar in a small saucepan. Add 120 milliliters of water, bring to a light simmer, stir to dissolve the sugar and remove from the heat. Once cool, drain the barberries and dry on kitchen paper. If using currants or raisins (see Note), put them in a bowl and cover them with the juice of one lemon.

3. Fluff up the couscous with a fork, then add the yogurt, eggs, chives or mint, feta, barberries or currants, and salt and pepper to taste. Mix well and then shape into approximately 20 firm round patties about 1.5 centimeters (1 inch) thick.

4. Heat two tablespoons of clarified butter or oil in a large frying pan on medium-high heat. Lower the heat to medium and fry the patties in batches, adding more butter or oil as needed. Cook each batch for five minutes, turning once, until crisp and golden-brown. Transfer to a plate lined with paper towel. Serve at once, while they're still warm.

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30 responses to “Yotam Ottolenghi’s Crisp Couscous and Saffron Cakes”

  1. Katrin Avatar
    Katrin

    Ohhhh – these sound great! Will definitely try them next week- Thank you!

    Like

  2. Bettina @ Books, Bikes, and Food Avatar

    After lunch today, I thought I could never be hungry again, and yet here we are. Your cous-cous deliciousness did the trick. Mmmmm… sounds really good!

    Like

  3. Angelina Avatar
    Angelina

    Just reading Yotam Ottolenghi’s Jerusalem cookbook:)
    But these look delish! BTW, what type of pan is that in the picture? I’ve been looking for a good, non-stick frying pan healthier than teflon…

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  4. Luisa Avatar

    It’s a ceramic-coated pan, the brand is TVS (it’s Italian).

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  5. Angelina Avatar
    Angelina

    Thanks a lot, Luisa. I’ll look it up.

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  6. Mari @ Oh, Sweet & Savory Avatar

    This looks so delicious! I love the use of saffron and the idea of making “cakes” out of couscous. Brilliant!

    Like

  7. Stephanie Avatar

    Oh, these sound like they would be a little bite of exotica to brighten up my (still!) wintery climate. Now, to find some gluten-free couscous . . .

    Like

  8. Sasha Avatar

    I recently discovered that the Indian grocery store near my house sells barberries (which, in my books, is quite the discovery); however, I might actually prefer your addition of yellow raisins in this little cakes. I’ll have to try both.

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  9. Robyn Avatar

    I could SPIT that I threw out some less-than-fresh but still relatively fine chives this morning, because I am going to make his tonight!

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  10. Luisa Avatar

    I think the sour bite of barberries here would be so brilliant – try them!

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  11. Luisa Avatar

    I left them out and just used mint and they were delicious.

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  12. JenchingHK Avatar
    JenchingHK

    Any substitue for feta?

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  13. Katie Avatar

    These sound so perfect. I associate couscous with the week there was a mysterious and major gas leak in my apartment, and so, beyond boiling water in the kettle, cooking was pretty much beyond me. Couscous got old kind of fast. But I think that it’s been long enough since then that I can return to the stuff…especially in the form of little fried cakes!

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  14. sarah Avatar
    sarah

    these look incredible, and i have all the ingredients to make them (despite coming back from holidays to a very empty fridge). guess what we’re having for dinner tonight!

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  15. Amanda Avatar

    Excited! And, might you enlighten us…barberries…I confess I have never had the pleasure. Mediterranean grocer? Indian? I’m at a loss.

    Like

  16. Luisa Avatar

    They’re used a lot in Persian cooking, so if you have an Iranian community in your town, you might have luck at a grocery there… They’re super-duper sour and really tiny.

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  17. Sherry T Avatar

    They look delicious! I love working with saffron. It feels so special, I think because it’s not used very often in American cooking.

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  18. Vivian Avatar
    Vivian

    Hi Luisa! Do you think quinoa will work with the recipe instead of couscous?

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  19. Caitlin Avatar
    Caitlin

    These look delicious Luisa. Am I right to drain the lemon juice off the raisins before including them?

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  20. Elizabeth Mars Avatar

    I have a friend who makes these little cakes with haloumi cheese and mint and they are rather delicious that way too.

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  21. Luisa Avatar

    I actually added the lemon juice, though the original recipe doesn’t really tell you what to do. I guess you could go either way?

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  22. Laurel Avatar
    Laurel

    Just made these for my family for dinner. The kids inhaled them, including the baby (there are tiny raisins in there! And chunks of cheese!). I did have some trouble with my first ones falling apart in the pan. I really needed to make FIRM cakes, preferably with a very flat bottom that went down in the pan to make them hold shape. I made them ahead of time and heated them for 15 min in a 180C (375F) oven. Yum.
    Instead of feta, next time I might try pine nuts. Or in addition to. I can’t believe this was an Ottolenghi recipe…not enough steps or pans used!

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  23. Mireya @myhealthyeatinghabits Avatar

    Yum. What a great alternative to pancakes. I’ll make these next Saturday, but I’ll have to substitute blueberries for the barberries.

    Like

  24. Laura Tosto Avatar
    Laura Tosto

    Luisa,
    After I read your blog on Friday i had to try and make these. I made them for lunch on Saturday and they were so delicious. I used golden raisins and pine nuts in the mix. We had a few left over, so I had tehm for lunch on Sunday as well. Thank you for sharing your beautiful and delicious dish.

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  25. Emily Avatar

    Holy flip these were delicious! We had them with tomato chutney as suggested, and it was an excellent pairing. I don’t think we’d have had any trouble polishing them off plain if we didn’t have any chutney on hand, though!

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  26. Claire Millington Avatar
    Claire Millington

    These were amazing. I used sultanas and pine nuts and a random mixture of leftover yogurt and sour cream. Definitely be making these again.

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  27. Honeybee Avatar
    Honeybee

    I made them for lunch today. In order to save time (and my sanity – with a toddler who likes to help 😉 me cook and a grumpy baby with a cold) and cooked them in the oven instead of pan-frying them. They were good but I’m guessing they’re better pan-fried.

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  28. Kitchen Butterfly Avatar

    Hummm, these sound wonderful, I’ll have to try them with the kids. Thanks for sharing

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  29. Alison Avatar
    Alison

    Those Near East boxes of couscous were my thing in college, too!

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