We are a collection of Minneapolis folks cooking, preserving, and harvesting local, seasonal foods. This blog-share is meant to inspire greater culinary genius, as well as continued local food invention. What are YOU concocting in that kitchen of yours?

10.05.2022

Babotie (South African "meatloaf")

I stumbled upon Boboti after having planning to make meatloaf, only to be completely uninterested at the idea when the meat was thawed. An internet search lead me to the South African dish Bobotie, which will now replace standard meatloaf, at least for the foreseeable future.  It is SO good - the topping, more like the whipped potatoes in a shepherd's pie, is actually a savory egg custard. It is light and creamy and so perfect on the meat pie. The spicing is what does it though: tangy tamarind and lemon zest, with coriander and turmeric and curry. It is really quite the star dish. 

After perusing many, many recipes, I mainly modified the recipe from African Bites, subbing almond flour and cornmeal for the bread. I also just made up my own chutney using tamarind paste, a date, some dried sour cherries, a spoonful of apricot preserves, some fermented jalapenos and a splash of fish sauce. I also increased added some ginger and  increased the garlic in the main dish, rather than make more for the chutney. If you have chutney on hand, that would work, but really you can throw whatever you have together and make your own. Mine was not sweet, and instead more tangy from the tamarind, which I really love. Reading the variety of recipes makes me think that you can take some liberties with spicing. I was low on curry powder, so added in some Ras El Hanout (Moroccan spice mix).

Traditionally this would be served with yellow rice and vegetables (according to African Bites), so I made some rice, perhaps a little more Ethiopian style, and collards, and it was perfect. I ate this over the course of a week and it was delicious every time. Yum. 

Meat mixture
2 T butter
2 med onions, finely diced
2 T garlic
1+ T ginger
1/2 c almond flour or cornmeal, or a combo
1/2 c milk
1 1/2 T curry powder
1 tsp turmeric
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp coriander
2 pounds ground beef (or do half pork half beef)
1 1/2 T dried thyme/basil/oregano
1 large apple, grated
1/3-1/2 c fruit chutney
1/4 c raisins (optional) *I added a handful of dried sour cherries
1 lemon, juice and zest
salt and pepper to taste
 
Savory egg Custard topping
3 eggs
5-6 bay leaves or kafir lime leaves 
1/2 c cream
1/2 c milk

Instructions
  • Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees.
  • In a medium bowl, mix together milk and cornmeal/almond flour. Set aside. 
  • Lightly grease a 9×13-inch baking dish, or a cast iron.
  • Heat up a large saucepan or large skillet over medium heat, add butter until melted, followed by onions, garlic and ginger. Saute for about 3 minutes just until soft and fragrant.
  • Next stir in the spices: curry powder, turmeric, ground cumin, coriander and dried herbs.
  • Add ground beef, stirring constantly to break it up, cook until beef is no longer pink or slightly brown. Remove from the stove.
  • Add to a bowl, followed by flour/milk mixture, chutney, grated apple, and lemon juice and zest  – add raisins here, if desired. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
  • Add beef mixture into greased casserole dish or cast iron pan. Using a spoon press the beef mixture down. (This will help keep the eggs mixture afloat and form a nice custardy top when baked.)
  • Bake in the oven for 40-45 minutes.
  • While bobotie is baking, mix together eggs, cream, milk and a ¼ teaspoon of turmeric, plus a little salt.
  • Take the meat out of the oven, pour the eggs mixture over the beef. Arrange the bay leaves (or kaffir lime leaves) on top of it .
  • Bake for another 20 minutes (start checking after 15 minutes ) or until the eggs mixture has set.
  • Remove and let it rest for a few minutes then serve with yellow rice* and vegetables.

8.30.2022

Scrapple

Scrapple! How I have not thought to make this before is a wonder to me, as it combines all kinds of things I love - liver, bone broth, and I used wild rice along with cornmeal - all in a breakfast sausage/toast kind of thing. It is so good! Good enough to resurrect a blog post. Because of the collagen-y broth, this sets (and keeps) in the fridge, so you just slice off a piece and then fry it up.

I mostly followed Forager Chef's recipe, but Hank Shaw at Hunter, Angler, Gardener, Cook has a nice looking one for the more traditional pig head scrapple. I don't know if my farm could get me a pig head, but might be fun to try. Scrapple seems fairly flexible, and I almost always have liver and bone broth around, which makes this pretty easy. For this first attempt I used a pound of goat liver and 3 slices of bacon (because it is what I had in the fridge), though any bits of leftover meat would do. You could start the whole thing from scratch following their recipes if you have meaty bones/a pig head. 

Liver (or organ) Scrapple

  • 3-4 slices bacon
  • half small onion, diced
  • 16 oz lamb/goat/chicken livers (or a mix of livers/hearts/kidneys)
  • 4 c bone broth (you need the collagen!) 
  • 1 T salt
  • 1 c cornmeal (fine or course)
  • 1 c wild rice flour (ground wild rice)
  • 1/4 c buckwheat flour
  • 3/4 tsp pepper
  • 1/4 tsp allspice
  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp cinnamon
  1. Prepare a loaf pan: I recommend using tin foil, parchment, or wax paper under/along the sides of a greased pan so that you can easily lift out the scrapple. Or, just grease the loaf pan and have at it. 
  2. Cook bacon slices and render out the fat. When bacon is done, brown the onions in said fat.
  3. In a food processor, process the liver (or offal) with bacon and onions and grind to a paste. (This is kind of weird b/c the offal is raw.) Put this mix into a small saucepan and cook for several minutes to sweat off the excess moisture. It will probably stick to the bottom of the pan, so stir as you go. 
  4. Whisk the flours and spices in a large bowl.
  5. In a large saucepan or pot, heat the bone broth and whisk in the flours. Keep whisking until it starts to thicken. Turn heat to low, and stir regularly for 15 minutes, then add the meat mix and cook another 30 minutes, stirring regularly so it does not stick OR put the whole thing in the loaf pan and cook in a 300 degree oven for 30 minutes. **I was too afraid of all the sticking, being as my mixture was so thick after 5 minutes with just the rice and cornmeal. So I added everything in then and there and stuck it all in the oven for 40 minutes. Alan Bergo says to bake it covered, but I found mine needed to be uncovered halfway through.
  6. When the scrapple is fairly solid and the cornmeal/wild rice is well cooked, "pour" (more like spoon) the mixture into the greased loaf pan. Chill the pan, uncovered on the counter until room temperature, then refrigerate, covered with plastic wrap, until completely set before slicing.

Serve with eggs and whatever you like. Many people eat this with maple syrup, a la bacon and pancakes. I thought it was delicious as a conduit for runny eggs.