Cross-posted to
cookbook_challenge.
From The Roasting Tin around the World by Rukmini Iyer. This will be the last recipe from this book I post. Truth be told, I'm feeling a little embarrassed about posting so many, even though I was/am cooking my way through it and the challenge comm specifies these should be recipes you were intending to try. If you've liked these recipes can I suggest you purchase a copy of the book since it is currently in print? I have just acquired my Mum's cookbook though, so I think next year, I will try cooking my way (selectively) through that.
Ingredients
1 butternut squash, cut into eights
4 pointy peppers, mixed colours
2 red onions, halved
4 cloves of garlic, grated
8cm ginger, grated
1 tsp chilli flakes
2 tsps caster sugat
60ml white vinegar
60ml water
2tbsp olive oil
sea salt flakes
extra virgin olive oil
A handful of pumpkin seeds
A large bunch of fresh basil
Method
1. Preheat the oven to 180C fan/200C/gas 6.
2. Put the squash peppers and onions into a roasting tin with everything in one layer.
3. Mix the garlic, ginger, chilli flakes, caster sugar, vinegar, water and oil in a small bol then pour over the vegetables and mix.
4. Cover with foil and cook for 45 minutes.
5. Remove the foil, turn up the heat to 200C fan/220C/gas 7 and roast for 15-20 minutes until the peppers have a good colour.
6. Remove from the oven, season as necessary. Drizzle with the virgin olive oil and scatter over the pumpkin seeds and basil.
Changes, Mistakes and Substitutions
I made half quantities of the veg, but full quantities of the liquid. Sainsbury's delivered regular red peppers instead of pointy peppers, so I quartered these and used instead. I also quartered rather than halved the onion. I used 2 tsps of garlic paste and 2 tsps ginger paste instead of grating fresh. The change that made the most difference, I suspect, and which I didn't think much of at the time, was that I selected my largest casserole dish with a lid and used that instead of a roasting tin with foil. Although large, the vegetables weren't in one layer. The result was that the vegetables that cooked in the liquid were properly cooked and had a nice sweet and sour flavour, while the ones that weren't were a bit under-cooked and dull.
Verdict
The verdict is mixed, probably because of the issue with the layers during cooking. I shall make again and see what its like when all the vegetables are in the liquid.
From The Roasting Tin around the World by Rukmini Iyer. This will be the last recipe from this book I post. Truth be told, I'm feeling a little embarrassed about posting so many, even though I was/am cooking my way through it and the challenge comm specifies these should be recipes you were intending to try. If you've liked these recipes can I suggest you purchase a copy of the book since it is currently in print? I have just acquired my Mum's cookbook though, so I think next year, I will try cooking my way (selectively) through that.
Ingredients
1 butternut squash, cut into eights
4 pointy peppers, mixed colours
2 red onions, halved
4 cloves of garlic, grated
8cm ginger, grated
1 tsp chilli flakes
2 tsps caster sugat
60ml white vinegar
60ml water
2tbsp olive oil
sea salt flakes
extra virgin olive oil
A handful of pumpkin seeds
A large bunch of fresh basil
Method
1. Preheat the oven to 180C fan/200C/gas 6.
2. Put the squash peppers and onions into a roasting tin with everything in one layer.
3. Mix the garlic, ginger, chilli flakes, caster sugar, vinegar, water and oil in a small bol then pour over the vegetables and mix.
4. Cover with foil and cook for 45 minutes.
5. Remove the foil, turn up the heat to 200C fan/220C/gas 7 and roast for 15-20 minutes until the peppers have a good colour.
6. Remove from the oven, season as necessary. Drizzle with the virgin olive oil and scatter over the pumpkin seeds and basil.
Changes, Mistakes and Substitutions
I made half quantities of the veg, but full quantities of the liquid. Sainsbury's delivered regular red peppers instead of pointy peppers, so I quartered these and used instead. I also quartered rather than halved the onion. I used 2 tsps of garlic paste and 2 tsps ginger paste instead of grating fresh. The change that made the most difference, I suspect, and which I didn't think much of at the time, was that I selected my largest casserole dish with a lid and used that instead of a roasting tin with foil. Although large, the vegetables weren't in one layer. The result was that the vegetables that cooked in the liquid were properly cooked and had a nice sweet and sour flavour, while the ones that weren't were a bit under-cooked and dull.
Verdict
The verdict is mixed, probably because of the issue with the layers during cooking. I shall make again and see what its like when all the vegetables are in the liquid.