Food for the changing season.
The moment the temperature (and the rain) starts falling, you can’t turn around without bumping into a blog or magazine spinning tales about stews and soups or prattling on about pancakes. While we do like these (worn out) “winter – warmers”, we have a couple of fresh favourites for you to try this season.
As much as we love a “hearty stew” or a “nourishing soup” packed full of nutrients and vitamins to fight off the winter sniffles, we also believe there is magic in these downright delicious, slightly less nutritious but perfectly comforting South African classics.
Melkkos (milk food)
This is an intentionally textured (lumpy) creamy type of thickened milk dish. Served hot with unhealthy amounts of cinnamon sugar, it is comfort in a bowl. There are many variations, from a sago-based melkkos, to one with “snysels” which is a kind of doughy noodle. Our favourite is the plain, slightly lumpy one with the consistency of a thick soup, but with a light, milky flavour and the aforementioned overindulgence of cinnamon sugar.
We love this recipe for traditional melkkos from Hannah Lewry, Multi-Media Food Editor at Woolworths TASTE Magazine:
“Just do what feels right. Melkkos is not a science, it’s an emotion.”
The what:
- 100 g sugar
- 1 1/2 t ground cinnamon
- 90 g cake flour
- Salt, a pinch
- 3 T butter
- 1 1/2 litres milk
- 1 cinnamon stick
The How:
Mix the sugar and ground cinnamon.
Rub together the flour, salt and butter with your fingers until it is nice and crumbly – the Afrikaans word for this is frummel (verb) or frummels (noun).
Add 3 T cinnamon sugar and continue mixing with your fingers. Pour the milk into a large saucepan and add the cinnamon stick. Bring to the boil. Once the milk is boiling and frothy, reduce the heat and allow to simmer while slowly sprinkling the frummels into the milk, whisking.
Reduce the heat and simmer gently, while whisking continually, for about 10 minutes. Turn off the heat, allow to rest for 5 minutes before serving with a generous sprinkling of cinnamon sugar.
Hannah’s Top Tip: “Do not skimp on the cinnamon sugar – if you are cautious with it, you have no business making and serving melkkos.”
If you like your melkkos milkier, simply use more milk and less flour. Alternatively, if you want to have small lumps of cinnamon dough drifting like tiny islands in a bowl of milk, gently stir with a wooden spoon instead of whisking.