Tuesday, February 08, 2011

A peck of unpickled peppers

Sunday was supposed to be the hottest day of the summer. Yeah, right. While parts of the country sweated it out in 40C-plus, we were stuck indoors while gale-force winds whistled around the house and rattled the windows. Now, with rain coursing down, I feel extremely cheated of the summer we were promised.

One good thing about all this rain though is that our vegetable patch is becoming incredibly lush and jungle-like. Sure, most of the cherry tomatoes probably won't survive the rain, but the peppers and chillies are producing amazing crops and the basil has grown into a veritable forest. We've been picking the peppers while they're still green - it's not hot enough here for them to go red - and they're so much nicer than the tough, bitter ones available in the shops. Having said that though, peppers of all colours are now really cheap so I've been buying red and orange ones, then tucking our precious green ones in between when I make this baked peppers dish.

Newtownese Peppers (with apologies to Elizabeth David)
This can be adapted to suit the number of people you are feeding (and how greedy they are). If it's the main vegetable component of a meal, I'd go for two peppers per person (especially if they are homegrown ones).

Peppers of assorted colours
Garlic, peeled and finely sliced
Cherry tomatoes
Basil
Olives
Olive oil
Salt and pepper

Preheat the oven to 180C. Cut the peppers in half and strip out the seeds. Lie them on a shallow-sided baking dish (they will shrink as they cook, so it's fine for them to be quite snug). Put a few slices of garlic, a few cherry tomatoes and a few olives into each half. Drizzle over some olive oil, then grind over some salt and pepper. Bake for about 30 minutes. Eat them hot, room temperature or cold, depending on how hot (or cold) it is outside. Strew with torn-up basil leaves just before serving. Pin It

9 comments:

  1. Peter Piper would be proud!

    P.S. By peppers do you mean capsicums or spicy peppers?

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  2. Thanks for stopping by my blog! I'm glad you did as I've come to visit you and I love the recipes. I actually tried your turkish bread last week (via Miranarnie) and it turned out so yum! Your comment about 15 yr old or those who've had labotomey's cracked me up!!!! :) Gotta love meeting new people. xo

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  3. mmmmm with a fab crusty bread ........

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  4. Woops, should have made that a bit clearer - I mean capsicums for this recipe (stay tuned for the harvest of our huge chilli pepper crop!)

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  5. ...can you let me know exactly where dullsville is in NZ, just want to make sure we don't move there when we come home.....!!??

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  6. These look glorious Lucy...I love roasted peppers.....I hope the rain and wind stops and you manage to rescue the tomatoes too....

    I've tagged you to join in with My Five Daily Essentials....they could be kitchen ones.......I know you may be too busy or decide not to join in that's fine....

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  7. am very jealous that you can grow all these things. and homegrown basil, sigh, there really is nothing better.

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  8. Looks delicious. They might be good with a little bit of cheese on top too!

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Hello - thanks for stopping by. If this was real life I'd make you a cup of tea and open the biscuit tin, but in lieu of those things, let's have a chat anyway...