• suomeksi

Vaimomatskuu ruokablogi

Ruokahullun päiväkirja

  • HOME
  • About
    • Vaimomatskuu food blog
    • Evästelauseke
    • Tietosuojaseloste
  • Recipes
  • Food photography
  • suomeksi
  • in English

4.5.2021

Spelt tabbouleh with red currants and chervil

spelt tabbouleh

Spelt tabbouleh with red currants and chervil – my take on the traditional Levantine salad!

I serve this spelt salad with Finnish leipäjuusto (bread cheese) which I pan fry golden with some local honey. The hot and sweet squeaky cheese + the herbaceous salad with tart cold berries is a killer good combo!

Jump to Recipe

spelt tabbouleh

Spelt tabbouleh

Tabbouleh is a Levantine classic, known to likely everyone who ever sat at a mezze table. The combination of juicy tomatoes, sharp onions and a mountain of parsley and mint is truly a wonderful thing! Tabbouleh is definitely one of my all time favorite salads ♥ I was lucky enough to be introduced to this salad in my University years by a fellow student, who grew up eating tabbouleh. Unless I’d had his version, I don’t think I would’ve known the correct ratio of herbs to bulgur a tabbouleh should have!

I’ve been making tabbouleh much like his up until recently, when I ended up developing a version using 99% Finnish ingredients. See, I was commissioned to develop a recipe out of produce marked with the “Produced in Finland” label, which I published on my Instagram as an ad for the label last week. The label is used by food industry companies operating in Finland that manufacture their products here using Finnish ingredients. A sign of a product that’s as Finnish as it can be! For this client work, I went shopping at my local grocery store to see what kind of recipe I could come up with produce marked with this label.

chervil salad

Spelt ♥

As I was going through my options, I ended up buying local and organic pearl spelt for the first time. I fell in love with the product instantly, and decided to create the recipe using this lovely ingredient! In a traditional tabbouleh the amount of bulgur wheat isn’t a lot in comparison to all the herbs and veg. But because I love the taste of spelt so much, my version ended up being on the “grainier” side 🙂

I use spelt flour all the time in my sourdough baking, but I’d never used spelt as a grain before. The pearl spelt I’ve now discovered cooks up in 20 minutes, and is incredibly flavorful! This ancient grain has a nutty taste I adore. It’s a good source of protein and fiber and I recently discovered it’s apparently also easier to digest than regular wheat! (You can read more about spelt here.) Spelt has been cultivated in Finland for ages so it’s a local ingredient for me. What’s not to love? Spelt has been my grain of choice lately, over rice in particular. It makes for a lovely base to my vegan watermelon poke bowl for instance!

red currant salad

Tabbouleh made with local ingredients

For my 99% Finnish tabbouleh, I picked up local tomatoes, herbs, bread cheese, organic pearl spelt, canola oil, frozen red currants and honey. I also found local green onions and small Finnish cucumbers called avomaan kurkku! This cucumber variety is grown on open fields and has a bumpy and bitter peel. Size wise it’s similar to Persian cucumbers, just a bit smaller. These cucumbers are a sign of summer for me and I love them to bits! I haven’t found a name for them in English, but they are the kind that is usually pickled whole here in Finland.

Although the recipe was developed with a certain goal in mind, you don’t need to stick to these exact ingredients of course. The whole idea is to make something with local ingredients, so I hope you use ingredients that are local to you! Pick an oil produced in your region, a berry that grows in your backyard and a grain of your country! If nobody is growing spelt where you live, try buckwheat or oat groats, pearl barley, farro, quinoa, amaranth, couscous… Or simply go for the traditional bulgur.

At our house the spelt tabbouleh was served with leipäjuusto, a Finnish squeaky cheese which I pan fry with some honey. You could totally serve the salad also with cheese curds, paneer or tofu for a vegan version. Or something on the other end of the cheese spectrum, like halloumi perhaps?

spelt salad

Spelt tabbouleh with red currants and chervil

This take on tabbouleh gets its tartness from red currants! As herbs I opt for plenty of fresh chervil along with the more traditional flat leaf parsley. I like to serve the spelt tabbouleh with Finnish squeaky cheese, pan seared with honey. If you can't get a hold of Finnish squeaky cheese, you could use paneer, cheese curds or even halloumi (which is of a totally different taste but a good combo with this salad all the same). For a vegan version I'd opt for some (cold smoked) tofu seared with agave syrup!
Course Appetizer, Lunch, Salad
Cuisine Fusion
Diet Vegan, Vegetarian
Keyword salad
Servings 2 people
Author Jella
Prep Time 20 minutes mins
Cook Time 15 minutes mins
Total Time 35 minutes mins
Pin Recipe Share on Facebook Share by Email

