Tomatoes. Oh my gawd, the tomatoes. We've canned, dehydrated, canned some more, made soup, had salad, sliced them for BLTs, snacked on them right off the vine, canned some more... And now this. This is good. This is different. I like this. I really like this with tequila. That is called a Bloody Maria, by the way.
If you have loads of little half-pint jars, put this mix up in those...fill them three-quarters full. This allows exactly the right amount of room for a scant shot of liquor, an ice cube or two, and a ring of pickled jalapeno...put the canning lid/ring back on and shakeshakeshake...instant cocktail in its own serving cup. Package up two or four of these guys with a 4 oz jar of homemade spicy pickled somethings and a miniature bottle of vodka or three, and it's a darling holiday gift.
The original recipe is here. I used some jalapenos out of our garden instead of hot sauce and added lemon juice to each jar in the amounts recommended by the Ball Blue book (2 tbsp per quart, 1 tbsp per pint, 1/2 tbsp per half-pint) to insure that the tomato juice was acidified enough.
How much you get out of this recipe depends on how thick or thin you want your final product (i.e. how much water you add). We like ours fairly thin, so we got about 4 quarts worth. Your mileage may vary (YMMV)
If you don't want to use this as a cocktail mixer, it would also be an excellent tomato soup.
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Showing posts with label bell peppers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bell peppers. Show all posts
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Shakshuka
I've seen and made multiple versions of the eggs-poached-in-chunky-sauce meal...one with a bed of sauteed spinach and mushrooms, another with caramelized shallots and a marsala-beef consomme reduction, among others. This one is a recipe from the cookbook Jerusalem by Ottolenghi that uses a stovetop-simmered pepper-tomato sauce as the poaching bed. A similar sauce that would probably also work well for cooking eggs this way is this roasted red pepper sauce.
The original recipe calls for harissa, a super-spicy pepper paste, that I don't have on hand. I used some minced jalapeno and ginger from my freezer stash to bring a little heat and depth of flavor to the sauce. If you like things hotter, use more or hunt down some harissa.
To chop your pepper finely enough for this dish, I highly recommend using the food processor. Pulse quickly and stop short of pureeing them. If you use canned tomatoes instead of fresh, drain them very well to shorten the cooking time needed to thicken the sauce.
I like how quickly the sauce went together and how well this recipe lends itself well to prepping ahead and freezing ahead. You can chop all the ingredients for the sauce ahead of time and fridge them, or make the sauce completely in advance. If you're going to freeze the sauce, you can even freeze it in individual portions for a quick meal-for-one. Just bring the sauce back up to a simmer (from its frozen state even!), crack an egg into the sauce, cover and simmer 8-10 minutes. Probably this thaw-and-poach process could even be managed in microwave...I don't know offhand how long to zap an egg to poach it, but if you do, let me know!
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The original recipe calls for harissa, a super-spicy pepper paste, that I don't have on hand. I used some minced jalapeno and ginger from my freezer stash to bring a little heat and depth of flavor to the sauce. If you like things hotter, use more or hunt down some harissa.
To chop your pepper finely enough for this dish, I highly recommend using the food processor. Pulse quickly and stop short of pureeing them. If you use canned tomatoes instead of fresh, drain them very well to shorten the cooking time needed to thicken the sauce.
I like how quickly the sauce went together and how well this recipe lends itself well to prepping ahead and freezing ahead. You can chop all the ingredients for the sauce ahead of time and fridge them, or make the sauce completely in advance. If you're going to freeze the sauce, you can even freeze it in individual portions for a quick meal-for-one. Just bring the sauce back up to a simmer (from its frozen state even!), crack an egg into the sauce, cover and simmer 8-10 minutes. Probably this thaw-and-poach process could even be managed in microwave...I don't know offhand how long to zap an egg to poach it, but if you do, let me know!
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Labels:
bell peppers,
breakfast,
eggs,
fast,
freezer,
garlic,
prep-ahead,
tomato paste,
tomatoes,
vegetarian,
yogurt
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