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sprig of thyme

September 21, 2020

Homemade Lutenitsa/Домашна Лютеница

by Iglika in Bulgarian recipe, from scratch


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Sprig_of_Thyme_Homemade_Lutenitsa_Cover_2.jpg
 

 

September is here. The weather is changing, cool air is coming and the days are getting shorter. I love watching the sunlight in my little apartment and its slow transitioning from the early bright sunny mornings in June, to the hot mid-days in July and August, and the amber-colored late mornings in September. I find myself all the sudden needing a long sleeve shirt for my morning coffee walks, and my rain jacket now is permanently hanging by the door instead of somewhere in the closet. My body feels the change is coming, and I noticed that I have been a bit more jittery this season compared to previous years. I stay longer at the farmers markets, and I have been hauling a ton of farmers vegetables to my little kitchen and preserving them for the winter. My cooking is also different. I noticed my constant cravings for Bulgarian foods lately. And little by little, I am starting to realize that I miss home (Bulgaria). I miss it a lot. 

I usually visit home at this time of year, my mom, my friends, and my favorite Sofia. And due to life changes and the current pandemic, this year marks two years since I have been home. I miss the Bulgarian air. There is something different about it. My body and my senses always know when I am home. I feel it all over me as I walk on the streets of Sofia in late August and early September, inhaling the smell of roasted red peppers, cucumbers and parsley coming from the open balcony doors and kitchen windows. It smells like end of the summer, and like all the foods I think as quintessentially, summery and Bulgarian – shopska salata (cucumber, tomato, parsley and feta cheese salad) made with juicy heirloom tomatoes and crunchy cucumbers, kufteta na skara (mini burgers with parsley and onions), and roasted red peppers for lutenitsa (a spread of roasted red peppers, tomatoes and parsley). The flavors and the aromas of these foods are embedded in my bones, and my body craves them as the fall season approaches – year after year, no matter if I am physically in Bulgaria or somewhere else in the world.  

So today, I want to share with you my version of the recipe for homemade Lutenitsa. From all the Bulgarian dishes I listed above, this beloved spread has the most nostalgic and craving effect on me. And this year I decided to make loads of it for the winter days, using all the bountiful produce from the farmers market. If you are close to me, I probably fed you Lutenitsa which I make yearly by following this old recipe of mine (my mom’s recipe). So what is different this year, and why a new recipe? Well, I have noticed that my Lutenitsa from previous years tasted slightly bitter due to the store-bought tomato paste. So, this year I decided to embody my Bulgarian grandma and make a homemade tomato paste from scratch, taking advantage of all the sweet, ripe, beautiful (and super cheap) tomatoes from the farmers market.

So how did you make a homemade tomato paste? – you might ask. Here is how I did it: I got loads of Roma tomatoes from the farmers market, grated them on a cheese box grater (super low-tech, how amazing is that!), and cooked them down to s super thick sauce consistency. The process takes a little bit of time, however, most of the tomato cooking is off-hands, and all you need time and patience. In addition, this year I also added garlic to the Lutenitsa, and a bit more oil (olive oil + sunflower oil, for a depth of flavor), which made all the difference taste-wise. Bellow are some tips I discovered that helped me when making homemade Lutenitsa:


 

Type of the red peppers: I recommend using Italian red peppers. They are different from red bell peppers as they are longer, triangularly shaped (see photos below). Italian peppers also have more condensed sweet-peppery taste, and they contain far less water than red bell peppers. The water content is important when making Luitenitsa because the goal is to evaporate most of it. So less water in the peppers, means less cooking time for you, and thicker Lutenitsa. If you can’t find Italian peppers at the farmers markets, or at co-ops nearby, you can use red bell peppers but use less of them as they tend to be meatier.

Roasting the red peppers: When using Italian peppers I prefer roasting them whole. Italian peppers are less meatier than bell peppers, and thy can burn and dry much faster than bell peppers while under the broiler or the grill. 

The tomatoes: I like using Roma tomatoes as they also have less water and are meatier than other types of tomatoes. However, I love the richness and the sweetness that big heirloom tomatoes have, so I tend to use about 90% Roma tomatoes and 10% heirloom tomatoes. You can use entirely Roma tomatoes, just add a bit more sugar for balance. If you want to use other types of tomatoes rather than Roma, you have to increase the quantity of the tomatoes about 25% since other types contain more water, which will mostly evaporate during the cooking process.

