The technique of finishing a cooked dish with fresh acid and herbs at the last moment appears in every serious culinary tradition — the squeeze of lemon over a completed Italian pasta, the torn herbs over a Thai curry, the vinegar over British fish and chips. In Ottolenghi's Jerusalem cooking it is codified: almost every dish receives fresh lemon and fresh herbs added off the heat in the final moments. The discipline of this timing is the technique.
Fresh lemon juice and/or zest, and fresh herbs, added to a completed dish in the final 10–30 seconds before serving — or at the table. The heat of the dish volatilises the fresh citrus and herb compounds immediately; timing the addition correctly preserves their brightness.
The fresh acid and herb finish is what makes a dish taste alive rather than cooked. It is the difference between a dish that reads as complex and one that reads as heavy. Without it, even a well-executed Jerusalem recipe tastes of the past; with it, it tastes of right now.
- Fresh lemon juice added too early cooks off its volatile aromatics and the residual acidity becomes flat - Fresh herbs added to a hot pan cook immediately — they must be added off the heat or at the very last moment - The zest is more stable than the juice under heat — it can be added slightly earlier - The quantity is usually larger than instinct suggests — a generous squeeze of lemon at the end, not a polite gesture - Taste after adding — the acid should be detectable but not dominant. It is brightening the dish, not souring it
OTTOLENGHI JERUSALEM — Technique Entries OT-01 through OT-25