This was from our “watch the LOTR trilogy and eat like Hobbits marathon”. The original recipe uses rabbit or chicken, and is an homage to Samwise’s rabbit stew.
Sorry for the bad pic…
Anyway, my friend made it with soy chunks and it was so good we had to make it again a week later. It takes a lot of time, but not much work.
Ingredients:
2 pounds of unseasoned soy chunks, the “like chicken” variety that is pretty dense. I wouldn’t use tofu here
2-3 onions, depending on size and your taste, cut to taste
garlic
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon allspice
2 teaspoons sage or thyme
3 tbsp olive oil
2 teaspoons sugar
500 ml red wine
some red wine vinegar (I prefer crema de balsamico)
50g tomato paste
2 laurel leaves
salt and pepper to taste
- rub the “meat” with herbs, pepper and allspice, set aside.
-use a cast iron pot, a dutch oven or anything that allows the stew to simmer nicely on the stove or go into the oven, heat the oil and gently brown the onions with the sugar for about 10 minutes. If you use the oven, preheat to 150°C now.
-add the garlic, fry for another minute. Add the “meat” and fry for five more minutes or so. Add wine, vinegar, tomato paste laurel and salt. Cover with a lid. Either put it into the oven or reduce the heat. Stir every 10 minutes or so for about 2 hours. I had to add some more wine and water because the soy chunks basically slurped up the sauce. Season again, garnish with parsley, and serve with po-ta-toes.
consciousness razor says
That looks mighty tasty to me. I may have to attempt that one soon, after another trip to the store. Poor little rabbit doesn’t stand a chance.
consciousness razor says
I’m thinking about chickpeas and/or pigeon peas now too… Hmmm.
Jazzlet says
Yum sounding and looking.
I think the “2 laurel leaves” should be “2 bay leaves”. We call the leaf you can use in cooking bay laurel or just bay -- Laurel nobilise, what we call laurel -- Prunus laurocerasus -- is somewhat poisonous, and has a far bigger leaf (12-15cm) very glossy leaf. For pictures see https://www.hedgesdirect.co.uk/acatalog/laurel-hedge-guide.html and scroll down a bit.
Giliell says
@Jazzlet Why is English? Why do you need two words again where one is perfectly fine?