Ingredients
 

  • 2 dl pearl spelt
  • 1 bunch fresh chervil (or mint and/or tarragon)
  • 1-2 bunch of fresh flat leaf parsley
  • 1 green onion
  • 1-2 small cucumbers (depending on their size)
  • 3 large ripe tomatoes
  • 1 dl red currants
  • salt and freshly cracked black pepper to taste
  • canola oil (or extra virgin olive oil)
  • 200 g Finnish bread cheese (or paneer, cheese curds, halloumi, tofu)
  • 1-2 tsp honey (or agave syrup)
Notes:
I use small Finnish cucumbers that have a hard and bitter peel in this (the kind that's usually made into a pickle), so I peel them before dicing them up for the salad. I you aren't using said cucumbers, no need to peel them! Just dice them quite small (I go for ½-1 cm cubes). You can remove the seeds if you want, I don't bother since I serve the salad immediately after making it.
Instead of red currants you can try white currants, lingonberries or sea buckthorn! Adjust the amount of berries according to your preferred tartness. If you want something a little less tart go for bilberries or blueberries!
I like to use frozen berries in this salad - the combination of the hot sweet cheese and the cold tart berries is wonderful! As the berries defrost in the salad, their juices season the grains.
I love fresh chervil, but you can definitely also mix in fresh mint or even some tarragon!

Instructions

Prep:

  • Cook the pearl spelt according to the instructions of the package. Season to taste with salt and black pepper + a generous drizzle of canola oil. Leave to cool.
  • Peel and dice the cucumbers. Chop up also the tomatoes and finely dice the green onion.
  • Chop up the fresh flat leaf parsley and chervil (and/or mint/tarragon). I use also the tender stems of parsley and chervil and I chop the bunches of herbs with scissors straight to the mixing bowl.
  • Once the pearl spelt has cooled down to room temperature, mix in the veggies, (frozen) berries and herbs. Mix well and taste, add more oil, salt and pepper if necessary.

Serving:

  • Portion the spelt tabbouleh to two bowls.
  • Cut the bread cheese to pieces (I like to do little triangles) and pan fry until golden on both sides. Drizzle the pieces with some honey at the end and turn the pieces to coat them evenly. Season with a sprinkle of salt and serve the hot cheese with the spelt tabbouleh immediately!

spelt tabbouleh

Aiheeseen liittyy

Filed Under: Recipes, Salad, vegetarian and vegan Tagged With: salad

Recent posts

  • Tteok and cheese – the ultimate comfort food fusion!
  • Nutritional yeast dressing with a fiery kick: love it!
  • Umeboshi salad dressing: new twist for a blood orange salad
  • Matcha noodles with matcha dressing
  • Homemade “umeshu”
Previous Post: « Watermelon poke bowl (vegan)
Next Post: Cold cucumber soup with herbs and violets »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Jotta sivuston käyttö olisi sinulle sujuvaa, käytämme kumppaniemme kanssa sivustolla evästeitä. Jatkamalla sivuston käyttöä, hyväksyt evästeet. Jos et hyväksy evästeitä, muuta selaimesi asetuksia. Lisätietoja evästekäytännöistä.

Jella Juulia

Hi! My name is Jella and I’m a Finnish food blogger, content creator and food photographer from Helsinki. Click here to read more about me!

Recent Posts

  • Tteok and cheese – the ultimate comfort food fusion!
  • Nutritional yeast dressing with a fiery kick: love it!
  • Umeboshi salad dressing: new twist for a blood orange salad
  • Matcha noodles with matcha dressing
  • Homemade “umeshu”

Most read

Caviar dip with potato chips!

Instagram

Roasty toasty 🍄‍🟫🧅🧄🍅 It's #soupseason and all of Roasty toasty 🍄‍🟫🧅🧄🍅

It's #soupseason and all of this is going into a noodle soup. And since the oven's hot, I'm roasting a pile of root veggies and baking sourdough too. Might as well - it's dark and cold outside but very warm and cozy in front of the oven 🤭

#rehurakkaus #myseasonaltable #roastedveggies #texthursdays #ofsimplethings
It's beginning to look a lot like the last month o It's beginning to look a lot like the last month of 2025! 

