
My favorite squash is starting to come in my home garden and I also see it at the farmer’s market. It’s called Kousa or Kusa and it’s a Lebanese version of the zuchinni. It’s about the same shape, but it’s a very light green in color. And I can’t get enough of it because of this recipe I am going to share with you. It was given to me by some close friends of our family that are of Lebenese descent.
We even just call the meal “Kousa”. And there is a hard version to make and an easy version. And of course I pick the easy version unless I want to turn some guests on to it. And sorry, you won’t get exact measurements for this recipe. It’s a family recipe that’s been handed down by watching people cook in the kitchen. I can’t think of a better recipe for success than that.
Ingredients:
1lb Ground meat, preferably lamb (Riverslea lamb is very good)
2-3 medium Kousas, seeds removed and chopped into 1 inch pieces
fresh tomatoes chopped or 2 cans of chunky tomatoes
a handful of freshly chopped mint or dried mint to taste
2-3 small handfuls of rice
About 1-2 cups of water, however you might like the consistency, more stew like or soup like.
Boullion cube if you like.
Saute the meat, toss in the rest of the ingredients and simmer until the kousa is soft, about 45 min. The liquid ingredients should just cover the meat and kousa.
The more difficult version involves coring out the kousa and stuffing them with the tomato/meat/rice mixture and then cooking them in a tomato sauce. It is soo good.
And waste not, the Lebanese take the Kousa insides/seeds and saute it up with onions and eggs for a delicious breakfast. Also, the insides and the kousa can be blanched and frozen, so you can eat this yummy warm your insides meal in the winter time as well.
If you are not into trying to cook as much, try out Martha’s restaurant in Hampton Falls. When Kousa is in season, you can have the meal made for you here. Click the link for a great review.
July 23, 2007 at 5:28 pm
ahhh that is so smart to just cook it all up together -
July 24, 2007 at 7:02 am
I like to squeeze on a generous amount of lemon juice right before serving. Mmmmmm.
July 25, 2007 at 7:31 am
This isn’t specifically cousa related -BUT- there’s a new kid in town. Z-Mart, a gas station on 108, (just North of downtown Newmarket) is now serving Lebanese cuisine (Maha’s Homemade.) Look for the gas station sign with the word “Falafel” underneath it- that was what drew us in. They haven’t got their full kitchen running, so everything is served refrigerated, but he assures me that that will change. We’ve tried a bunch of their stuff, and it’s pretty darned good, considering it’s not freshly made. Martha’s will always be my first love, but I look forward to getting my fix closer to home!
July 26, 2007 at 9:35 pm
That’s great to hear. Since I spent many years in the Washington D.C. area, I was spoiled eating fantastic ethnic food. It’s always a good thing, when another cuisine opens up. Thanks for sharing the info!
August 2, 2007 at 11:15 am
Kate and I finally tried your Kousa recipe last night. Yum-o, as the kids say.
August 2, 2007 at 11:47 am
lol. Yucky and yummy are two of the most used words in our house right now, so I understand to vocab.
August 6, 2007 at 6:50 pm
The Kousa was delicious! Ted and I enjoyed it so much I will add it to my regular repertoire of recipes. I used ground buffalo meat in the recipe, which I bought along with the kousa, at our local Farmer’s market in VA.
August 3, 2008 at 8:47 am
am going to try this today–I wanted to avoid cooking cousa the traditional way–always looking for fast recipes.
August 26, 2008 at 10:41 pm
Im sorry but this is not a lebanese recipe. It is a BLAND American one. My Lebanese dog would stick his nose up at it.
August 29, 2008 at 9:23 am
Mahoil - any suggestions to spice it up?