An Exotic Weekend Dinner: Ethiopian Food

I am one of those people that’s always seeking the newest, latest, most different. I tend to get bored with tasks, activities and even meals pretty soon after starting. Call it a little ADD, but it’s more like “what am I missing by not trying something new?”

Cooking plays a big part of feeding my desire to try something new almost every day. And last week trying my hand at homemade Ethiopian food was the way to do it.

Homemade Ethiopian foodI found the two recipes I made to be incredibly easy to make, Doro Wett (a chicken stew) and Fossolia (a stewed green bean and carrot dish). The chicken dish came together just like any other dutch-oven chicken braise and the green bean dish was also a snap. BOth could be done in one pot each. Love that simplicity! The reciopes were somewhat time-consuming (I was cooking for at least an hour and a half) but the whole process was surprisingly fluid, and I was able to improvise any ingredients I didn’t have on hand.

The desire to make Ethiopian food began by the serendipitous finding of Injera bread at my local specialty store. If you’ve never had it, it’s delightfully sour like sourdough bread, but has the bubbly texture of a crumpet and the flatness of a crepe. It’s amazing.

If you come across Injera in your local store, or feel in the mood to whip some up yourself, I highly recommend these two Ethiopian dishes to serve alongside. And don’t forget to use the Injera as your “plate” – it soaks up all of the delicious juices of your cooking!

Doro Wett (Ethiopian Chicken Stew)

Makes 6 servings. Recipe by Marcus Samuelsson.

  • 2 medium red onions, diced
  • Salt
  • 1/4 cup Spiced Butter (or 4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, divided
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom, preferably freshly ground
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 cloves
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • One 1 1/2-inch piece ginger, peeled and chopped
  • 1 tablespoon Berbere or chili powder
  • 2 1/2 cups chicken stock, divided
  • One 4-to 5-pound chicken, cut into 10 pieces, wings reserved for another use
  • 1/4 cup dry red wine
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 2 hard-boiled eggs, peeled

Combine the onions, a pinch of salt, and half of the spiced butter in a Dutch oven or other large deep pot over low heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the onions are golden, about 15 minutes. Add the remaining butter, the cardamom, black pepper, cloves, garlic, ginger, and berbere and cook until the onions soften and take on the color of the spices, about 10 minutes.

Add 2 cups of the chicken stock and the chicken legs and thighs, bring to simmer, and simmer for 15 minutes. Add the remaining 1/2 cup chicken stock and the wine, bring back to a simmer, and simmer for 10 minutes. Add the chicken breasts and simmer for 20 minutes.

Gently stir in the lime juice and eggs and simmer for another 5 minutes. The sauce will be loose and soupy. Season with salt to taste.

Fossolia (Ethiopian Green Bean dish)

Serves 6. Recipe from here.

2 onions, chopped
1/3 c. canola oil
3-4 oz. tomato paste (about 1/2 of a 6 oz. can)
4 cups green beans, ends snapped off and cut or snapped into halves or thirds
3 carrots, cut into stick-shaped pieces
2-3 tomatoes, chopped
minced ginger and garlic (as much or as little as you’d like- I use about 2 tsp. each)
salt, to taste

Start by cooking the onions on medium heat for about seven minutes, or until the onions begin to turn translucent and soften. Add the oil and continue cooking for several more minutes. Stir in the tomato paste and allow several minutes for the ingredients to simmer together. Add the green beans and carrots, stir well, and cover. Continue cooking on medium heat for 10-15 minutes, then add the tomato, ginger, garlic, and salt, and simmer until all of the vegetables are tender.

 

Vegetarian Baked Beans with Rancho Gordo Beans

So yesterday I wowed you by introducing you to the wonderful world of Rancho Gordo beans.

Today, I’ll astonish you with the (wait for it, the title is long!): The Best Vegetarian Slow Cooker Baked Beans. Ever.

That’s right. I’m making that statement with guns blazing. This is no ordinary pot of baked beans. There’s real whole fruit (shocking!) and cumin (oooh!) and lots of other goodies to make you ooh and ahh.

