Garden Vegetable and Chickpea Tagine
Aromas of Morocco emanate from the kitchen this summer with this veggie-full crowd-pleasing dish.
'Tis the peak season for the summer abundance, and while fresh salads and quick meals are definately on the menu, this veggie-full ragout-style stew brings an interesting pallet into play. Flavours from Morocco include warming digestive spices cumin, corriander and cinnamon as well as saffron. The stew is punctuated by the sweetness of cooked, dried fruits contrasted with savoury and salty olives. Add an edible flower flourish for maximum summer look.
Garden Vegetable and Chickpea Tagine
Total prep + cook time 45 minutes
Serves 6
Freezes well
I am in love with these Moroccan flavors! The warming spices are alternately punctuated by the salty olives and the dried fruit. Every bite calls for the next! Tagines are stews- named after the traditional clay pots they are baked in. Feel free to vary the vegetables in this. For a seasonal summer to early fall variation, I have added eggplant and zucchini as well as cauliflower.
The ingredient list is long-ish, but don’t be intimidated! It takes less time than you’d think once you round up the ingredients. I recommend doubling this recipe and freezing some of it for those too-busy-to-cook nights.
This recipe is developed for stove-top cooking, just to quicken the cooking time. It should be served with rice, couscous or quinoa.
Ingredients
2 Tbsp cooking oil (I like avocado or coconut, but olive oil is ok if you don’t over-heat it) |
1 medium onion, medium diced |
2 or more cloves of garlic, grated or minced |
1 thumb-length ginger, grated or minced |
1 cinnamon stick |
2 tsp ground coriander |
2 tsp ground cumin |
2 tsp paprika |
1 pinch saffron |
Salt and black pepper to taste |
2 large carrots, medium diced |
1 globe (Italian) eggplant or 2 smallish Asian eggplants, medium diced |
½ a head of cauliflower, cut into florets |
1 32 oz. can crushed tomatoes (NOTE: when buying canned tomatoes, look for BPA-free cans, or opt for jarred tomatoes instead.) You can sub fresh tomatoes. Use about 3-4 large tomatoes. |
About 1 cup water |
1 handful green beans (fresh or frozen are both fine.) or sub shelled peas (fresh or frozen) |
1 zucchini, cut into 1” wide quarter rounds |
1 ½ cups of cooked chickpeas (or a 14oz can or jar, rinsed) |
½ cup dried fruit. Prunes or figs (chopped) or golden raisins are nice |
½ cup pitted olives. Both black and green olives are good, or a mix. (I like the garlic-stuffed green ones, left whole) |
Parsley or cilantro to garnish |
Directions
·Wash and chop all veg, measure spices before you begin cooking. Starting your quinoa or rice now will time up nicely.
·In a large pot, slightly warm the oil and add the onions, stirring until they become translucent and fragrant.
·Add garlic and ginger as well as the spices.
·Stir in carrots, eggplant, cauliflower and chickpeas, seasoning with salt.
·Once carrots are slightly softening, add tomatoes, olives, dried fruit and enough water to just submerge everything (the end result is a tight stew, not a soup-y one.)
·Bring to a simmer, piercing the cauliflower to check if it’s tender.
·Add green beans (or peas) and zucchini, cooking until beans are just cooked (about another 2 minutes) and zucchini is softening.
·Taste and adjust seasoning with salt as needed and some black pepper.
·Serve over freshly cooked grains and garnish with herbs.
·Freeze the rest or love the leftovers (it’s even better the next day.)




