Lentils
If you have ever had the sorry broth that passes for lentil soup, you
are probably neutral or slightly apprehensive toward lentils. This is a
better kind of recipe for lentils. It is not a recipe for soup. If you
know what good bean soup is like, this is sort of like that, but thicker.
And tastier. And you don't have to put any big fat squares of pork
fat in. Not that I have anything against big fat squares of pork fat.
Mmm. Pork fat.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup dry lentils
- 3 cups water
- 3 cloves of garlic
- 1 bay leaf
- 1 tsp ground ginger
- 1 tbsp cinnamon
- 1 tbsp lemon juice
- 1/8 tsp asafetida (optional)
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1/8 tsp pepper
- 1/8 tsp cayenne
- 2 tbsp olive oil
Rinse and drain your lentils. Chop up the garlic into little bits.
Add water, bay leaf, ginger, garlic, and cinnamon to lentils, and
set them to boil. When the mixture is boiling, reduce heat, cover,
and simmer about 40 minutes. Add the rest of the ingredients about 20
minutes after cooking starts. Uncover it after about 40 minutes and when you
are satisfied with the consistency (I like mine kind of sludgy) turn the stove
off and eat your lentils with rice.
Go back to the recipe index.
Go back to my home page.
The odour of Asafetida is stronger and more tenacious than that of the onion,
the taste is bitter and acrid; the odour of the gum resin depends on the
volatile oil. It is much used in India and Persia in spite of its offensive
odour as a condiment and is thought to exercise a stimulant action on the
brain. ... Owing to its vile taste it is usually taken in pill form...
---
Whoever
wrote this was weak.
Brian R. Gaeke