Koshari is an
Egyptian dish made with rice, lentils, macaroni, vermicelli and
chickpeas and topped with a tomato sauce and fried onions. I've had
it quite a few times as street food and have totally fallen in love
with the dish. What scared me off making it myself previously, was
the amount of components. I was basically fearing I wouldn't have
enough pots to cook everything separately. Now I felt brave enough
and started making Koshari. It turned out that it wasn't such a
horrible multi-tasking exercise, but quite straight forward instead,
as most of the processes are simple. I used for example ready made
fried onions to save that stage. There can be several variations of
Koshari and the below recipe is my version of the dish.
Tomato sauce:
1 small onion
3 garlic cloves
1 tbsp olive oil
2 tbsp tomato
purée
Chilli flakes
Ground cumin
Ground nutmeg
Ground black
pepper
Salt
Other ingredients:
1 cup brown rice
1 cup puy lentils
1 cup macaroni
1 cup vermicelli
pasta
1 can chickpeas
2 vegetable stock
cubes
½ tsp smoked
paprika
Fried onions
Method
First make the
tomato sauce. Chop the onion and garlic cloves finely, cook them in
olive oil, add the tomatoes and cook slowly under lid. Season to
taste. Add more chilli flakes and other seasoning, if you prefer a
very spicy sauce. When the sauce is almost done, start with the other
preparations.
Cook the rice and
the lentils with a vegetable stock cube each in separate pots.
Basically everything is cooked separately and layered into a bowl in
the end.
Cook the macaroni
and vermicelli (break the vermicelli into about 1 cm long pieces
first).
Warm the chickpeas
up and season them with smoked paprika. Normally I would use dried
chickpeas, but this time I chose the canned ones in order to save
some additional cooking time.
Layer the
components, top with tomato sauce and fried onions and enjoy.
This dish is also
my contribution to this month's My Legume Love Affair (MLLA) #86
cooking challenge. It's hosted this month by Shaheen from
Allotment 2 Kitchen. MLLA was started by Susan from The Well Seasoned Cook and now administered by Lisa from Lisa's Kitchen. I thought that koshari would be a suitable dish to this
challenge, as it's quite rich on lentils and puy lentils.
Have a good week
everyone!
Your VegHog
So homely and such a comforting dish for rainy days I Like koshari, it has so many different names. Thanks for sharing with MLLA, the round up will either be up the end of this month or beginning of September, wow - is it nearly September.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe it's nearly September... the up side is though that we can get away more easily with such dishes. Just imagine all those soups, stews and bakes! Autumn is starting to sound good. :)
DeleteThe round up should be up tomorrow morning. Once again, thanks for participating.
Delete