Not pictured:
* tahini, this was ground from the sesame seeds where I didn't know what "husked" meant. It's like peanut butter. Nobody makes tahini from husked sesame seeds ... except me. Eh, it's fiber, and it tastes great. It's actually better than the stuff I bought.
* a couple of garlic cloves
* juice of one lime
* olive oil sufficient to cover the top
* a few roasted red peppers from a jar
* a teaspoon of aji amarillo chile powder
* Himalayan sea salt.
* diced onion
* parsley
* cilantro
Now, you're probably wondering what sea is located in the Himalayas, so I must answer, this would be an ancient sea from a remote era before the mountains were lifted by India crashing into the continent, as cataclysmic an event as imaginable if in profoundly slow motion. The salt is pink. It's considered the oldest sea salt in the world and although its pinkness suggests high mineral content it's not so high as to excessively displace NaCl, so it's surprisingly salty tasting. I learned this the hard way by putting too much on my cheese crackers. By contrast, the gray Celtic sea salt (French, not British), which is my favorite, is so loaded with minerals that it actually does displace NaCl and so doesn't taste nearly as salty. I've sat there munching the large granules at length until an urgent message was rushed from the back of my brain saying, "What are you doing, you dumb ass, are you crazy?" I find the minerals in that grey sea salt to be positively addictive.
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