I’m happy to share, really. Because these Rancho Gordo beans are a hands-down favorite, but I know you’ll love this recipe with any similar brand of beans. But don’t say I didn’t tell you so. Go buy some, silly, I’ve told you twice…

Recipe after the jump..

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Rancho Gordo Beans i.e. the Best Thing Ever

I don’t take that statement lightly. I’m serious. These beans are some of the Best. Things. Ever.

Like the perfect chocolate cake. Or a light and fluffy sourdough roll. Maybe even the ultimate homemade-by-grandma tomato sauce.

They are that good.

Why on earth do I have such praise for, of all things, beans?! Because they are heirloom varietals. They are fresh (er, freshly dried). They are grown, harvested and sold in a sustainable manner. They have cool packaging.

Major points for the cool packaging.

Double major points for producing an incredibly high-quality product that’s accessible, reliable and delicious.

I made a little pilgrimage to the Rancho Gordo storefront in Napa this past weekend with the sole intention of buying several pounds of beans. And I did. And there they are (plus a few more bags not pictured).

These beans are meaty, robust, flavorful and far more complex than the sad bag (or can) of white or pinto beans in your cabinet now. These beans are an investment in your fall / winter cupboard. Your mother taught you to invest. You remember that, right? Heed her advice and buy some beans. Not as cool as stocks, I know, but she’ll be proud of you nonetheless.

I have some of the Rio Zape Beans in the slow cooker right now slowly making their way to becoming vegetarian baked beans.  Will report back with the final results!

So go buy some beans. Buy good beans from Rancho Gordo. Your feelings toward beans will never be the same.

Ugly Apples

You have some of these, I’m sure. You probably even have some right now. Some really ugly, starting-to-brown, don’t-look-appetizing-anymore apples sitting in your fruit bowl. You meant to eat them a few days ago but they never made it into your lunch bag or that summer salad you were planning.

There they sit, all alone, withering a slow death.

But you can save them. I promise.

Save them with applesauce.

Quick, easy, one pot, one bowl, four ingredient applesauce. Yummy applesauce. No-canning-required applesauce. Open-the-fridge-the-next-day-with-a-smile applesauce.

And you can get out all of your aggression chopping up the apples. Double bonus.

Recipe after the jump.

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Bison Chili

Yes, you heard me. Bison Chili. As in Buffalo. As in not a cow, or a steer but a real live (dead) buffalo stirred into the spicy goodness that is chili. Good chili, in fact. Healthy chili. Chili that makes you feel warm and fuzzy.

It starts like this: Lindsey and Daniel are meandering the farmer’s market in Hollywood this weekend, taking in the lovely bounty of winter citrus. And then, hark! A bison vendor. A real live grower of those ancient beasts. We had to buy some, especially since Daniel had never tried the wonders that are American Bison (Buffalo).

We bought a pound of ground bison to whet our chops in some burgers. Good. Next, with about 1/3 lb. left I had to get creative on how to stretch such a small amount of meat for a meal for two. This chili was meant to be.

First I sweated some veggies (onions, carrot, red bell pepper) in a big enamel pot until translucent. Threw in the rest of the ground bison and sauteed until almost cooked through. Seasoned with some chopped garlic, salt, pepper and chipotle peppers in adobo sauce that I had picked up at a Latino market nearby.

As the aromatics worked their way into the meat and veggies I added chicken broth, black beans (from a can, I know, lazy!) white beans, chopped diced tomatoes, tomato paste and spices (oregano, paprika, cumin, coriander). Then I forgot about it. Well, not literally. I turned the pot down to a low simmer and went about my business, checking on it every 20 to 30 minutes to give it a stir.

The chili worked its magic for about 3 hours, of which included maybe 20 minutes of hands-on attention. Topped with a little sour cream and some pepperocini (because I have an addiction to making my food as spicy as I can handle) it was a great, warm and healthy one pot meal. And then I got to take a pretty picture of it to share with you.