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Ottolenghi to the rescue! Kosheri & spicy minced beef.
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![]() Kosheri on the right, Spicy minced beef on the left ?We are currently going through a period of extreme financial embarrassment (least said, soonest mended) and have been making meals out of very little. For instance, this last week, our total groceries bill came to just short of £45 - which I think is something of a record. On the menu list for the Saturday, was entered "Rice & stuff". Now this is the name of a moveable recipe which, in our house, can mean absolutely anything - it's one stipulation is that it has to involve rice. I had been pondering over this "Rice & stuff" as to what kind of "stuff" I could utilise. I knew we had a pack of minced beef in the freezer for use in this dish, but what form it would take thereafter was in the lap of the gods. A few days into this pondering, I suddenly remembered a recipe I'd seen in the Ottolenghi book "The Cookbook", which I had borrowed from the Library. To the best of my recollection, it involved rice (tick), lentils (tick), vermicelli noodles (hmmn, no vermicelli in the cupboard, but I did have egg noodles) and spices, all of which I had in stock. So I looked it up. "Kosheri" is, apparently, an Arabian street vendor dish. Well, that suited the lack of vermicelli, as I reckoned that if street vendors made it they probably didn't go off down to their local deli for noodles. Kosheri is traditionally served with a spicy tomato sauce, which got me to thinking regarding the minced beef. If I could make a spicy tomato-based minced beef, that might go quite nicely. Well, it did. I have blogged the minced beef recipe here. A couple of notes on the recipe itself - firstly regarding the lentils. I used dried lentils and put them on to cook as it said in the recipe, to boil for 25 mins. Then it occurred to me to check the cooking time on the bag. Which said "soak for min. 12 hrs". Yikes! Well, I couldn't do anything about that now, so continued with the cooking. I tested them at around 15 minutes and they were becoming softened, so put my trust in Ottolenghi's recipe and continued. Suffice to say, they didn't need the 12hrs soaking. For sure, if they had have been soaked, they'd have needed far less cooking - so that's something to bear in mind for the future. Secondly, where the chicken stock was concerned, I used a chicken stock cube. However, having watched Masterchef far too many times and consequently having had the words "get lots of flavour into your food" drummed in, I had an idea which turned out to be a blinder. I keep a dripping cup in the fridge. Whenever I roast a joint, I tip the fat into the dripping cup and use it for my roast potatoes, next time. Inevitably, I also get a layer of jelly in the dripping cup. Now I know that this jelly is like concentrated chicken (as that's the meat we predominantly roast) stock. So I included a tablespoonful of it in the stock - which upped the chickeny flavour by a measure of many. Well worth doing, I'd say! KOSHERI (feeds 4) Ingredients : 150g green lentils, unsoaked 200g basmati rice 40g unsalted butter 50g vermicelli noodles (I used egg noodles) 400ml chicken stock half tsp grated nutmeg one and a half tsp ground cinnamon one tsp salt half a tsp ground black pepper 2 tsp olive oil 2 onions, halved and thinly sliced. Method : 1. Place the lentils in a large sieve and wash them under cold running water. Transfer to a large saucepan, cover with plenty of cold salted water and bring to the boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for 25 minutes. The lentils should be tender but not mushy. Drain in a colander and leave to one side to keep warm. 2. Heat the oil in a large frying pan, add the onions and sauté over medium heat for around 20 minutes until dark brown. Transfer to kitchen paper to drain and keep warm. 3. Rinse the rice and drain well. Melt the butter in a large saucepan over a medium heat. Add the raw vermicelli or noodles, stir and continue frying and stirring until they turn golden brown. Add the drained rice and mix well until it is coated in the butter. Now add the stock (with or without the chicken jelly included), nutmeg, cinnamon and pepper. 4. Stirring all the time to prevent the rice sticking, bring to the boil, cover and reduce the heat to a minimum and simmer for 12 mins. Turn off the heat, remove the lid, cover the pan with a clean tea towel and put the lid back on. Leave like that for around 5 minutes, which helps to make the rice light and fluffy. 5. To serve, lightly break up the rice with a fork and add the lentils & most of the onions, taste for seasoning and adjust accordingly. Top the rice with the remaining onions. related searches : Ottolenghi
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