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  1. What Is A Ratatouille Recipe? - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Winter Ratatouille (With Option to Make Into a Great Appetizer!)
    Food.com
    I made this into an appetizer for New Year's Eve and it was a huge hit! I also had enough leftover ratatouille for a side dish the next day. This is a great, easy and healthy recipe. It is very versatile: adjust the veggies to your liking, make into an appetizer (see directions and note below), enjoy as a vegan main dish or serve as a side. *Oh, I just thought of another great idea, you could serve this over pasta...yum! **Please do look at my extra notes about olive oil amount and cooking time for the veggies. Both are personal preference and I noted what I like to do.**
    OMFGoulash!
    Food52
    I'm going to say right up front that this is a project, and while it can absolutely be assembled in a single session, it wouldn't hurt to consider dividing the labor over two days, or between morning and late-afternoon/early evening (i.e., around dinnertime). Not because it's particularly complicated--don't be intimidated by length of the ingredient list; it's mostly the contents of your spice rack--but because after the initial busywork, it's mostly waiting around for the meat to slow-cook at low heat over an extended period. And don't stews always taste better the next day? Anyway, the back story: I was home sick (read: hungover) from work one day about five years ago, trying in vain to find a Law & Order marathon on the tube, when I came across Good Eats on Food Network. The episode was "Beef Stew," and Alton Brown was preparing a goulash in a way I had never seen before. He took several pounds of English-cut short ribs and seared them on a griddle pan. Then he blended tomato paste, worcestershire sauce, cider vinegar, paprika, and herbs, and coated the browned meat in it. Then he sealed it in foil and cooked it in the oven for 4 hours at 250. The meat was then separated from its juices, which were refrigerated until a fat cap formed and could be easily removed (and saved). He then cooked onions and potatoes in a little of the reserved fat before returning the meat and de-fatted sauce to the mixture and stewing them together briefly to complete the dish. I became fascinated with this technique and decided to try adapting it to the classic Hungarian Szekely Gulyas, which is a pork and sauerkraut stew, usually seasoned with paprika and caraway, sometimes cooked with tomatoes and banana peppers, and always finished with sour cream. I've tried this method several times now, with varied cuts of pork including cheek, butt, shoulder, neck, belly, and sparerib. A combination of belly, butt, and neck has yielded the best results so far, so that is what I call for here. Some notes about esoteric ingredients: Lecso is like a Hungarian version of ratatouille. It's a stew of tomatoes, peppers, and onion, usually seasoned with garlic and paprika, and if you're into canning, it's a great way to preserve the late-summer bounty. (In the colder months, many Hungarian cooks substitute lecso for the out-of-season fresh tomatoes and peppers in their recipes.) It's admittedly not the easiest ingredient to source, but there are two varieties I have seen: the one by Bende is like a chunky sauce and has a sweeter, more tomato-y flavor than the Gossari brand, which is slightly more bitter and emphasizes the pepper flavor, while also having a higher oil content, which gives it good body when pureed. If you can't find either of these, stewed tomatoes make an acceptable substitute. But if you want to be really DIY about it (and have the basis for another meal altogether--lecso is really good cooked with smoked sausage and/or eggs), it's super-easy to make. These are good recipes: http://homepage.interaccess.com/~june4/lesco.html OR http://zsuzsaisinthekitchen.blogspot.com/2010/10/hungarian-ratatouille-lecso.html OR http://www.thehungarydish.com/lecso-recipe-guest-post-by-peter-pawinski/. The basic rule of thumb is a 2:1:1 (by weight) ratio of peppers:tomatoes:onions. Cook the onions (and garlic, if using) in a little lard or bacon fat until soft, then add some paprika to taste (do this off heat so as not to burn the paprika), then throw in the peppers and cook a few minutes before adding the tomatoes, salt, and pepper, and simmering until a saucy consistency has been achieved. As for which peppers to use, traditionally you'd use Hungarian wax, a mixture of sweet and hot to taste, but you can use banana, bell, cubanelle, green Italian frying peppers, whatever is available, basically. If you do make your own, you can omit the stewed tomatoes and banana peppers when finishing the goulash and substitute an equivalent amount of lecso. Dill seed is, yes, the seed of the dill plant, and it has a flavor reminiscent of caraway, but lighter. Information here: http://www.seriouseats.com/2010/11/spice-hunting-dill-seed-how-to-use.html As mentioned above, this is an adaptation of Alton Brown's "Good Eats Beef Stew" recipe, which can be found here: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/good-eats-beef-stew-recipe/index.html
    Pistou Bruschetta
    Food52
    If somebody were to accuse me of merely ratatouille-ing a Soupe au Pistou recipe and spreading it on some toast I wouldn't argue. The fact is, I'm not crazy about thin watery soups with little macaronis floating around. I want my veggies to sing with flavor and bite back a little in texture. So I guess my Pistou recipe isn't really a soup, but you know what? I'll stand by it. Hope you enjoy! - whatsjohneating
  2. Jul 22, 2021 · 1 hour 15 minutes. Jump To Recipe. This French Provencal-inspired traditional ratatouille recipe has all the summer veggie goodness going on with eggplant, zucchini, yellow squash, and sweet bell peppers simmered to perfection in a lively tomato sauce.

    • (163)
    • 249
    • Vegetarian / Vegan Entrees
  3. www.allrecipes.com › recipe › 18411Ratatouille Recipe

    Oct 18, 2023 · 15 mins. Cook Time: 45 mins. Total Time: 1 hr. Servings: 4. Jump to Nutrition Facts. This top-rated ratatouille recipe is full of color and fresh French flavor. What Is Ratatouille? Ratatouille is a French Provencal dish that consists of stewed vegetables.

    • Dinner, Side Dish
    • 4 min
    • 251
  4. Directions. Heat 1/4 cup olive oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat until shimmering, about 1 minute. Add the bell peppers, onion and 1 teaspoon salt and cook, stirring often, until the onions...

    • (47)
    • Side-Dish
    • Food Network Kitchen
    • 227
  5. Apr 28, 2021 · Ratatouille is a French vegetable stew that at first glance seems like a simple, humble dish. But made well, it punches well above its weight, a summery stunner bursting with Mediterranean flavours! The key to a great ratatouille is to sauté each vegetable separately before braising together.

    • (62)
    • French, Western
    • Light Mains, Main, Sides
    • 158
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  7. Apr 29, 2024 · Ingredients. for 8 servings. Veggies. 2 eggplants. 6 roma tomatoes. 2 yellow squashes. 2 zucchinis. Sauce. 2 tablespoons olive oil. 1 medium white onion, diced. 4 cloves garlic, minced. 1 red bell pepper, seeded and diced. 1 yellow bell pepper, seeded and diced. kosher salt, to taste. freshly ground black pepper, to taste. 28 oz crushed tomatoes.

    • 118
    • Meal
  8. Jun 6, 2023 · This easy ratatouille recipe is my take on the classic vegetable stew from Provence, France. Tomato, eggplant, zucchini, and bell peppers simmer with aromatics until they soften, release their juices, and become jammy and delicious. Ratatouille recipes traditionally call for a long, slow simmer.

  9. Nov 20, 2023 · Ratatouille. Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Cyd Raftus McDowell. In this classic Provençal dish, summer vegetables, like eggplant, onions, peppers, tomatoes and...

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