Tajine of Sweet Potatoes and Prunes Recipe


sustainable sweet potato tajineA vegetarian slow-cooked casserole with a fine Middle Eastern blend of flavors.

Sustainable cooking means healthy food from local sources and  fair worker’s wages. Sustainable agriculture not only maintains, but also enriches the natural resources that our food supply depends on. Join Green Prophet as we tour the Middle East region offering the quintessential sustainable dishes each country has to offer. Today, visit Israel.

Multicultural Israel’s cuisine changes almost daily. It’s a tasty process of evolution as each of its dozens of ethnic streams contributes to the heady cooking pot. The early French and Italian influence over fine dining slowly gave way to flavors  that people know from home, and from North Africa in particular. Today, many chef’s restaurants feature traditional North African dishes like beef head meat with chickpeas or stuffed artichokes in piquant sauces that emigrated straight out of their grandmothers’ kitchens.

But not everything need be meat-based. The country has the largest number of vegans per capita in the world. With the abundance of produce available (and see our February seasonal produce post here), it’s only natural to concoct delicious things out of vegetables in season. Sweet potatoes and carrots are fat and hearty right now. Combined with the mild tartness of prunes, they make an excellent late-winter dish to serve with rice and a leafy salad. You may substitute smen preserved butter for ordinary butter if you wish.

Tajine of Sweet Potatoes and Prunes

Serves 4-6

Ingredients (try sourcing organic food when you can)

3 tablespoons olive oil plus 1 of butter

1″ slice of fresh ginger root, chopped fine or grated – or 1 teaspoon powdered ginger

1 small cinnamon stick or 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

16 shallots (or 3 small red onions, peeled and quartered)

2-3 medium sweet potatoes, around 700 grams – 1- 1/2 lb. total

2 medium carrots

175 grams – slightly less than 1 cup pitted prunes

1 tablespoon dark honey or silan date syrup

2 cups hot vegetable stock or water

1 small bunch cilantro (coriander leaves), stems removed and leaves chopped

2 tablespoons fresh mint, chopped

Salt and black pepper to taste

Make Israeli vegan tajine

Peel the shallots and leave whole. Peel the sweet potatoes and carrots and chop into bite-sized pieces.

Heat the oil and butter, if using, in a tajine or heavy-bottomed pot. When the fat is hot, add the ginger and cinnamon. If using ground spices, stir to prevent burning and lower the heat.

Add the shallots. Allow them to color slightly, then add the sweet potatoes and carrots. Cook for a few minutes, stirring, until the vegetables start to soften.

Add the prunes and honey, stirring them in.

Add 1-1/2 cups of the hot stock, and bring all to a boil. Lower the heat so that the liquid barely simmers. Cover and cook for 1/2 hour, stirring once in a while. Moisten the vegetables from the reserved 1/2 cup of stock if necessary.

When all the vegetables are tender, add half the cilantro and mint. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Keep the pot uncovered and let the juices reduce to a syrup –  another 3-5 minutes’ cooking.

Before serving, scatter the remaining cilantro and mint over the top.

Serve right away, and enjoy!

More delicious and sustainable Middle Eastern foods on Green Prophet:

Photograph by Miriam Kresh.

Miriam Kresh
Miriam Kreshhttps://www.greenprophet.com/
Miriam Kresh is an American ex-pat living in Israel. Her love of Middle Eastern food evolved from close friendships with enthusiastic Moroccan, Tunisian and Turkish home cooks. She owns too many cookbooks and is always planning the next meal. Miriam can be reached at miriam (at) greenprophet (dot) com.

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