Moroccan lentil & chickpea stew with tahini yoghurt
Is it a soup, or is it a stew?! I’m going with stew today as it ended up so nice and chunky, but you can call it a soup if you prefer! I like to have a big tub of something tasty in the fridge, so there’s an instant lunch or dinner ready for me when either I can’t be bothered to cook, or I’m starving and need to eat immediately! In the winter it’s a stew or soup and in the summer a salad with roasted veggies and grains. So this is what’s in my fridge at the moment and I’ve been loving it. It’s really warming and quick to make, apart from chopping a few veggies, you just basically chuck everything in the pan and leave it for half an hour.
To make this recipe vegan, all you need to do is switch the plain yoghurt for a plant based variety or just whip up the tahini with water, it’ll still make a nice creamy dressing.
Ingredients
Serves 6-8
2 red onions, chopped
2 sticks celery
2 large garlic cloves, grated
2 tsp ground cumin
2 tsp ground coriander
4 carrots, cubed
1 tbsp rose harissa
2 x 400g chopped tinned tomatoes
1 x 400g tin chickpeas, or 125g dried
150g cavolo nero, stalks removed, chopped roughly
1 ½ tsp sea salt
A handful of fresh coriander leaves
Tahini yoghurt
240ml (12 tbsp) plain yoghurt
6 tbsp tahini
6 tbsp water
1 ½ tsp sea salt
Method
If you’re using dried chickpeas, soak them overnight and then cook in boiling water for about
45-60 minutes.
Heat ½ tbsp olive oil in a large pan and fry the onions and celery for 10 minutes.
Next add the garlic and ground spices, let them warm through for about a minute.
Add the carrots, rose harissa, lentils and tinned tomatoes, plus 3 tins of water.
Simmer with the lid half on for 30 minutes.
Mix the tahini, yoghurt, water and 1 ½ tsp sea salt in a medium sized tub or bowl.
Serve with a drizzle of tahini yoghurt, coriander and a chunk of sourdough or brown rice.
Tip
You could use red lentils instead of green, but they absorb more water so you would need to keep an eye on the stew getting too thick.
If you’re looking for another recipe to use up some rose harissa, then try this Butternut squash & spelt salad, it’s really good and another one you can store in the fridge for tasty lunches, dinners or as a side.
If you don’t have tahini, you can just use plain or coconut yoghurt instead.
New Year tabbouleh salad
Happy New year everyone! Not the start we all wanted for 2021, but at least there is light at the end of a very long tunnel with the vaccine roll out.
Anyway, here’s the first salad I made this year as I really needed a break from winter comfort food. I made a big bowl to last us for a few days and I’ve been enjoying my lunches so much. I’ve used pomegranate molasses in the dressing because I happened to have a big bottle and I’m trying to use my store cupboard up, but you can replace with red or white wine vinegar and a squirt of runny honey. I know it’s not easy getting quirky ingredients at the moment, but everything else is pretty straight forward.
The salad is vegan if you just top with a sprinkle of toasted sunflower seeds, but veggie with the addition of crumbled feta. It’s up to you!
Ingredients
Serves 6-8 as a side dish
150g Puy or small green lentils
150g bulgur wheat
1/2 red onion, chopped finely
1 handful cherry tomatoes, quartered
3 sticks celery, thinly sliced
1 red pepper, chopped
1/2 cucumber, seeded centre removed & chopped
1 handful chopped parsley
1 handful chopped coriander
Generous pinch sea salt
Approx 50g sunflower seeds
150g feta, crumbled
Dressing
50ml olive oil
Juice 1/2 lemon
20ml pomegranate molasses
Method
Cook the lentils as per the packet instructions, usually simmer for 20 minutes, but add a spoon of vegetable bouillon to the water.
Cook the bulgur according to th packet instructions (about 12 minutes). Drain both well and allow to cool completely.
Toast the sunflower seeds in a frying pan (no oil) on a medium heat, but watch them like a hawk as they’ll suddenly burn. Set aside to cool on a plate.
Next put all the chopped vegetables and herbs in a large bowl. Stir in the cooled lentils and bulgur.
Mix the dressing ingredients together and give them a good shake.
