Description
AKA chocolate beans. They do it in Mexico! Well they put in on turkeys in Mexico. I contrived this delicious, unusual dish in Australia after impulse buying a bottle of red wine ‘with a hint of natural chocolate’ (Chocolate Cellar from the McLaren Vale). A couple of sips in and it was hard to prevail. We abandoned it for a nice bottle from the Barossa Valley with only an almost imperceptible (and no added hint of) chocolate flavour.
Determined not to waste the unfortunate purchase, I turned it into a delicious mole sauce with beans in place of the traditional dead birds, it went down a storm. You may not be able to get hold of chocolate wine; ÉG dont mæli með að reyna mjög erfitt,en. Add a few squares of dark cooking chocolate to taste. Serve with plenty of plain brown rice, no more strong flavours needed. Very experimental, serendipitous, delicious.
Innihaldsefni
skvetta af matarolíu
er laukur, diced
teskeið af þurrkuðu cumin fræ
2 teaspoons of dried chillies (this makes a medium hot sauce, add more or less to taste)
2 negulnaglar af hvítlauk, smátt söxuð
250cl (a third of a bottle) of red wine
a few squares of dark cooking chocolate
matskeið af soja sósu
the juice of a lime
a teaspoon of tamarind paste
matskeið af Agave nektar
3 matskeiðar af tómötum mauki
salt og pipar
a 400g (14 aura) tin of mixed beans
half a head of pak choi coursley chopped
fresh coriander to garnish (valfrjálst)
Instructions
Sweat the onion in a splash of oil with a pinch of salt until softened (up to 10 mínútur)
Add the cumin seed and dried chillies
Bætið hvítlauk, stir and leave for a couple of minutes
Add the wine, agave nectar, soy sauce, tómatur mauki, tamarind paste, a few good grinds of black pepper and lime juice
Add the beans
Stir well, bring to the boil and simmer and reduce for about 20 mínútur, stirring occasionally until its a delicious thick sauce
Add the pak choi, stir through and simmer on a low heat for anothr 10 mínútur
- Prep Time: 10
- Cook Time: 40
- Category: Dinner
- Aðferð: Boil and Sautee
- Cuisine: Mexican