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Matkonation goes to India

By: Deanna Linder When I moved to Israel, within a few months I had altogether stopped wearing colors. My mom, being on the other side of the world, and worrying as a mother does, believed that I was depressed. That was far from the case.  I can’t put my finger on it, but it had something to do with the ever-so-colorful Israeli wardrobe that turned me off to colors all together. I even had a month-long fight with my boyfriend, when he insisted on bringing an every-color-of-the -rainbow rug to put in our living room.   Two years later, after moving to Israel, for love…my love decided he needed his “after-army” trip.  And there he went, to the Far-East, to find himself amongst the thousands of other young Israelis, finding themselves.  I joined him in India, where I didn’t necessarily find myself, but I did find my missing love of colors. Every possible shade of reds, pinks, blues, oranges and greens were everywhere; clothes, sunsets, jewelry, food, buildings. I came back... 
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An Anchovy Phase

By: Danya Weiner Recently I’ve been in an anchovy phase. Every so often I get into a different phase of some ingredient that I just want to use in everything I cook. I had a preserved lemon phase- where I put preserved lemons in every meatball, sandwich, and pasta I prepared. I had a harissa phase, a parmesan phase, a lemon zest phase, and even a sage phase. Now I’m all about anchovies. Unfortunate for me, my husband hates anchovies. His hate for anchovies developed long before I could introduce him to the real quality-type of anchovies, and now he’s completely uninterested in tasting them. At home I can’t even try to cook with anchovies; the second I put them into pasta sauce, he knows they are there. So the blog was a perfect opportunity for me to create recipes with anchovies and enjoy them with Deanna (who is also a huge fan). My anchovy phase began while I was doing photography for a company called “Ristretto”, which imports (to Israel) high quality ingredients from Italy... 
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Recipe Developing- What and How

Many people ask me "what is a recipe developer" and "how did I get  become one"? Obviously it means that I create/develop new recipes, but it differentiates me from the term chef, which I am not. I never formally studied cooking and I never worked in a restaurant, so I don't consider myself and wouldn't call myself a chef. I do develop recipes as a career and I have done so for cookbooks, for promotional material (Tnuva) and for large food companies who would like recipes for the home use, using their ingredients. When you start developing a recipe, the first and most important thing is that the outcome will taste good. When you develop a recipe for a magazine or cook book, you also have to keep in mind that it needs to look good and appetizing. It's a doctrine in itself (food that looks good), and if you peep through food magazines you'll begin to realize that there are certain dishes that photograph better than others, just like people (Bar Rafaeli will always take a better photo than... 
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Crunchy Smashed Potatoes

I know that the name of this recipe isn’t particularly appetizing, but you’ve got to give this potatoes a chance- they are one of the best side dishes! The concept of the recipe is to cook the potatoes first in boiling water until they soften, and then to mash them by hand (in order to expand their surface area) and then finally to broil in them in the oven- they will come out especially crispy and tasty. If you planning to serve these potatoes as a side dish to a main course then the amounts listed below should suffice for 6 people, but if you are serving this recipe to people who prefer the side dishes (over the meat or chicken), then this recipe should be enough for 4 people, and maybe even less. Danya talks about her mom's oven which somehow miraculously produces crispy on the outside-soft on the inside potatoes. Every Friday night dinner at the Weiner family household, these potatoes make their appearance, and every Friday night someone asks Danya's mom- "how did you make them?"... 
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Potato and Cucumber Salad

I came back a week ago from the very cold Berlin, with the intention of posting winter recipes, but once I landed back our very warm country (Israel), I realized the winter recipes will have to wait. So until the "real" winter arrives, here’s a recipe for the most popular potato salad- aka Kartoffelsalat. The Germans don’t miss a chance to serve this salad as a side dish along with main courses from schnitzel to fish, and there are many different versions of this salad. The one here is my favorite version. If you serve this a side dish along with a main course it should feed up to 6 people, but if the salad is served on its own then it should serve 2-4 people according to their hunger level. Ingredients for 2-6 servings: 2 pound (1 kilo) fingerling potatoes, thoroughly washed. Potatoes are easy to peel after they are cooked- the skin just slides off and the potato stays whole. 2 Persian cucumbers, thinly sliced into circles ¼ cup chives, roughly chopped or two green onions sliced... 
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