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Sunday, June 5, 2016

Green Shakshuka


Green Shakshuka
Originally found at Blue Apron

1/2 pound tomatillos, husked and chopped
1/2 poblano pepper, seeds removed
1 yukon gold potato, chopped
1 eight ball squash, chopped into bite sized pieces
4 cloves garlic
1 Tbsp Za'atar
1 cup water
1 lemon
4 eggs
Feta cheese
Olive oil

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. On a sheet pan covered in foil, lay out chopped tomatillos in a single layer and drizzle with a small amount of olive oil. Place the poblano pepper skin side up on the pan and drizzle with olive oil. Roast in oven for 10-12 minutes, until tender. Once cool enough to handle, chop pepper into small pieces.

Meanwhile, in a medium pan (oven-proof, if you have one), heat small amount of oil over medium-high heat. Add potatoes and cook until light brown and tender. Add chopped squash and cook until tender. Add garlic and Za'atar seasoning. Stir to coat potatoes and squash well, cook 1-2 minutes until fragrant. Add chopped tomatillos, chopped pepper, and water. Cook, stirring occasionally, 6-8 minutes until thickened and saucy. Add juice of 1/2 lemon.

Create four small wells in the sauce. Gently crack one egg into each well. Cover pan and either move to the oven, or cook over medium heat for 6-8 minutes, or until egg whites are set and the yolks are cooked to your desired degree of doneness.

Top with feta and serve, garnishing with remaining lemon.

My Notes:
The first time I made shakshuka, I transferred the sauce to an oven-proof dish and finished making it in the oven. It took forever and a day. The second time I made it, I decided to just keep cooking it on the stovetop. And it took while, but it worked, especially after I put the lid on the dish. Now, that's how I make it. If you have a cast iron skillet, it'd probably work best if you put in the oven, but otherwise, I just prefer to use a saucepan to do it.

The eggs you can keep cooking however well you like. I am not a huge fan of poached eggs with runny centers, so I opted to cook them to soft-boiled consistency. The yolk is nice and creamy and crumbles well to mix with the sauce.

I also added a poblano pepper to this dish because traditional shakshuka is made with red peppers, and I like a little heat to my dishes. I happened to have half of a roasted pepper leftover from a previous dish I made, and I chopped it up and added it to the dish. It added a small amount of heat to the dish, and added to the overall green color.

The dish is pareve if you don't add the feta cheese at the end, so that's the category I'm listing it under.