ysabetwordsmith: (Cheap Cookin)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
I made this today. I wanted to use up the leftover tomato paste, and I wanted to experiment more with the xawaash spice mix. The result is utterly spectacular. My house has smelled like spices for hours. :D  We definitely plan to make this again.  I'm especially thrilled because it's so different from my usual broth-based crockpot stews.


"Crockpot Xawaash Chicken Stew"

Ingredients:
water
6 oz. can of tomato paste
2 tablespoons xawaash spice mix
1 pound boneless chicken thighs
1/2 sweet onion chopped
half a package of baby potatoes
1 tablespoon xawaash spice mix
16 oz. can of large butter beans


Directions:

Turn the crockpot on High.

Pour in enough water to cover the bottom of the crockpot between 1/2" and 1" deep. Scoop out the tomato paste in blobs and stir it into the water to start breaking it up. The remaining lumps will melt down as the stew cooks. Stir in 2 tablespoons of xawaash spice mix.

Add the boneless chicken thighs. Separate them so they cook evenly. Put the lid on the crockpot.

Chop half of a sweet onion. Scrape the bits over the chicken. Put the lid back on the crockpot.

Rinse half a package of baby potatoes. Cut off any bad spots and cut the baby potatoes into bite-sized pieces. Sprinkle 1 tablespoon of xawaash spice mix over the potatoes. Put the lid back on the crockpot.

Cook for 3-4 hours, stirring occasionally. If the stew starts boiling, turn the crockpot down to Low. The base will cook down a lot in the last hour or so. If it dries out too much, add a little more water. The chicken thighs should come apart when pressed and the potatoes should be soft.

About 10 minutes before serving, open the can of large butter beans and drain them. Pour the beans into the crockpot and stir gently to combine. They don't need to cook, just warm up for a few minutes and absorb some of the flavors.

Serve the stew alone, over rice, or with bread; greens make a traditional African side dish. It comes out very rich and thick, almost like a chunky sauce. This recipe makes 4-6 servings.


Notes:

Use unflavored tomato paste. The ingredients should just say "tomatoes" and usually either "citric acid" or "salt" to help preserve it. The amount is somewhat flexible, so this is a great way to use up a partial can of tomato paste. I used what was left after taking out 2 tablespoons for Suugo Suqaar (pasta sauce with beef). If you don't have tomato paste, then tomato puree should work, but use less water. The stew base will be juicy while cooking, but toward the end it should get quite a lot thicker.

EDIT 6/6/22 -- We made this again, using about half a large can of tomato puree that was left over from another recipe.  This one works just as well with tomato puree as tomato paste.

Xawaash spice mix comes from Somalia; I got the recipe from the cookbook In Bibi's Kitchen. It involves roasting whole spices and then grinding them together. The result is intensely fragrant and flavorful, but not hot, with a reddish-orange color. This mix is made in large quantities because it is used in large quantities, so check the amount of ingredients before you start assembling it. You can make a half-batch which is about one spice bottle full, and that's enough to make 2-4 supper recipes depending how much each needs. You can use more or less xawaash if you prefer. I based the 3 tablespoons in this recipe on the amount used in Suugo Suqaar (pasta sauce with beef).

Basically, water + tomato + xawaash spice mix = flexible stew base. You could put almost any kind of chunky stew ingredients into this and it would work. Adjust the level of spiciness with the amount of xawaash. To make it hotter, add a hot spice powder like cayenne, or throw in a hot pepper like Scotch bonnet.

Boneless chicken thighs make great stew meat. When you stir at the end, let them break up as much as they want to. However, many other meats would work in this dish, such as beef or pork. Goat is a popular African choice, though hard to find in America.

Sweet onions are less hot than regular onions, and add flavor. You can use half or whole; we usually cook with half an onion, so there is often half of one in the refrigerator.

Baby potatoes don't need peeling. We like the tricolor blend of red, white, and blue potatoes. Fingerlings also work well. You can use big potatoes, but those are more work to chop and if the skin is tough they need to be peeled.

You could throw in whatever other vegetables you like in stew, such as carrots or celery. Fresh chopped tomatoes or canned diced tomatoes would make the sauce chunkier. If you like greens in stew, they're a traditional African option. Stems of squash or pumpkin can be peeled and used like vegetables.

Large butter beans are big white beans, kind of like pale limas. They are soft and creamy with a buttery taste. You can use whatever canned beans you want -- we also considered red kidney beans or great white northern beans. If you want to use dry beans, then presoak them the night before and add them at the beginning of the cooking time. For a meatless recipe, omit the chicken and use 2+ types of beans; you could also use one bean and one whole grain or pasta.

This stew is very easy to make and flexible in terms of ingredients. If you wanted a quick-fix version then you could use frozen chicken chunks or leftover chicken, canned diced potatoes, and the canned beans. If you like tomato-based stew, you will probably love this -- although it doesn't taste much like tomato, because of all the spices.

Crockpotting over here, too

Date: 2022-03-25 01:37 am (UTC)
ng_moonmoth: The Moon-Moth (Default)
From: [personal profile] ng_moonmoth
Every so often I try something from one of our cookbooks. This go-round was from the Jewish Slow Cooker Cookbook. It was originally Chicken with Rice, but rice had been a theme over the past few days and the recipe called for short-grain brown rice, so it would retain its texture during slow cooking. We didn't have any of that, but we did have some kamut, which would have very similar properties.

Came out great! We're really enjoying the flavor of the kamut, and the entire dish. A whole chicken (which was what got me thinking crockpot in the first place) has made enough for at least three dinners, plus maybe a bit more that that -- which was perfect to line up with our weekend activities away from home.