How to thicken your Lutenitsa: I like adding boiled and pureed carrots to my Lutenitsa for two reasons. One: it adds sweetens and complexity to the flavor. Two: it helps thicken Lutenitsa really fast. If you are a person who absolutely hates boiled carrots, don’t worry – when mixed with the rest of the ingredients you won’t taste the carrots at all. I promise!

The Jars: Mason jars with twist off metal lids work the best for water bath . The glass jars with glass lids (found in the United States) will not work for Lutenitsa as they do not create a good enough vacuum seal, which will result in spoiled Luntenitsa and, many, many tears and frustration for all your hard work. The nice part of the metal lids is that you can buy new ones, super cheaply to replace each year. Having new lids (free of scratches and dents) when canning will ensure a perfect vacuum and a seal that could last for a month even without refrigeration. How clean your jars are is super important too. Make sure you wash them with soap and water just before ready for canning.

Canning Funnel: In my opinion canning funnel is one of the greatest inventions ever! It is super cheap and it helps from spilling the canning liquid everywhere around and all over the jars. Having clean jar necks is supper important while canning, as it will ensure good vacuum between the jar and the seal. 

Canning Time: Make sure that the temperature of the water bath is the same as the filled jars temperature. Also, make sure that the water bath covers the jars at least 1/2” above the top of the jars. This will ensure that the temperature around the jar is consistent bottom to top. My cooking time for 8oz jars is 10 min after the water starts boiling rapidly. 

How to store Lutenitsa: After the jars are vacuumed sealed the contents are good up to a year. I usually store my Lutenitsa in a cool dark place, like a basement, or even a closet or a cabinet in a box. Examine jars once a month to ensure the seals and the lids are holding up. 

Common problems: 
– “Help! Some Lutenitsa escaped the jars during the canning process and it is floating in the boiling water bath.”
– Turn the heat off, dump the hot water, let the jars cool down completely and examine them to see which lid might be leaking. Most of the time this is a one jar problem vs the entire batch problem. Usually this happens due to faulty lid, broken seal, or irregular jar neck. In those cases, place the content of the faulty jar in a new one with a new lid and start over with the canning process.

 
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Homemade Lutenitsa/Домашна Лютеница

Makes 4-6 (8oz) jars

Equipment:

• 4-6 (8oz) jars with new metal lids
• Canning funnel
• Jar lifter (optional)
• Large cooking pot (at least 5” deep)

Ingredients:

• 10 large, ripe Roma tomatoes (or 8 Roma, and 2 heirloom), about 2.5 pounds
• 10-12 Italian sweet peppers, about 2.5-3 pounds
• 1-2 tbsp sugar
• 1 tsp sea salt
• 4-5 garlic cloves, mashed
• 3 large carrots, peeled and boiled
• 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
• 3 tbsp sunflower oil
• 1 tbsp olive oil
• 1/2 - 2/3 cup chopped fresh Italian parsley


Directions:

Wash jars and lids and let them dry.


Tomatoes 

Wash tomatoes and cut them in half lengthwise. Take a shallow (pasta type) bowl, or a plate, place a box grater over (or inside) the bowl so the bowl can easily collect the tomato juices. Hold a tomato half cut side towards the box grater (see photo) and grate the tomato half on the large holes of the grater until the only part left from the tomato in your hand is the tomato skin. Discard the tomato skin and repeat with the rest of the tomatoes. You might have to empty the bowl when full of tomato juices a few times in a large cooking pot. When all the tomatoes are grated and juiced in the cooking pot, add the salt and the sugar, place the pot over high-heat and bring to a boil, lower the heat to a medium-high heat and let the water to evaporate naturally, about 2 hours. It’s important to keep the heat to a medium-height for the first hour during the cooking so the water can evaporate quickly. Stir tomatoes frequently, and after about 1.5 hours lower the heat to a low-heat to avoid tomato splashes over the stove top. Tomato sauce is thick enough when it is reduced to 1/3 of its original volume. Tested for thickness by running a spoon through the sauce, it should leave deep grooves. Turn heat off, place the lid on the pot to keep the tomato sauce warm, and set aside until you have the rest of your ingredients for the Lutenitsa all cooked, pureed and ready to go. If the rest of your ingredients are pureed and ready, keep the tomato sauce on the stove top on low and follow the directions under “Assembly” below. 


