Browsing Tag

Food

Show me the bunny

November 6, 2010

This vegetarian has a confession to make — I love bunny chow.

Wait. Before you call PETA, you should know that no adorable, fluffy animals were harmed in the making of this post.

Bunny chow is a curry-licious South African specialty, invented in the coastal city of Durban. The area boasts a large community of Indian people, which makes for some of the most mouthwatering, spicy food this side of New Delhi.

Nobody knows exactly how bunny chow got its name — though there are a few theories — but rest assured, the dish doesn’t actually contain Peter Rabbit. It’s basically just curry served inside an enormous loaf of bread.

While you can get meaty versions of bunny chow, I can’t imagine why anyone would. The vegetable curries are laced with spice, rich with fragrance and heat — and eating them won’t make bunnies cry.

This isn’t the recipe for the bunny chow I had in Durban — the chef said it’s a closely guarded secret, probably because it was made of hellfire and Satan’s tears — but it’s close enough to give you an idea. A very mild idea.

YOU’LL NEED

1 butternut squash, diced

2 onions, diced

1 head cauliflower, cut into small pieces

2 tomatoes, diced

2 sweet potatoes, diced

5 potatoes, diced

1 can chickpeas, drained and rinsed

3-4 red or green chilies, depending on how hot you like it

1 T. chili oil

2 T. garlic, minced

2 curry or basil leaves, chopped

2 t. curry powder (or more, depending on taste)

1 T. canola oil

1 T. salt

2 cups water

2 loaves of bread

WHAT TO DO

In a pot, heat the oil. Add the garlic, chili and onions. Fry for a few minutes, until onions turn slightly translucent.

Add the tomatoes and fry for three more minutes.

Add the potatoes, squash, cauliflower and sweet potatoes. Add water and basil/curry leaves. Make sure all veggies are submerged under water.

Add the curry powder and salt to taste.

When the water boils, turn it on a low heat and let simmer for 90 minutes, stirring occasionally.

If the curry is still wastery after 90 minutes, mash some of the potatoes and stir. Curry should have a stew-like consistency.

Cut loaves of bread in half. From each half loaf, carve out the middle, leaving some bread on the bottom to form a bowl.

Fill the hole with curry and serve with the portion of bread that was removed.

No bread? Just serve the curry with rice.

Serves four very hungry people.

 

Grape expectations

September 15, 2010

I can support anything that pairs drinking with an otherwise healthy activity. So when I heard it’s possible to bike from vineyard to vineyard in Argentina’s wine country, I was immediately up for the challenge.

In Mendoza, drunken cycling is not only allowed, it’s encouraged.

Deborah and I rented bikes from a tour company, Mr. Hugo’s Bikes, where we were outfitted with old-school BMX bikes. Someone thrust a map at us and we pedalled away.

Our first stop was Trapiche Winery. I decided that guzzling wine at 10 a.m. is perfectly acceptable when it’s in a place this swanky.

Besides, we were just doing what the adorable tour guide told us to do.

Trapiche’s big thing is that they make organic, biodynamic wine … which basically means they plant pretty flowers in between their vines.

Also, they have cows.

And, naturally, we sampled the fruits of their labor.

The remainder of the day was a blur of wine, vines and other assorted pretty things.

Altogether, we rode about 15 miles, which is admirable, given the not-quite-sober conditions.

It was the perfect way to see wine country. Even though we biked it, we still found time to sip back and relax.