A casual French BBQ with friends, petanque, brochette, merguez and harissa
In France, we do barbecue or BBQ mostly with Merguez (Lamb sausages) and brochettes (vegetables/ meat on skewers) served with salads and rice. We rarely do burgers or hot dogs like in the States. So few months ago during a relaxing and lazy week end, we invited our friends Michael, Jackie,Dani, Barbara and Terry for a French BBQ.
The night before on Friday Joel made a beautiful, fruity, delicious red Sangria.
Saturdaym morning I made les Brochettes ( beef and chicken vegetables skewers) and marinated them in olive oil and fresh herbs. I made the same marinade that my sister and mother make in France, every summer.
Few hours before our BBQ I cooked white Basmati rice and cooked Zuchini and Tomatoes a la Provencale and Joel made and bake his French baguettes.
I asked our friends to bring some Finger foods , tapas style . We also ordered some Merguez on line via Dartagnan that we sandwiched in fresh baguette spreaded with homemade Harissa : Harissa is in North Africa mainly Moroccan, Algerian and Tunisia what American call hot chili paste or Asian shirasha.Harissa is added to couscous, soups, pastas and other recipes. It can also be purchased in Middle Eastern stores in a tube or jars. My homemade recipe is below.
For hours between the food, the pool ,la petanque game – a form of bocce game (popuar all over France but mostly in Provence and Marseille )where the goal is, while standing inside a starting circle with both feet on the ground, to throw metal balls as close as possible to a small wooden ball called a cochonnet , the Sangria we spent a lovely evening.
Our menu :
Sangria
Tapas/ finger foods ( brought by our friends)
Merguez Lamb Sausages dartagnan with Fresh homemade baguette and Harisssa ( see recipe below)
Summer vegetables and beef or chicken skewers
Rice
zuchini and tomatoes a la Provencale
Fresh Summer fruits en papillote served with Caramel Salted ice cream and Palmiers cookies
Harissa is in North Africa mainly Moroccan, Algerian and Tunisia what American call hot chili paste or Asian shirasha.
Harissa is added to couscous, soups, pastas and other recipes. It can also be purchased in Middle Eastern stores in a tube or jars.
Harissa-tomato sauce recipe
½ tsp cumin seeds
100 ml olive oil , plus a little extra
4 garlic cloves, peeled but kept whole
1 tsp smoked paprika
6 tomatoes, deseeded and chopped
1 Fresno chilies , deseeded (use more chilies if you like it very fiery)
Heat the spice seeds in a dry pan until lightly toasted and aromatic, then lightly crush using a pestle and mortar.
Heat the oil in a large pan and add the garlic, toasted spices, paprika, tomatoes and chillies. Cook over a low heat, stirring frequently, until the tomato flesh has cooked down to a pulp and the garlic is tender – this will take about 15 mins.
Remove from the heat and blend it pulse in a food processor to make a rough paste. Spoon into a sterilized jar and pour a little oil over the surface to completely cover it. Will keep in the fridge for several months if you cover the surface with oil after each use.
Thank you friends it was a fantastic evening, can’t wait to do that again soon….
troy
Bonjour,
SD Petanque here, check our website and calendar, we have several interesting Petanque/food events during the year at balboa park/Morley field and also travel to LA and Palm Desert to play. This Sunday is coffee and croissants followed with Petanque matches. See you on the piste? Sometime?
Troy
Barbara Jarvis
Thank you Celene, what a fantastic day with family and friends and of course the French Barbecue was great!! The food was delcious and we tried and ate many different types of food for the first time. Thank you so much for the food, company, fun and of course Joel’s sangria. Barb and Terry
admin
merci Barbara and Terry…thank you it was a great day we will do it again we love having you/ Terry and your family over always a pleasure
Aaron B
Looks great Celine!
Vic Yepello
Celine, the photos are pure joy. Its fun to see how others apply the techniques of cooking over fire. Great post!