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Cape Malay Recipes
BOBOTIE
Bobotie
is a very popular South African meal. The combination of sweet and savoury
tastes is typical of Cape Malay dishes. Follow this recipe and enjoy a
lovely bobotie.
INGREDIENTS
· 1 slice of
white bread
· a half a cup of seedless raisins
· a half a cup of peeled almonds
· 250ml milk
· 1 kg minced beef
· 3 eggs
· 4 bay or lemon leaves
· 1 teaspoon turmeric
· 1 teaspoon fresh, chopped herbs
· 2 teaspoons medium strength curry powder
· 2 teaspoons salt
· 2 teaspoons oil
· 3 teaspoons apricot jam
· 3 teaspoons fruit chutney
· 2 tablespoons lemon juice (25 ml)
METHOD
1. Put the
bread in 125ml of milk. Squeeze the bread dry and mix it with the minced
beef.
2. Mix in all the other ingredients EXCEPT the remaining milk, the oil,
the eggs and the bay leaves.
3. Heat the oil in a frying pan and cook the meat mixture at a low temperature
until slightly brown.
4. Transfer the brown mixture into a casserole dish (an oven dish).
5. Beat the eggs together with the remaining milk and pour it over the
meat mixture.
6. Place the bay leaves on top.
7. Bake the mixture in the oven at 180'C until the egg becomes solid.
8. Eat with plain or yellow rice
SOSATIES
This is a festive
dish, served at braaivleis, or outdoor cookouts, in the south of Africa.
I normally cook the dish with lamb, as specified in the recipe, but I
suspect that the dish is very old and might well have been used with monkey
or some other good meat. In any case, try it with lamb, mutton, or kid
goat. The recipe called for sticking the meat on skewers (sometimes with
lamb fat between the pieces) but I usually cook it with pieces larger
than are normally used on kabobs. If you use chunks, you can always put
them into a hinged basket, as I do.
INGREDIENTS
3 pounds lamb
4 medium onions, peeled and minced
1 clove garlic
1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup peanut oil
2 tablespoons apricot jam
1 tablespoon dark brown sugar
1-1/2 teaspoons ground coriander
1 teaspoon hot curry powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
2 bay leaves or fresh lemon leaves
2 tablespoons flour
Salt and pepper
1/2 cup water
METHOD
Split
the garlic clove, then rub it over the lamb. Cut the lamb into pieces
and sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste. Place the meat in a glass
or nonmetallic bowl. Heat the oil in a skillet and sauté the onions
until they are golden.
Stir in the coriander, cumin, and hot curry powder. (To make hot curry
powder, add 1/8 teaspoon of cayenne pepper to ordinary curry powder.)
Simmer for 3 minutes, then add the brown sugar, lemon juice, and apricot
jam. Turn up the heat, stir in 1/2 cup water, and bring to a quick boil,
stirring constantly with a wooden spoon. After it boils, remove the sauce
from the heat and let stand. When it is cool, pour the sauce over the
meat, sticking in the bay or lemon leaves. Cover and refrigerate for 12
hours or longer.
When you are ready to cook, build a good fire and let it burn down until
you have hot coals. Put the meat into a hinged basket or thread it onto
skewers, then cook it for 15 minutes or longer, depending on how thick
the chunks are. While the meat is cooking, remove the leaves from the
sauce. Put the sauce into a cast-iron skillet and bring to a bubble. Slowly
stir in the flour, using a wooden spoon, until the sauce is thick. Remove
from the heat and pour it into a serving dish. Keep it warm until the
meat is ready.
The measures in this recipe will serve 6 hungry people, maybe 8, depending
on what else you've got to eat. Traditionally, this dish is served with
rice that has been colored yellow with turmeric or saffron.
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