Blackened Grape Leaves with Olive Mint Chutney: Difference between revisions
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== Ingredients == | == Ingredients == | ||
* For the grape leaves | * For the grape leaves | ||
* | * 6 to 8 grape leaves (sold in a jar), drained, rinsed and patted dry | ||
* | * 1 3/4-to-1-pound round piece goat cheese, such as bucheron, at room temperature (or 2 smaller pieces, stacked) | ||
* 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for brushing | |||
* 2 sprigs fresh rosemary | |||
* Pinch of red pepper flakes | |||
* Kosher salt | |||
* Crusty bread, for serving | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* For the olive-mint chutney | * For the olive-mint chutney |
Revision as of 20:15, 10 September 2013
- Mentioned In: 1.29 - Sisters
- While acting as a waiter, Jason advises a customer at Kora's Inn to order this.
Recipe
- This recipe was found by Ty. At first, it was a standard stuffed grape leaves dish. However, because the recipe did not call for charring the leaves, this has since been changed. The chutney recipe was adapted from two different recipes- one for green olive chutney and another for mint chutney
Ingredients
- For the grape leaves
- 6 to 8 grape leaves (sold in a jar), drained, rinsed and patted dry
- 1 3/4-to-1-pound round piece goat cheese, such as bucheron, at room temperature (or 2 smaller pieces, stacked)
- 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for brushing
- 2 sprigs fresh rosemary
- Pinch of red pepper flakes
- Kosher salt
- Crusty bread, for serving
- For the olive-mint chutney
- 1 lb. cracked green olives; pitted & minced
- 1/2 cup of mint leaves, Optionally: separated from stems
- 1/4 cup of coriander leaves (Cilantro), Optionally: separated from stems
- 4 cloves Garlic; minced
- 1/2 fresh chile; minced
- zest of 1 lemon; minced
- 2 tbsp. capers; rinsed & minced
- 2 tbsp. olive oil
- 1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
Preparation
- For the grape leaves
- Step 1- Blanch the leaves.
- Bring 8 cups of water to a boil in a large pot, add juice of 1/2 lemon and the salt.
- Carefully unroll the leaves (do not separate them). Turn off the heat and place leaves in the hot water for 3 minutes.
- Remove leaves and place them in a bowl and cover with cold water. When cooled, drain in a colander.
- It is not unusual for many of the outer leaves in the jar or can to be damaged, or to tear while using. Set these aside to use later in the recipe.
- Step 2- Prepare the filling
- Soak the rice for 10 minutes in hot water and drain. (Alternatively, sauté the rice with the onion.)
- Sauté the onions in 1 tablespoon of olive oil until translucent, not browned.
- In a bowl, combine the onions, ground beef, rice, remaining olive oil, dill, mint, juice of 1 lemon, and pepper. Mix well by hand.
- Step 3- Filling and rolling the leaves
- Gently separate one leaf and place it shiny side down on a work surface.
- Place a pinch (up to a teaspoon) of the filling on the leaf at the point where the stem joined the leaf.
- Fold up the bottom of the leaf over the filling, then each side inward in parallel folds, and roll up the leaf.
- Roll should be firm, not tight, as the filling will expand during cooking. Repeat until all the filling has been used.
- Step 4- Cook the leaves
- Put a plate or wooden kabob skewers in the bottom of a heavy-bottomed pot (see tip below). The plate should fit as closely as possible to the sides.
- If there are unused leaves, or leaves that were torn and not used during the filling process, put them on the plate or on top of the skewers.
- Place the stuffed grape leaves on top, packing them closely together (not squashed), seam side down, so they don't unroll during cooking.
- Layer them until all are in the pot (2-3 layers is best, but no more than 4 layers). Place several unused leaves over the top.
- Take another plate and place it upside down on top of the stuffed grape leaves, with something to weight it down (a second plate works well).
- Add 2 cups of water to the pot and cover. Bring the water to a gentle boil, add the remaining lemon juice, reduce heat to low and simmer for approximately 50-70 minutes.
- Check to see if done. If the rice has cooked, they are done. If not, continue cooking for another 10 minutes and check again.
- Cooking time depends both on the type of pot used and the particular stovetop element.
- Step 1- Blanch the leaves.
- For the chutney
- In a bowl, combine the olives, garlic, chile, lemon zest and capers. Stir in the olive oil and black pepper.
- Wash the mint and coriander leaves in cold water, give them a rough chop, and add them to the other ingredients.
- Put into a blender and pulse to desired consistency.
- Serve on the side or poured over grape leaves.