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food leeks lentils pancetta

braised puy lentils with leeks

braised puy lentils with leeks

I happened upon this recipe on the Merchant Gourmet site. I’m a big fan of leeks generally, but what attracted me to this was the chance to try out some ready-to-eat puy lentils. I love lentils, particularly puy, but who has time for all that soaking and boiling? As you may be aware I’ve no problem with pre-cooked grains, pulses and noodles, as they cut into the time required for a given dish substantially.

It’s a lovely mix of flavours, but it really shows off the lentils – tender but with a meaty bite, and that lovely pepperyness you associate with puy lentils. Very tasty!

Braised puy lentils with leeks:

1 onion, diced

2 cloves of garlic, finely diced

200g diced pancetta

2 leeks, sliced

3 sprigs of thyme

200ml vegetable stock

Pinch of cayenne pepper

1 tin tomatoes

1 pack ready-to-eat lentils

Dried onions, to serve

  1. Fry the onions and garlic over a gently heat until softened. Add the pancetta, raise the temperature and fry until coloured on all sides.
  2. Add the leeks, thyme and a pinch of cayenne pepper and cook for a couple of minutes until starting to soften. Add the stock and tomatoes and simmer for a further ten minutes.
  3. When the leeks are tender, add the lentils and cook for a further couple of minutes until the lentils are warmed through. Check for seasoning at this point, you may need some salt and perhaps a pinch of sugar if your tomatoes are a little sharp. Serve garnished with dried onions.
Categories
cauliflower curry food lentils

cauliflower and lentil curry

Once again the wonderful Delicious magazine brings another great recipe. Grab a lentil curry ready meal and mix with freshly-boiled veg – a clever way to mix the tricky parts of Indian cookery with ‘real’ ingredients.

Categories
chorizo food leeks lentils soup

chorizo and lentil soup


Hot diggity, I love chorizo. So meaty, spicy and god-darned irresistible. I hate those pre-packed sweaty little plastic things, so I always buy mine from the deli counter. Except there I have to plead with the assistant not to slice it into bits, it’s always finger-thick slices or rough dice for me.

This wintry soup is a real cracker: fried leeks and chorizo, cooked until softened, joined by red lentils, paprika and stock, then allowed to simmer until everything’s tender. Followed by the obligatory blitz. Just to finish it off I seared some reserved chorizo slices until blackened, then rested on top to allow its savoury blood-red juices to drip into the chunky soup.
Categories
food lamb lentils

tomato dahl with lamb


This poor, poor recipe: it got bumped for weeks and weeks off the menu as other things came up, we got home late, someone invited us out… and finally we made it. It was very nice, luckily.

The lamb was supposed to be koftas but mega-juicy onions didn’t allow the meat to bind into kebabs. So instead the lamb mince was mixed with onion, garlic, ginger and turmeric to make a batch of fried mince. The dhal was onion, garlic, turmeric and lentils simmered in stock, with a tin of tomatoes, to form the carb part of the dish. Not fussy, not clever, but satisfying.
(the white strips above are slivers of halloumi cheese that were sitting looking bored in the fridge lightly grilled and left on top)
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