Pour over the dressing, and top with seeds and feta
Tip
If, like me, you’re making this salad to eat for lunch or dinner over a few days then keep all the elements separate and mix a portion at a time as you eat it. This way the salad should last about 4 days.
The main thing to keep separate is the dressing as adding liquid will make the veggies go soggy.
Lentil bolognese
If you’re looking for a vegan alternative to a bolognese sauce this recipe is a good place to start. It’s protein rich and and after testing several times I think I’ve got a good depth of flavour. To do this I’ve used a few extra ingredients, but don’t be put off as they’re all easy to buy and the sauce cooks itself after you’ve fried the onions - I promise!
I always find that you need make a little bit more effort to get the right texture and flavour in vegetarian dishes, so it’s worth having ingredients that bring umami or a deep savoury taste in your cupboard if you want to cook like this more regularly.
Things I keep in stock are: nutritional yeast, veg stock cubes, vegetable bouillon, Marmite, Worcestershire sauce (veggie or normal if you aren’t strict like me!), dried porcini mushrooms, soy, miso, olives, toasted seeds or nuts, capers, plus vinegars or citrus to give dishes a lift before serving. To add zing I use balsamic (which also adds umami), red/white wine or cider vinegar, lemon or lime juice and zest.
This recipe is for a big batch of sauce that you can use in a few different ways. It’s always a win for me if I can get a couple of meals out of one recipe as it saves time in the kitchen and it’s always nice to get ahead of yourself. If you split the sauce in half you can serve it with pasta, courgetti, roasted squash wedges, baked sweet potato, or as a pie topped with cheesy mash, sweet potato or puff pastry. This time I went for tagliatelle and a ‘cottage’ pie with Maris Piper mash, but it would also work really well with sweet potato or squash mash.
And now on to the all important question: how the hell do I get my kids to eat it? Well, my trick is to use a hand blender to blitz either part or all of their portion so they’re not too freaked out by the lentils! Not rocket science and probably not in any parenting manual, but it’s one way to get/trick my (very picky) 15 year old son into eating something that isn’t a/ breaded b/ beige. The other obvious thing to do is serve with a mound of cheese as I find most things become more child-friendly covered in melted cheddar.
Ingredients
Serves 8
2 aubergines, 2 cm cubes
1.5 tbsp olive oil
2 red onions, small dice
2 celery sticks, small dice
2 large cloves of garlic, grated
600g mushrooms
175ml red wine
250g green lentils
2 x 400g tins of tomatoes
2 tbsp tomato puree
1 tsp oregano
1 vegetable stock cube or 2 tsp veg bouillon
1/2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce (vegetarian)
500ml water
1 tsp red wine vinegar
1 1/4 tsp sea salt
Handful of fresh basil leaves, stalks reserved and chopped
Parmesan to serve
Method
Preheat the oven to 200ºc.
Put the aubergine on a large tray and drizzle with 1 tbsp of olive oil. Place in the oven for 30 minutes, turning half way and adding a little more oil if needed. Set aside when cooked.
Heat 1 tbsp rapeseed oil in a large pan and cook the onions and celery on low heat for 20 minutes then add the garlic for a further 1 minute.
While the onions are cooking, put the mushrooms in a food processor and pulse until they resemble a rough crumble. I usually do 3-4 quick pulses.
Turn the heat up a little and add the mushrooms and red wine to the onion mix. Allow to bubble for 5 minutes, to burn off the alcohol and some of the water from the mushrooms.
Then pour in the lentils, tinned tomatoes, tomato purée, oregano, stock cube, Worcestershire sauce, water and basil stalks; cook with the lid on for 30 minutes
Add the roasted aubergine and then cook for 20 minutes with the lid on adding the red wine vinegar for the last 5 minutes.
Add the salt and basil leaves.
Serve with parmesan or feta.
Butternut squash, lentil & Stilton salad
This is a really nice dish to make when the weather’s cold, but you still fancy a salad. It can be eaten warm or cold (room temp is best), as part of a spread or just on its own.
Remember this one after Christmas when you can’t stand anymore turkey and you’re wondering how to use up all that Stilton in your fridge. It’s easy to make and won’t take you too long to prep. It’s also very nutritious, so that’s a win, win, win.
