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Tajine, which is both the name for the distinctly Moroccan cooking dish in which the food is made and the food itself, is an assortment of lightly seasoned vegetables and usually a meat (chicken, lamb, beef). It is cooked on a ceramic plate underneath a ceramic chimney like cone. In restaurants it often came overcooked, as if the vegetables had been boiled beyond recognition and then plated back on the tajine just in time for service. It tended to be bland, but during the first week it was everywhere, and we ate it a lot. Cous cous was essentially the same as tajine but the veggies and meat arrived atop a mound of the little granules. Harira was also a common find. A traditional Moroccan soup that is tomato based with lentils and garbanzo beans. It was a favorite of mine and was especially good in Chefchaoen a small, rainy mountain town where a piping hot bowl ran us about $1.00. Although we never encountered camel meatballs, we did see this at a butcher shop in the Fez medina.
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Halfway through the trip we were a little tajined out. We made the the discovery that Morocco has about as many Italian places as traditional Moroccan spots. We went on a pizza and pasta binge that lasted more than a few days and spanned a few cities. Most of the pasta was only ok at best but we found a few spots where it was LEGIT. One was in Essaouira and was a Sicilian restaurant run by a guy whose mother was Sicilian and father was Moroccan. That place was turning out some amazing food. Katie and I went two nights in a row. Their complimentary bread basket came with a plate of assorted goodies: creamy goat cheese, roasted eggplant, anchovies, and olives. I can't remember the name of the place at the moment, it might have been something like Mama Siciliana, I'm pretty sure that Mama was in the title. I'll try to figure it out. Here I am with the owner (on left) and head waiter who treated us to limoncello shots after closing.
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The very best gem, I suppose, counts as street food. Although the cook was not technically a street vendor. While wandering through the maze that is Fez' old city, we happened upon this guy cooking up tasty sandwiches. He was frying eggs on a griddle alongside little potato cakes. When cooked he mashed them up together, stuffed them into a pita pocket, drizzled, a spicy chili sauce over the whole business, and then sprinkled it with cumin. That was a really good find. And for Morocco, the man had a pretty immaculate kitchen.
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Another huge bonus was Fez' donut guy. This man wheeled a cart near the entrance of the Medina in the afternoon and rolled donuts and fried them to order. The best part was that you got to dip your hot oily donut in sugar yourself. Katie and I were way into it. We went so far as to buy four of them at the same time and each take down two, one after another. Below Katie gets busy and happy.
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