Peppers 

While the tomato sauce is simmering and thickening, wash and dry the Italian peppers. Arrange on a rimmed baking sheet (work in batches if needed), leaving at least 1/2 inch space around each pepper. Place peppers under the broiler (alternatively you can use the grill) and roast until their skin blisters and turns black. Check peppers every 3-5 minutes to make sure they are not burning. Turn peppers over when a side is blistered and with dark spots. Roast until all sides of the peppers are blistered and with black spots, 25-40 min depending on your oven type and broiler settings. Remove peppers from the oven and place in a large pot or bowl and cover tightly with a lid. Repeat with the remaining peppers, if any. Let peppers cool completely, the steam in the bowl/pot will loosen their skin. The skins should peel away off of the peppers easily when cooled. 

Peel the pepper skins, remove the stem and the seeds.  Seeds can be easily removed if the roasted peppers are cut open and the seeds are gently scraped with a spoon or back of a knife. Do not run peppers under water to clean, you’ll lose most of the roasted flavor that you worked so hard to get.  


Assembly 

Place as many peppers as you can fit in your food processor (using an immersion blender works well too). Pulse a few times until peppers are chunky and bumpy consistensy (not entirely smooth). Place the pureed peppers in the cooking pot with the thickened tomato sauce. Add the boiled carrots to the food processor and puree until smooth. Add pureed carrots to the pot with the tomato and peppers puree. Add the mashed garlic and balsamic vinegar to the pot with the rest of the ingredients (hold the paisley until the end), mix everything really well and add more salt, or balsamic vinegar per taste. At this point, if your mixture looks a bit runny or not quite thick, turn the heat on and simmer the mixture on very low heat for additional 10-15 minutes, stirring frequently, until the mixture looks thick enough. Add the chopped parsley, stir well and taste (I tend to love my Lutenitsa with lots of parsley, so I always add more, but you donut have to).


Canning

Take a clean jar, place the canning funnel on top, and fill the jar using a spoon. Make sure the jar is filled only to the point where the jar neck starts, don’t fill it all the way to the top. Wipe clean the jar top, otherwise it might not create a solid vacuum with the lid. Close the jar with a lid and make sure the lid is tight. Repeat the process with the remaining jars until no Lutenitsa is left. Sometimes the Lutenitsa will not be enough to fill one last full jar, in that case place the mixture in a smaller jar, or just enjoy the fresh leftover Lutenitsa with some toasted bread. 

Working in batches if necessary, place the closed Lutenitsa jars, standing up with lids up, in a large pot. Make sure that the pot is deep enough; you need at least 2 inches of space above the top of the jars. Fit as many jars as you can but make sure the jars are not touching each other. Fill the pot with water that is close to the temperature of the filled jars. Water should cover the jar lids by at least an inch. Bring the pot to a boil, lower to med-heat and simmer bubbling for 10 minutes (start timing after the water starts boiling). During the 10 minutes of canning make sure the water is bubbling but not super aggressive and splashing. Check the jars from time to time to make sure no jar is leaking.

After the 10 minutes of canning, pour the water from the pot carefully, it will be really hot! If some water is still left at the bottom of the pot that is ok, the most important thing is to be careful when pouring the hot water from a pot filled with jars. Let jars sit for 10 min to cool off slightly.  Using a jar lifter or a thick kitchen towel, carefully remove jars from the pot and place them on a kitchen towel. Repeat the sterilizing process with the remaining jars, if any.

Cool the jars completely and store in a cool place. Lutenitsa can be stored for up to 1 year. Refrigerate opened Lutenitsa jars, and consume within 10 days of opening.

Ways to enjoy Lutenitsa

• Spread on a buttered thick-crusted bread toast, and top with feta or goat cheese (Bulgarian style)
• Spread on burgers or sandwiches
• Excellent French fries dipping sauce

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TAGS: tomatoes, peppers, feta cheese, spread, appetizer, lunch, Vegan, Vegetarian


August 31, 2020

Roasted Eggplant with Harissa Sauce, Feta and Mint / Печен Патладжан по Марокански

by Iglika


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It’s the end of the summer, and the farmers markets near me are full of wonderful produce. There are so many vegetables to choose from and so much to be excited about, and often I find myself torn deciding what to cook this week. Zucchini! Potatoes! Tomatoes! Cucumbers! Peeeeepppppeeeers! Eggplant!!!!!

