Then my friend Tzippy took me to Shvil Izzim restaurant. We shared (among other things) the best shakshuka I've ever had. Sweet bell peppers in a flavorful sauce with fresh tomatoes and not too much spice. And the eggs! Not the baked-to-death eggs I'd experienced in my previous shakshouka history. Delicate, gently poached, with rich, runny yolks! And, of course, fresh bread to soak up all that rich tomato-y goodness. (See my post on Shvil Izzim and my photo restaurant review on Facebook.)
When I saw heaping piles of brightly colored, inexpensive peppers on sale, I immediately had an itch to recreate this traditional dish. Shakshuka is the perfect nonrecipe meal. You make it how you like it. I didn't use a recipe and I didn't have an Israeli (or Algerian or Tunisian) grandma to teach me how to make it. But whatever I did, it was yummy AND EASY!
First, a confession: I didn't use fresh tomatoes. Tomatoes are in season and so delicious. No matter how many I buy they get gobbled up! So, I didn't have any left by dinner time. You can definitely use fresh tomatoes, but starting with a base of pre-cooked tomato sauce is also a valid short cut.
Here's what I used:
- 3-4 orange bell peppers
- 1-2 green peppers
- 2 onions
- 3 cloves of garlic
- 1/4 finely chopped chili pepper (no seeds)
- 1-2 small packages of tomato sauce (no sugar added)
- tomato paste (optional)
- salt and pepper to taste
- mushrooms (optional)
- 5-6 eggs
- more chili pepper, cumin, coriander...
- I also put fresh chopped basil in near the end with more on top
- Chop and gently fry all fresh vegetables.
- Season to taste and add any pre-cooked tomato products.
- Simmer until sauce is to your liking.
- GENTLY drop raw eggs into the hot sauce and cover.
- Cook for a few minutes, just until the top of the eggs turns almost opaque white.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteyour link to Shvil Izzim restaurant was not correct. Would you mind fixing the link if you have one
I linked to my post on Shvil Izzim. I edited the post so that is clearer. Here is a link to information about the restaurant. http://www.israel-tours-hotel.com/id/Shvil-Izim-Dairy-Restaurant
DeleteDang darn! I love this food recipe. I'll eat it until the cows come home.
ReplyDelete