(no subject)

Date: 2022-03-25 06:24 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
Cookbook recommendations: Anything by Fuchsia Dunlop, an Englishwoman who lived and went to cooking school in Chengdu, Sichuan Province. She explains things clearly, and illustrates her points with anecdotes from her adventures - "One time I walked down the street and smelled something delicious. I followed my nose into a tiny little restauraunt where they made the most delicious dumplings I've ever had. I was able to talk the chef into letting me watch while he made them. You'll need a lot of some Sichuan pickled vegetable, and some bamboos leaves and a steamer. Here's a photo of how you fold the wrappers." Or instructions for how to make a particular seasoning mixtture (for example, Hot CHili Oil or Sweet and Fragrant Soy Sauce). She gives instructions like "Add the ginger and garlic to the wok; stir-fry until everything smells wonderful". And advice like, "To cook dinner for a number of people, make a few cold dishes first and have them on the table when your guests arrive. Then you can go back in the kitchen and stir-fry and steam everything else. You can also order things like sliced cooked meats from a good Chinese restaurant if there's one near you. Most Chinese home cooks do that. And if you have friends or family members who can help you, it makes it a lot easier."
Edited Date: 2022-03-25 06:30 am (UTC)

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-26 07:07 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I've developed a taste for capsaicin. As I mentioned, I have a bowl of chili oil on my kitchen table, along with the salt and pepper and butter dish. I also use hot peppers, and lots of ginger, in cooking. And it sounds uttterly weird, but a tiny drop of hot chili oil on a mouthful of vanilla ice cream is mind-bending. Vanillin and capsaicin are chemically related.

Sichuan pepper has a weird effect. It makes your mouth tingle, a bit like a mild electric shock, and in doing so makes you more receptive to other flavors and "mouthfeels"/textures. Sichuan cooking is described as "ma la" - hot and tingly. I enjoy it.

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-26 07:51 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I don't know what the staple foods in Ghanaiaan cuisine are, so I can't be sure it's not all made out of things I'm allergic to. Seafood, eggplant, greens, onions and garlic. I'd better stick to the fried plantains (having lived in NYC, I got to be rather fond of tostones.)

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-26 10:03 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I added it to my Amazon wish list for next Yule. This past year I got Fuchsia Dunlop's "Sichuan Cooking" and also "The Mitiszam Cookbook" as well as "Vegan Black Metal Chef".

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-27 12:17 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I think I want Joshua Weisman's cookbook this Yule. He's a young man on YouTube who eplains things well.

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-28 05:38 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I had a smallish bookshelf in the kitchen where I kept my most-used cookbooks. The floodwater of Hurricane Sandy tipped it over and all those books got saturated with filthy seawater. One of my friends owned a bookstore in Maine, and helped many of my other friends find replacement for some of the older books, which was very useful. I now have wall-mounted bookshelves, and I need to put up a couple more,because I keep getting more cookbooks. And I prefer to have them right there in the kitchen, because when I had all my cookbook in the spare room, it was always a pain to go look up what I needed. So any natural disaster would have to break the house before it got to my cookbooks.

When they replaced the sheetrock after the storm, I had them paint the kitchen the same shade of off-white as the rest of the rooms (it had been an annoying dark yellow when we moved here). My kitchen bookshelves are plain white ones from Ikea, and I use the shiny chrome 3/4 circle brackets also from Ikea. WHen they replaced my kitchen appliances (destroyed by the flood), they gave me all stainless-steel ones, so the chrome shelf brackets match the rest of the kitchen.

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-29 12:42 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
Most of those interesting spice blends include garlic, onion, asafetida, cilantro, cumin, tomato paste, and/or mustard. All of which cause me severe gastrointestinal distress. I stick with ginger, chili pepper, black pepper, Sichuan pepper, soy sauce, fermented black beans, and a bit of sugar.

Re: Thoughts

Date: 2022-03-26 08:24 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I don't know what the staple ingredients are in Ghanaian cuisine. Because of my food allergies, I don't know if I'd be able to eat any of it.

(no subject)

Date: 2022-03-25 10:02 am (UTC)
cmcmck: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cmcmck
Another great spice mix but from north Africa is ras el hanout if you can find it- works wonderfully well with couscous dishes.

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2022-03-26 10:07 am (UTC)
cmcmck: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cmcmck
I'm also a herb and spice freak.

I adore harissa.

Have you run into smoked harissa?

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2024-03-31 05:12 am (UTC)
greghousesgf: (House Schroeder)
From: [personal profile] greghousesgf
I loooooooooooove Ras el Hanout! There is a store in Oakland that sells it. They have a lot of other interesting spices and blends but no Xawaash.

(no subject)

Date: 2022-03-28 05:41 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I'm not fond of couscous. I lean more towards East Asian - Chinese and Japanese cuisines seem to influence my style a lot, plus regular American food and fancy French baking. Maybe I lived in CHina or Japan in a previous lifetime.

Re: Yes ...

Date: 2022-03-28 07:04 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] acelightning73
I know how to make all sorts of rice dishes. I have also expermented with things like black/purple "forbidden" rice, and of course Native American wild rice. I have a recipe for chicken cooked in orange juice, and the purple rice looks really good next to it on the plate (I also stir-fry watercress and serve with it, because the bright green also looks nice.) And then there's always ordinary fried rice. I haven't tried quinoa, kasha, or any other grain, but I'll probably get around to it eventually.

(no subject)

Date: 2022-03-25 12:14 pm (UTC)
ashtoreth: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ashtoreth
Thank you for sharing this receipt; it sounds like the perfect dinner idea for this weekend.

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