I’m not sure if you feel the same, but I often find myself with the dilemma of how much I love eating eggplant, but I don’t always like to cook it. It usually takes me a long time to cook an eggplant, and it’s one of those vegetables that you have to pair with something else because the eggplant on its own is not really that fulfilling. My usual go-to recipe for eggplant is either diced and sautéed for pasta, or pan-fried and smothered with homemade marinara sauce and lots of parsley. So, for today’s recipe I wanted to challenge myself to be creative, and do something different with the lovely eggplant.

And this brings me to my inspiration for the recipe – the amazing Harissa! For a long time I have been drooling over the fingerling potatoes at Tilia restaurant in Minneapolis, as they are served with a wonderful harissa sauce that’s nothing I had tasted before. Most store-bought harissa sauces have a pronounced heat and punch, and Tilia’s harissa is full of roasted peppers flavor, cumin, but without the strong, overpowering heat that blocks the other flavors. For many years I have been on a shortcut route by buying harissa sauces from ethnic stores and online, with the hope that at least one of them will be close to Tilia’s – but no success. So, frustrated and determined I finally decided to pull up my sleeves, put my apron on and attempt to recreate the flavors as I experienced them of what Tilia’s harissa sauce tastes like. 

So here I am, super excited to report that (I believe) I successfully nailed my dreamy harissa sauce! Yay!!! It blends roasted red peppers, tomato paste, lots of cumin, a touch of sweetness for balance, and the wonderful harissa spice blend from my new friends at Spice Your Life, who are as passionate about spices as I am about cooking and eating. I discovered Spice Your Life shop in Minneapolis by accident, and I was so fascinated by their story and how their love and passion for spices, combined with many years living and working in the middle-east had inspired them to bring that abundance to Minneapolis. I found kindred spirit in the founders, and we had many passionate conversions about food and its healing power, spices and recipes. ***This is not an ad for Spice Your Life. It is a genuine appreciation and reflection of people who love what they do, and who are so authentic in their expression of how they share their passion, and knowledge with their community. 

This recipe, with it's blend of spices and ingredients, transports me to the middle-east where spices are abundant and have the power to transform a simple vegetable to an explosion of aromas and flavors. Freshly ground cumin, hot and sweet peppers, eggplant, feta cheese, mint parsley, and a creamy roasted garlic yogurt sauce. Eating that dish makes me feel like I am enjoying a lunch at a tiny, plastic cloth-lined table at one of those colorful, busy spice markets in Morocco or Turkey. It is so full of exotic spices and flavors, and makes me want to buy a ticket to travel far, far east for a while and be immersed in unknown cultures. 

I hope that my rumbling and passion for harissa sauce made you a bit curious about what Iggy is excited about. So now...close your eyes, and imagine yourself being at my kitchen, sitting on my tiny table, sipping a glass of wine, chatting with me as you are being immersed in the wonderful aromas and flavors coming from my stove as I cook us lunch. Fragrant cumin, sweet roasted garlic, olive oil roasted eggplant, and fresh mint and parsley. 

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Roasted Eggplant with Harissa Sauce, Feta and Mint / Печен Патладжан по Марокански

Serves 4 (generously) or 6-8 (as a side dish)

Ingredients:

Roasted Eggplant

• 2 eggplants cut in half lengthwise
• Olive or Sunflower oil for roasting
• Salt and pepper

Harissa Sauce

• 1 jar (12oz) roasted red peppers, drained
• 1 tbsp tomato paste 
• 2 tbsp Spice Your Life (or a brand of your choice) Harissa Spice Blend
• 1 tsp cumin powder
• 1 1/2 tsp maple syrup
• 1 tbsp lemon juice
• 1 tbsp olive oil
• Salt

Roasted Garlic Sauce

• 1 large garlic head
• 1 cup plain, full fat, Greek or Icelandic yogurt
• 1 tbsp olive oil
• 1-2 tbsp lemon juice
• Salt and pepper

Toppings

• 2oz-3oz mild feta cheese (Israeli or French)
• Handful of fresh parley leaves
• Handful of fresh mint leaves

Directions:

Roasted Eggplant 

Preheat oven to 400F. 

Line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. 

Prepare the garlic for the yogurt sauce: Peel and discard the papery outer layers of the whole garlic bulb, leaving intact the skins of the individual cloves of garlic. Using a sharp knife, cut 1/4 to a 1/2 inch from the top of cloves, exposing the individual cloves of garlic. Place the garlic on a piece of aluminum foil, drizzle a couple teaspoons of olive oil over the exposed head, and wrap the garlic the foil. Place in the baking sheet.

