Spiced Potato, Chickpea, and Asparagus Pancakes with Roast Red Pepper Coulis
Okay, so you're probably looking at these pictures and recipes and thinking a few things. (1) This looks really delicious...they are. (2) They and their sauce look really difficult to make/use a lot of pans, etc. to prepare....these are really simple to make and require only a knife, skillet, bowl, and hand grater to prepare. If you know how to grate stuff, mix stuff in a bowl, and cook something in a frying pan you can do this. (3) They're probably greasy because they're pan-fried...they're not. If the oil is hot and they are drained well these are crispy on the outside and succulent on the inside.
These are, in a way, a meal in themselves...potatoes, beans, vegetables, egg, and a vegetable sauce. Eat them as is or with a salad (which I did), but make extra because you (or anyone else that happens to be around) will be eating them straight from the pan.
Spiced Potato,
Chickpea, and Asparagus Pancakes
Makes about a dozen small pancakes
2 medium sized Yukon Gold potatoes,
peeled and shredded
½ pound trimmed asparagus, shredded
1 small onion, shredded
1 cup cooked chickpeas, mashed
2 cloves garlic, minced
½ teaspoon turmeric
½ teaspoon crushed hot pepper
½ teaspoon ground cumin
½ teaspoon black pepper
½ teaspoon sea salt
2 large eggs
6 tablespoons whole wheat flour
oil for pan frying
Combine all of the ingredients except
the oil in a bowl and mix well. Let rest for a couple minutes and mix
again. Heat about ¼ inch vegetable oil in a large heavy skillet over
medium-high heat. When the oil is hot, carefully spoon dollops of the
mixture into the pan. Flatten the pancakes slightly and cook them for
about 7 minutes, turning them a few times to cook evenly and brown.
If the oil becomes too hot lower the heat. Transfer the pancakes to
absorbent paper before eating.
Roast Red Pepper Coulis
Makes about 1½ cups
2 roast red peppers
1 clove garlic
¼ cup olive oil
¼ cup white wine vinegar
½ teaspoon sea salt
Combine all of the ingredients in a
blender and process until very smooth. This is delicious warm, at
room temperature or chilled.
How To Roast A Pepper
Roasting peppers is a
simple thing to do and the flavor that it adds to a dish is
excellent. This is an ancient technique of cooking vegetables where
the peppers are not actually roast in the oven but are “roast”
over an open flame. The skin becomes charred black as night. With a
little steam the skin just about falls off the pepper leaving only
the tender cooked flesh with a light smoky flavor. This can be done
outside over a grill or directly over the open flame of the burner on
your stove.
The first time that I had
seen this done was while I was at culinary school in the mid 1980’s.
The chef instructor had a thick German accent and when he told me to
put the pepper over the flame of the burner I thought I had heard him
wrong and instinctively reached for a skillet. After telling me again
he became frustrated and grabbed the pepper from my hands and put it
on the flame himself. At the time I thought he was nuts, but when I
tasted the resulting product I knew that he wasn’t. Thus, to roast
a pepper do this:
Remove stickers from the
pepper. Place the pepper directly on the grate of your gas stove
with the flame adjusted to medium. Using a set of tongs turn the
pepper ever couple of minutes until the entire outside is completely
black. Immediately place the pepper(s) into a small paper bag and
seal it closed. Allow the pepper to rest for a couple of minutes. The
steam that naturally occurs loosens the skin. Remove the pepper, and
while holding it under cold running water gently rub of the blackened
skin (it’s wise, but not essential, to do this over a small
colander to catch the skin, which may clog the drain). After the skin
is removed gently tear the pepper in two and remove the stem and
rinse the seeds.
Comments
Thank you for sharing all these recipes.