Ingredients
Serves 4-6
20 ml lemon juice (approx 1 lemon)
1/2 red onion, sliced thinly
1 butternut squash (approx 1kg), chopped into 3cm wedges
1 tbsp olive oil
150g dried green lentils
1 vegetable stock cube
Handful of parsley, chopped
60g stilton, crumbled
Dressing
60ml olive oil
20ml lemon juice
1 tsp dijon mustard
1 tsp honey
1/4 tsp sea salt
Method
Preheat the oven to 200ºc.
Place the sliced onions into the lemon juice so they can pickle while you prep the rest of the ingredients.
Chop the squash, spread out on two large trays, and drizzle over the olive oil. Mix to coat well, sprinkle with sea salt and put in the oven for 25 minutes. Turn and put back in for a further 25 minutes.
While the squash is roasting, simmer the green lentils for approx 30 minutes (check the packet for instructions) with 1 vegetable stock cube and a generous pinch of salt. Drain well and put back in the pan.
Mix all the dressing ingredients and pour 2/3 on to the warm lentils and sprinkle in another 1/4 tsp sea salt.
Layer the salad on a large platter: squash, lentils, stilton, parsley, repeat finishing with the cheese and herbs then top with pickled onions.
Tip
Use the small green lentils which look like Puy as they stay firmer. Larger green lentils like these are better for making dal. I buy mine in 2kg bags from Real Food Source. They’re really good value and great quality. Or Tesco do a smaller bag if you don’t want to commit to a big one!
Green lentil dal with crispy red onion
This was a cupboard and fridge raid dinner as we didn’t have much in, but it turned out to be really tasty. Lentils are a great source of protein and fibre and the combination with brown rice and roasted veggies makes this dish low fat and packed with nutrients.
Ingredients
Serves 6-8 portions
600g green lentils
5 cloves garlic, grated or finely chopped
Thumb of fresh ginger, grated
1 tbsp turmeric
1-2 tsp dried chillies
2 tbsp groundnut oil
2 red onions, finely sliced
1 tbsp cumin seeds
1 tsp mustard seeds
Fresh coriander, chopped to serve if you have it. I didn’t and it was still tasty without
1 cauliflower, chopped into florets
4 red onions sliced into half moons
Method
Preheat the oven to 180°c.
Rinse the lentils well and then add to a large pan with 3L of water, boil and then reduce to a simmer. For the first 15 mins make sure you take off the scum as it can make the dal bitter.
Once the scum has stopped forming add the garlic, ginger, turmeric and dried chilli. Simmer for about 1 1/2 hrs, stirring occasionally, until the lentils have completely broken down and there isn’t much liquid left. Season with 1-1 1/2 tsp sea salt to taste.
While the lentils cook add the mustard seeds to another pan with a little oil and heat until they start to pop.
Next put in the onions and fry gently until they’re browning and starting to crisp. This will take a while, 20-30 mins. Add the cumin seeds for the last 5 mins.
While the dal is cooking, place the florets on a baking tray (well spaced out) and drizzle with rapeseed or olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt and cumin seeds. Roast for 15 minutes and then turn, put back in the oven for 5-8 minutes - or until the other side is browned.
Serve with basmati (I added wild rice too) and the cauliflower and red onions ( the photos shows some slices of white sweet potato too, you don’t need these, I just wanted to use some up).
Filter by Tag
- Middle Eastern
- Moroccan
- aubergine
- almond
- blueberry
- BBQ
- Mexican
- Spice blend
- basil
- asparagus
- blueberries
- Prawns
- Thai
- Blog
- Breakfast
- Topping
- Winter
- bone broth
- Nutrition
- black beans
- Christmas
- French
- Spanish
- beans
- banana
- apricot
- broad beans
- Italian
- avocado
- almonds
- banana bread
- biscuits
- adzuki beans
- Indian
- bologese
- beetroot
- Asian
- Sweet potato
- broad bean
- Yorkshire
- Yorkshire puddings
- Ottolenghi
- bread
- Honey & Co
- asian
- Nigella Lawson
- bake
- Meera Sodha
- Lepard
- baking