Eggplant: Score the flesh of the eggplant with a knife in a diamond shape, cutting deep into the flesh but not through the skin. Brush eggplant flesh with olive or sunflower oil and season generously with salt and some pepper. Place eggplant cut-side down on the lined baking sheet and roast for 35-40 minutes, or until the back of the eggplant looks collapsed and puckered. Let the eggplant cool for 10 minutes before serving.

Harissa Sauce 

While the eggplant is roasting, place all the Harissa sauce ingredients in a food processor (or use an immersion a blender) and puree until smooth. Taste and add salt to taste, more lemon juice if needed, or more Harissa spice if you like it spicier. Place the sauce in a jar or a container for later. Makes about 1 cup (you will have some leftovers – wonderful on smashed potatoes, breakfast eggs, or as sandwich spread).

Roasted Garlic Yogurt Sauce

Allow the garlic to cool enough so you can touch it without burning yourself. Use a small knife cut the skin slightly around each clove. Use a cocktail fork or your fingers to pull or squeeze the roasted garlic cloves out of their skins. Place all roasted garlic cloves into the food processor bowl. Add the rest of the roasted garlic sauce ingredients. Wizz until smooth. Taste and add more salt, pepper or lemon juice.

Assembly

Use dinner plates or pasta bowls if serving individually, or a large serving platter if serving as an appetizer for a group. Spread the yogurt sauce (about 3 tablespoons of the for each eggplant half) and place eggplant on top. Top each eggplant half with about 2 tablespoons of Harissa sauce, large pieces of feta, fresh parsley and mint leaves. Finish by drizzling some olive oil and light dusting of Harissa spice. 

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TAGS: lunch, appetizer, eggplant, Vegetarian, yogurt


December 24, 2018

Turmeric Roasted Carrots with Carrot Top Pesto and Roasted Garlic Sauce

by Iglika


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Turmeric_Roasted_Carrots_Sprig_Of_Thyme_Blog_Cover_3.jpg
 

 

Days of sparkle, festive Christmas trees, buttery warm cookies, slow cooked foods that cover the entire house with a delightful aroma and make you jump out of the chair and go lick a spoon in the kitchen, steal a cookie or open the oven door to check on that roasting goodie that makes your mouth watering with anticipation. Busy house with fancy dressed family. Rushing people on the streets cozzied up with scarfs and mittens while caring bags of produce and presents. Passing strangers and neighbors wrapped in their scarfs, mittens and bags, nodding to say hello and smiling in this holiday togetherness. Colorful wrapping paper, long ribbons covering the living room floor as boxes and items are carefully wrapped, stacked and placed under the tree. 

Christmas to most of us is about family and traditions. Celebrating them. Recreating them. Making new ones. And this year, as with any other year that I have lived away from my family, I celebrate it – always, by making a wall tree out of Christmas ornaments simply because my apartment is waaaaay too small to fit a real tree. Recreate it – as I cook an odd numbers of vegan dishes on Christmas Eve. Make a new tradition – as I celebrate it with new “by Love” family eating Lasagna while hoping not to anger the Gods that I broke the tradition and the “rule” and ate meat and not vegan food on Christmas Eve. And coming up with new or revised traditional Bulgarian dishes because sometimes is hard to find the ingredients, and sometimes because as new life comes and asks me to renew, to be open, to change and to make something new while preserving the core.

So this year I decided to make, as always, the traditional bread with fortunes but with a new recipe. Make stuffed leaves, but rather than using ‘the hard to find’ grape leaves I am stuffing collard greens. And to make turmeric roasted carrots in place of the bean soup, not because I don’t like bean soup, in the contrary I LOVE it, but every year I eat too much of it (out of pure gluttony – hey, non of us is perfect) until my tummy hurts. So this year I decided to replace the soup with roasted carrots which I can eat by the loads without the belly ache.

Now onto the carrots. 

