About Yeish Kemach

My photo
Food is a powerful force. Beyond daily nourishment, it is a means for communal engagement, cultural celebration and creative expression. Jewish tradition teaches: Eem eyn kemach, eyn Torah. Eem eyn Torah, eyn kemach. * If there is no flour (sustenance) there is no Torah. If there is no Torah, there is no flour. (Pirkei Avot 3:21) Yeish kemach is translated as "There IS sustenance!" This food blog helps add this sustenance to your life. It is primarily designed around Jewish holidays, and is an interactive blend of Torah and Kemach. Posts will most often focus on a particular recipe or menu, including an explanation for how food brings Jewish tradition to life. Posts also allow for communal teaching and learning through the ending she'elah (question), which you are invited to answer. B'tei'avone!

Labels

Monday, October 24, 2011

Stuffed Peppers with Quinoa, Chickpeas & Raisins

I'd been dreading this night since the start of the holiday - the final night of Sukkot, also known as Shemini Atzeret.  Why the sorrow?  Sukkot is such a great holiday, and while I had moments of fatigue from all the standing, cooking, cleaning, I was sad to see it go.

Now, Shemini Atzeret is a point of confusion for most Jewish people.  Many haven't even heard of it.  Others can state with ease that Shemini Atzeret is the end of Sukkot/lead in to Simchat Torah ... but can't explain its meaning or origins.  Well, a literal translation indicates it is a "stop" (atzar) on the "eighth" (shemini) day.  Figuratively speaking, most rabbis explain that it is the winding down of the joyous harvest festival, and that on this occasion we stop our routine work and focus on the transition from Sukkot to Simchat Torah ... and into the rest of the Jewish year.

CULINARY CRESCENDO!  This is what Shemini Atzeret means to me, and so I invited a cohort of good friends for a vegetarian feast (vegan in fact, since one of my friends follows this extreme version of the vegetarian diet).

The featured item on the menu was an original invention - Stuffed Peppers with Quinoa, Chickpeas & Raisins.  Since this was the main course in a vegetarian meal, I figured quinoa and chickpeas would provide a sufficient amount of protein.  Borrowing from the flavor profile of a Moroccan-esque butternut squash stew recipe I love, I constructed a sauce with a rich tomato base.  I then built it up with the pungent Eastern spices of coriander, cardamom and cinnamon, and added some lemon juice, lemon rind and golden raisins for an acidic, tangy twist.  I didn't use vinegar when I made it, but have included it in the recipe below.  To add some green color I threw in some sauteed spinach.  The result was excellent,  BUT it must be seasoned adequately with salt and pepper to make the flavors pop in an otherwise bland quinoa.  It was delicious, and very well received!


The full menu included:
Now - that's what I call a harvest feast!

STUFFED PEPPERS with QUINOA, CHICKPEAS & RAISINS

Serves: 8

Ingredients 
1 cup quinoa
2 cups vegetable stock or water
1 Tbsp. olive oil
½ cup onion, chopped
8 oz. fresh spinach
15 oz. can diced tomato or tomato sauce
1 cup chickpeas (either canned or dried peas that have been soaked overnight)
2 tsp. ground cardamom
2 tsp. ground coriander
2 Tbsp. red wine vinegar
1 Tbsp. lemon juice
1-inch piece lemon rind
1 cinnamon stick
½ cup golden raisins
Freshly ground salt and pepper
8 peppers, tops cuts out and seeded
Olive oil spray

Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 375° F. 
  2. Prepare the quinoa:  Wash the dried quinoa two or three times with water.  Put quinoa in a pot with the water or vegetable stock.  Bring to a boil, and then simmer 15-20 minutes until the liquid dissolves.  
  3. Saute onions in olive oil for 10 minutes over medium-low heat until translucent.  Add spinach and sauté until wilted.  Sprinkle with a pinch of salt and pepper.  Add tomato, chickpeas, cardamom, coriander, vinegar, lemon juice, lemon rind, cinnamon stick and raisins.  Bring mixture to a slow boil, and then reduce heat to simmer for one hour.  Remove lemon rind and cinnamon stick.
  4. Meanwhile, place the hollowed peppers in a baking pan propped up right.  Sprinkle with salt and pepper, and spray with olive oil.  Place pan in pre-heated oven and roast for 40 minutes   
  5. Pour sauce onto quinoa and salt and pepper to taste!   
  6. Divide quinoa mixture amongst the peppers, and return peppers to oven for another 15 minutes. Serve and enjoy. 
SHE'ELAH: One of the customs of Shemini Atzeret relates to a change in liturgy in the Jewish tradition. At this point in the calendar we start praying for "geshem" or "rain."  Sometimes we cannot count on a sufficient amount of rain to last us a year.  What is something you can do to preserve water?

    No comments:

    Post a Comment