Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Random Recipe Challenge #2: Shakshuka

The Boy Wonder and I rarely cook together these days unless we've got people over. Even then, we tend to separate out courses, so one of us can be sorting out one part of the dinner while the other puts the Small Girl to bed/sweeps the toys off the floor/pours the drinks. We always eat together - and increasingly with the Small Girl, who has learned to clink glasses and say 'cheers' as a result - but cooking together isn't always practical. However I got all inspired when I read last month's post by Louise at Please Do Not Feed The Animals, who enlisted the help of her husband when it came to Belleau Kitchen's first Random Recipe Challenge. Louise's 'Perfect Date Night' post was so lovely that I felt we should follow in their footsteps.
 
The rules for Random Recipe Challenge #2 are to choose the 18th book on your cookbook shelves, then pick a recipe at random. Book 18 in our case turned out to be Plenty (aka the second Ottolenghi book), which was quite apt as the BW had given it to me for Christmas. The BW isn't big on following instructions (or taking orders), so he baulked a bit when I said we had to cook whatever page fell open first. His face dropped even further when that turned out to be chard and saffron omelettes, so rather than open divorce proceedings we flicked the pages again and landed on Shakshuka.
 

Shakshuka, from Plenty by Yotam Ottolenghi
This is a very simple dish, similar in style to piperade. It seemed to take us ages (we went out to the garden to pick the peppers and herbs, then we decided to have a glass of wine, then the phone went...) but we had a really nice time doing it. Our coriander plant has long since bolted so I used flatleaf parsley instead, and we didn't have any saffron or bay leaves. Quantities below are for four - we halved it - and ate it with chunks of bread.

1/2 tsp cumin seeds
180ml light olive oil
2 large onions, sliced
2 red and 2 yellow peppers, cut into 2cm strips
4tsp muscovado sugar
2 bay leaves
6 thyme sprigs, leaves picked and chopped
2tbsp chopped parsley
2tbsp chopped coriander, plus extra to garnish
6 ripe tomatoes, roughly chopped
1/2tsp saffron threads
pinch of cayenne pepper
up to 250ml water
8 free-range eggs
salt and black pepper

In a very large pan dry-roast the cumin seeds on high heat for two minutes. Add the oil and saute the onions for five minutes, then add the peppers, sugar and herbs and cook for another 5-10 minutes until well coloured.
Add the tomatoes, saffron, cayenne and some salt and pepper. Reduce heat to low and cook for 15 minutes. Add water during this time to get the consistency of pasta sauce. Taste and adjust the seasoning - "it should be potent and flavoursome". This sauce can be done well in advance.
Make indentations in the sauce mix (either in this pan or in four small frying pans) and carefully break an egg into each one. Sprinkle with salt and cover, then cook on a very gentle heat for 10 minutes, or until the eggs are just set. Sprinkle with coriander and serve. Pin It

11 comments:

  1. It must've tasted so wonderful with home grown ingredients.. especially since the dish looks so flavorful itself!

    I just made my random recipe for this month's challenge today! Post up soon hopefully!

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  2. aww... i'm so happy that you did this together... I have tried and tried to get The Viking to take part in this challenge... I must show him your post and insist!

    This looks so good too... I LOVE Ottolenghi... brilliant! (and again a dish you probably wouldn't have done normally without the challenge???)

    Thanks for taking part

    Dom x

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  3. I loved Louise's post too - a really good idea that Date Night thing. I am glad she inspired you to make this, it looks and sounds wonderful.

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  4. Awwww thanks Lucy. I hope BW enjoyed the cooking challenge and I hope he enjoyed the dish.
    It sounds wonderful when you say you just nipped out to the garden for the ingredients and the recipe sounds intriguing. Not my usual sort of thing which would be a good reason to give it a try.
    Dom's challenge is brilliant, isn't it. I cooked my random recipe today so will post sometime in the next fe days.

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  5. YUM!!!!! And I love the cookbook idea. We get ours today - hip hip hooray! Yes, 2 months later our boxes are finally arriving.

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  6. Thanks for this - I made a kind-of-something-similar dish last night, but with chickpeas and sausages:

    http://bit.ly/hcATqr

    ...I can't resist messing with recipes, get it from me mother(!).

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  7. I love Shakshuka, though haven't yet tried making Ottolenghi's version. I so miss not cooking with CT these days. We always used to cook together, but our kitchen is just too small now and we very quickly get cross with each other if we are both in the kitchen at the same time.

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  8. Oh my, this dish looks awesome and yummy. I love the name too. Very fun too pronounce. Yes, I am very easily amused by small things. :)

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  9. Oh, I've been eyeing up that recipe for a while - now I'm going to have to make it. And my kids love saying 'cheers' too. My 19-month daughter points to my glass and says 'mummy's wine'.

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  10. I wish I could get my husband to cook with me but he's terrified of the kitchen! Your shakshuka looks lovely. I've borrowed Plenty from the library, it's a gorgeous cookbook.

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