Tak Snacks
For the sausage, herring, or veggie replacements cut into Tak playing piece shapes: Cane or Miter.
In fancier establishments, these bites will be pre-assembled in the order shown above, with one piece of each ingredient stacked up. Each individual open-faced sandwich should be approximately one- or two-bite sized to keep players hands free and clean for playing. Assembled, each sandwich should vaguely resemble a move on a Tak board square with either a Cane (sausage or mushroom) piece or a Merchant (herring or artichoke) piece on top. Very fancy plating of this hors d’oeuvre alternates the dark pumpernickel squares with the light rye.
In more casual locations the ingredients are served on a platter for players to assemble themselves, usually during their opponent’s turn.
*Pumpernickel bread may contain cornmeal, and both pumpernickel and rye may contain corn syrup. If you make your own though, these breads can easily be corn-free. **Good luck determining the exact spices in available pickled herring, often they’re just listed as “spices.”
*Pumpernickel bread may contain cornmeal, and both pumpernickel and rye may contain corn syrup. If you make your own though, these breads can easily be corn-free.
**Good luck determining the exact spices in available pickled herring, often they’re just listed as “spices.”
I wrote this recipe as part of a stretch goal competition for the @TakBoardGame Kickstarter, which you can find until May 20, 2016 at tinyurl.com/takgameks #takgamerecipe. After that I’m sure you’ll be able to find information from the creators Patrick Rothfuss, author of some truly wonderful books, and James Ernest, designer of some truly wonderful BRAIIINS … I mean games. I was attempting to think of a recipe that reminded me of (European) epic high-fantasy foodstuffs–mead, meat pie, ale, pasties, etc–but yet was snackable and kept your hands clean enough for playing a game. This is essentially an aesthetically-designed version of Danish open-face sandwiches, Smørrebrød. You can honestly put anything on these that you want, but as you can see from the blog, we’re focused on avoiding several food allergens, so we don’t use staples you might prefer, such as cheese.
I wrote this recipe as part of a stretch goal competition for the @TakBoardGame Kickstarter, which you can find until May 20, 2016 at tinyurl.com/takgameks #takgamerecipe. After that I’m sure you’ll be able to find information from the creators Patrick Rothfuss, author of some truly wonderful books, and James Ernest, designer of some truly wonderful BRAIIINS … I mean games.
I was attempting to think of a recipe that reminded me of (European) epic high-fantasy foodstuffs–mead, meat pie, ale, pasties, etc–but yet was snackable and kept your hands clean enough for playing a game. This is essentially an aesthetically-designed version of Danish open-face sandwiches, Smørrebrød. You can honestly put anything on these that you want, but as you can see from the blog, we’re focused on avoiding several food allergens, so we don’t use staples you might prefer, such as cheese.
From Jenn Purnell
Sauté the onion in the olive oil until soft, then add minced garlic.
Add everything except the tomatoes and roasted garlic.
Squish the tomatoes and add them (including the liquid!). Stir and bring to a boil. Simmer 20 minutes.
Add the roasted garlic, mix. Simmer for 45 minutes.
From Alice
Mix water and food coloring. Mix sugar into water and food coloring. Add mijin-ko and mix until the dough holds finger marks.
Dust your molds with katakuri-ko. Fill molds tightly, and tap out onto a plate.
These are dry sugar candies – and go well with the tea ceremony. Shapes of these candies are seasonally linked and generally very specific. Since I only have a few molds, those are what I plan to make.
If you do not have rakugan higashi molds, you can buy candy or chocolate molds at many craft supply stores. They’ll hold you over until you can make a friend in Japan to send you some molds.
From Jessica Branom-Zwick
Chop, toss, and serve.
Sauté bread with oil until browned, mix up the vinaigrette. Mix everything together. Let sit 30 minutes before serving.
Heat the oat milk until it bubbles and remove from heat. Add the palm oil, stir until melted. Add the yeast when it is about the same temperature as tap-hot water. Try not to let the yeast get coated in palm oil.
Add ⅓ cup sugar, fake eggs and 2 cups flour. Add the rest of the flour a little at a time, mixing thoroughly. Knead until smooth, about 8 minutes. Put dough in an oiled, warm bowl. Cover and let rise until doubled in size (1 hour).
Divide the dough into 16 equal pieces. Form into flat ovals on a lined cookie sheet. Cover with a damp cloth and let rise until doubled again (40 minutes).
Topping: mix ½ cup sugar, ⅔ cup flour, and palm oil until you get crumbs. Mix coloring with the fake egg, then add to the crumbs. Roll into 16 ovals about the same size as the top of the buns. Place a topping oval on each bun, and press very lightly into place. Do not press hard enough to collapse your buns!
Cut patterns into the oval topping – spiral shapes, criss-crosses, etc.
Bake at 350°F for 15 to 20 minutes, or until sugar topping is almost browned.
Combine sauce ingredients (except katakuri ko) in a saucepan. Heat. Add katakuri-ko to 1 tablespoon of water. Add katakuri-ko mixture to sauce. Remove from heat as soon as the katakuri-ko is mixed in. Set aside.
Mix dry ingredients in a glass bowl. Add water a bit at a time, while stirring. Mix thoroughly. Put into a microwave at 600 watts for 2 minutes. On our microwave (1500 watts) this is setting 4 of 10.
Mix with a wooden spoon as best you can. Repeat until it is so stiff that you can cut it with a knife and it stays in place. You should start microwaving it 1 minute at a time as you get close to this point. It will be a little bouncy/springy.
Wrap in a cool, damp cloth and knead for 2-3 minutes. Rinse your hands often in cool water – the dough is very hot.
Split into 6 parts. Roll each into a 16 cm long sausage. Keep wetting your hands so they don’t stick to the dough. Cut each roll into 8 equal pieces. (“Marume naosu hitsuyou wa nai” – you don’t have to make sure they are all perfectly round. How nice.)
Skewer 4 onto each skewer and roast. “Kirei ni yakeru” – roast until they look pretty.
We roasted them on the oiled rack from a toaster oven positioned over a stovetop burner set on high.
This is very much like roasting marshmallows – you want a nice crusty (though not completely browned) layer on the outside.
Set on a plate, drizzle with sauce. Eat as soon as they’re not too hot for your tongue.
From Jason Enevoldsen
Grind together.
From Selma Marie Schiefer Schury
Put all fruit in the food processor until finely ground. Add sugar. Mix. Let stand in the fridge overnight. Stir and serve.
This is an old family recipe, and an alternative to sweet cooked cranberry sauce.
Cook together, serve over chicken (or wherever you’d like pesto)
I don’t eat pesto, because no matter how many times I read the ingredients, and no matter how often the cook insists it doesn’t include walnuts … it always does (in addition to those pesky not-quite-nut pine nuts). So I refuse to eat pesto. Jessie kindly refers to hers as “basil sauce” and cooked it from scratch in my own house so it was entirely safe and 100% nut free. I will never trust pesto.