Gardening Magazine

The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – Chermoula

By Gardenamateur

Every day this month I am looking back on the 10 years since I started this blog in June, 2008. Part 16 is this one — Chermoula — from May 2010. Over the years I've done occasional cookery postings, and this is one dish I still love to make from scratch, starting the time-honoured way with a mortar and pestle.
With more than a week of relentlessly wet weather drenching the garden and ruining that kind of fun, there is but one thing for this boy to do – cook! But something new, something different. For our 20th wedding anniversary last year, Pammy bought me a lovely Scanpan Tagine plus a big, beautiful Moroccan cookbook, and that's where I went to for inspiration. Hmmm, "chermoula" – a classic North African spice/herb blend – that sounds nice. I have most of the ingredients either in the pantry or growing in the garden. Let's go.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaI'll give the recipe at the end, but here it is in its prettiest stage, just after I added ground cumin, paprika and cayenne pepper to the garlic. But I am already getting ahead of myself.

The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaHere's the makings of my chermoula. Coriander, parsley and lemon (all home-grown), garlic, paprika, cumin, cayenne pepper, olive oil, and mortar and pestle.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaOops, forgot to mention the salt. In fact the salt is a magic ingredient, as it helps to turn garlic to soft mush with just a few thumps of the pestle. It's just like a little chemistry lesson on its own, the way salt disintegrates garlic.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaThen you add the three spices mentioned earlier.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaThen add chopped parsley and chopped coriander, plus some lemon juice, then at the end, some olive oil.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaTraaa daaaa! Chermoula. It wasn't that hard to do, but the trick is to not add all the bulky parsley and coriander in one go. I added it in small batches and it quickly pounded down. Total time taken to pound it all down to a paste was about 5 minutes. Good village-style peasant work, and good rainy-day work, too. I suppose you could do it all in a blender, but it wouldn't come out like this, with the little chunky bits here and there.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaThe next step is to coat the "meat" with some of the chermoula. This in fact is a beautiful fish called Bass Grouper (it's similar to blue-eye cod). It comes as big, thick steaks from which I remove the bones, then cut it into chunks. It holds together beautifully in cooking and remains moist, never seems to go dry. However, this recipe would work equally well with other meats, such as chunks of chicken or pork, for example.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaNext, the vegies. Here, I cut up slices of potato, red and yellow capsicum, zucchini, and tipped in a can of diced tomatoes, then stirred in the remainder of the chermoula and a few leftover scraps of parsley and coriander.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaBig spoon to toss all the vegies together, plus a grind each of salt and pepper, and a drizzle of olive oil.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaAny casserole dish will do, of course, but I do think my tagine looks snazzy.
The 10-Year Rewind – Part 16 – ChermoulaInto the tagine I scooped in half the vegies to layer the bottom, then covered these with all the fish (which had been marinating in the chermoula for the half-hour it took to prepare all the vegies), then I covered the fish with the rest of the vegies. Lid on. Bake one hour at 180°C (350°F) and it's ready. Serve with couscous on the side.
Halfway through eating it, I said to Pam: "Oh oh, I forgot to take a photo of the finished dish". So you'll just have to imagine the results. It tasted yummy, though. Anyway, here's the amounts for the chermoula. As for the vegies, I just made all that bit up as I went along.Chermoula2 garlic cloves, roughly chopped1/2 teaspoon salt3 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley3 tablespoons chopped coriander (cilantro)2 teaspoons paprika2 teaspoons ground cumin1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper1 tablespoon lemon juice2 tablespoons olive oilMethod: pound the garlic with the salt until mushy, then add the paprika, cumin, cayenne pepper and lemon juice to make a paste. Then add the parsley and coriander in batches, and pound until reduced in bulk. Finally, work the olive oil into the mixture in stages, until blended nicely.(For Aussie readers, this recipe is from the excellent book, "The Food of Morocco" by Tess Malloss, published by Murdoch Books, ISBN 9781741960341).

Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog

Magazines