It's dark, wet and gloomy outside, but I don't mind! My kitchen is warm and filled with the scent of orange marmalade bubbling away on the stove, and I'm eating a perfect avocado 🧡

All thanks to a PR delivery @fresh.land.fi !! 
Ad: 🍊 & 🥑 / gifted / hedelmät saatu

What's your first of December looking like?

#storyofmytable #moodofmytable #rehurakkaus #sesonkiruoka #satokausi #appelsiini #avokado #freshland
Ihana, ihanampi, @neferrestaurant 🏵️ #recenttreats Ihana, ihanampi, @neferrestaurant 🏵️ #recenttreats

Mulla oli ilo osallistua modernin, persialais-levanttilaisia makuja tarjoilevan Neferin avajaisiin. Kaikki mitä pöytään kannettiin katosi onnellisten huokausten saattelemana, mut erityisesti hummustarteletti, happomarjoilla maustetut katkikset, kultainen tahdig ja shirazi salaatti oli taivaallista!

Avajaismenusta vastaa huippukokki Sara Aqel yhdessä Nina ja Riku Stenros-Khoshnamin kanssa. Jos olet levanttilaisten makujen ystävä, tätä menua ei kannata jättää väliin!

Menusta puheen ollen: siinä lukee, että "nefer" tarkoittaa Egyptissä kauneutta, Persiassa ihmistä, ja että Levantissa merkitykset sekoittuvat. Lisäisin tähän vielä, että mulle Nefer Nefer Nefer tarkoittaa nyt myös onnellista, tyytyväistä ja täyttä 😌

Mainos / kutsuvierasavajaiset, ateria saatu
Kiitos kutsusta @neferrestaurant ja @aldantew

🏵️🏵️🏵️

Kiitos myös seuralaiselle @justanotherfoodblogweb - Madli taisi olla ruuasta aivan yhtä onnellinen, tyytyväinen ja täysi kuin minä 🤗

#nefernefernefer #helsinkirestaurants #heleats #myhelsinki #ravintolavinkki #ravintolathelsinki
Recent (tr)eats 🍒 Creature of habit - roikun aina Recent (tr)eats 🍒 Creature of habit - roikun aina samoissa paikoissa:

1. Tarjoilut @ottiliaorenius & @cheftalesbyjulia Fun Dining kirjanjulkkareissa @dream.cozy 🎯 *PR-tilaisuus 
2. Viikon spessu @blondievaasankatu ei petä koskaan! Seurana rakas @lanili 🪩
3. Negroni & espresso martini pysähdys @twentyfoursocialclub - seurana täälläkin Lani-muru
4. Toinen aamiainen, josta Merry ja Pippin olis ylpeitä: pekoni-muna bagel & paistetut perunat. @sorkanrinkula delivers!!
5. Uunituore Fun Dining! Upea kirja, onnea Ottilia ja Julia!! *PR-tilaisuus
6.-7. Tuhma peruna @harju8 - herranen aika!! Törkeän hyvää, minä sydän kaikki tuhma ja 🥔
8. Olen käynyt ahkeraan @kultsahelsinki - tää on niin upea rakennus kaikkine yksityiskohtineen!
9. Pimeässä vuodenajassa on puolensa. Kameran kuvarulla on täynnä kaikenlaista valoa kuvattuna pitkällä valotusajalla...
10. Ai mikä se on? No @leipomobolle kardemummapulla, tietysti. Enkös mä kirjoittanut kuin tuonne alkuun että creature of habit?
11. Roikun ahkeraan myös @rivieracinemas ! Joulukuussa tulen olemaan täällä todella pitkän päivän, koska ostin just liput Twin Peaks ykköskauden näytökseen 🍒 ahhhhhh

#recenttreats #heleats #helsinkifood #myhelsinki #ofsimplethings
Follow on Instagram

Facebook

Facebook

Categories

  • Food photography
  • Recipes
    • Baking
    • Desserts
    • Drinks
    • Eggs
    • Meat
    • Pasta
    • Preserving
    • Salad
    • Seafood
    • Soups
    • Stocks and broths
    • vegetarian and vegan
  • Yleinen

Archives

Languages

  • suomeksi
  • in English

Copyright © 2025 · Divine theme by Restored 316

Copyright © 2025 · Divine Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in