This recipe had fallen into my favorites box and which I have made a million times. Well, not that many times, but you get the idea of why something becomes my favorite – because it is insanely good and I crave it often. So why this recipe works? It is because the carrots are roasted with aromatics like turmeric and cumin. The cumin gives a middle eastern (and Bulgarian) flavor while the turmeric and the heat makes the carrots sweet and nicely roasted with that slightly brown exterior, soft but not mushy exterior and extremely sweet. The other part of the recipe that I love, even on its own or as an accompaniment to roasted potatoes, veggies or just to dip my bread are the carrot top pesto and the roasted garlic sauce. The carrot top pesto uses the entire carrot vegetable – the carrots, the leaves – yes, everything my friends. If you haven’t made or tasted carrot top pesto, let me tell you that it is so good that you might ditch your regular pesto and switch to this one, especially in the winter time when basil by the bunch is so expensive. This pesto has the same components as a traditional pesto but replaces the basil with carrot tops and handful of cilantro. The roasted garlic sauce is so rustic, full of flavor and easily addicting. It mixes roasted garlic with greek yogurt, lemon juice and olive oil that gives body and richness and it is whipped until smooth. When laid as a base for the roasted carrots and accompanied by the carrot top pesto is, in my perspective, is a match made in heaven and so addictive that it goes into the favorites box and to be made a million times.

Well, enough carrot-blabbing from me. I hope you have a very Merry Christmas with your family and loved ones. And don’t forget to celebrate your traditions, to recreate them and to make new ones as new life comes to you.

xoxo


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Turmeric Roasted Carrrots with Carrot Top Pesto and Roasted Garlic Sauce

Serves 4 (as a side dish)

Ingredients

For the Roasted Carrots
• 2 bunches of carrots scrubbed, tops trimmed to about 1/2 inch
• 1 tbsp cumin seeds
• 1 tbsp ground turmeric
• 1/4 tsp salt
• 3 tbsp olive oil

For the Carrot Top Pesto
• 1 bunch carrot tops (about 2 cups roughly chopped)
• 1/2 cup cilantro leaves
• 1/3 cup + 2 tbsp olive oil
• 1/4 tsp salt
• 3 tbsp lemon juice
• 1/3 cup chopped walnuts
• 1/3 cup freshly grated Parmesan
• 1 small garlic clove

For the Roasted Garlic Sauce
• 1 large garlic head
• 1 cup plain, full fat, greek or icelandic yogurt
• 1 tbsp olive oil
• 1-2 tbsp lemon juice
• Salt and pepper

Directions

Carrots

  1. Preheat oven to 425F.

  2. Cut the large carrots in half and leave small/skinny carrots whole. Toss them with the olive oil, turmeric, cumin and salt on a rimmed backing sheet. Prepare the garlic for the yogurt sauce: Peel and discard the papery outer layers of the whole garlic bulb, leaving intact the skins of the individual cloves of garlic. Using a sharp knife, cut 1/4 to a 1/2 inch from the top of cloves, exposing the individual cloves of garlic. Place the garlic on a piece of aluminum foil, drizzle a couple teaspoons of olive oil over the exposed head, and wrap the garlic the foil. Place in the pan with the carrots. Roast, shaking the pan occasionally, until the carrots are evenly browned and tender about 25 minutes. If your carrots are on the larger side, this might take a bit longer. If you like your carrots drier and sweeter (like I do) roast them for an attitudinal 15 minutes, but remove the garlic before doing that so it doesn’t burn. Remove carrots from the oven and set aside.

Carrot Top Pesto

  1. Rinse the carrot top greens to dislodge any dirt. Pick out and discard any dry, yellowed, or otherwise unappetizing looking leaves. Discard tough stems.

  2. Place the carrot tops greens, cilantro, garlic, olive oil, lemon juice and salt in a food processor or immersion blender. Pulse several times. Scrape the sides down with a rubber spatula. If the mixture is too thick and hard to work with, add 1-2 tbsp of olive oil or water. Add walnuts and Parmesan cheese and pulse or puree until smooth. I like my pesto really smooth, so I puree it on high for a long time until no chunks are left. Taste and add more salt and lemon juice. 

Roasted Garlic Sauce

Allow the garlic to cool enough so you can touch it without burning yourself. Use a small knife cut the skin slightly around each clove. Use a cocktail fork or your fingers to pull or squeeze the roasted garlic cloves out of their skins. Place all roasted garlic cloves into the food processor bowl. Add the rest of the roasted garlic sauce ingredients. Wizz until smooth. Taste and add more salt, pepper or lemon juice.

Assembly

Spoon 1-2 tbsp of the yogurt sauce on 4 individual plates. Place roasted carrots on top. Sprinkle few cilantro leaves (optional). Serve with the carrot top pesto.



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TAGS: carrots, Vegetarian, pesto, garlic, winter


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