For azleena, who requested this one. Thanks to everyone who has commented or is a follower of the blog. We appreciate your support!
Salata Mashwiya literally means roasted salad, and is known by that name in Tunisia and in western Libya. This salad doubles as a hot sauce, and is served with barbeques in much of the Arab world. When made for a barbeque, the vegetables are grilled over the fire while the meat marinates, and get that smoky distinctive barbeque flavor, but you can just as easily use the grill at home. The salad's color and thickness depends on the vegetables you use. Bell pepper in Arab countries is generally thinner, so you can use eggplant to thicken the sauce, grill it with the other vegetables and peel it to keep the color bright. Grilled eggplant is used in baba ghanouj and mtabal.
Ingredients:
5 medium tomatoes
3 large sweet bell peppers
2 medium onion
1 medium eggplant (optional )
2/3 medium hot chillies
5 garlic cloves
2/3 medium hot chillies
5 garlic cloves
1 tablespoons (freshly ground) caraway seeds
salt to taste
for decoration:
2 hardboiled eggs
olives and olive oil as needed
Prepare the bell peppers by cutting into thick equal strips, and cut the onions in half, or smaller, depending on size. You might also want to de-vein and de-seed the chillis at this point. Cut the tomatoes in half. If they are large, scoop out the insides into a bowl. This will keep them from becoming soggy. Set the pulp aside.
Heat a grill tray at 250 degrees. When the tray is hot, lay the vegetables on it. It should be hot enough that there is a sizzling sound. It has to be hot, and the vegetables have to be dry, so that you get the roasted taste, otherwise the salad will taste like steamed vegetables. Make sure you put the garlic cloves closest to you as they will need to be removed before the rest of the vegetables.
Remove the garlic cloves once they're done.
Take out the rest of the vegetables. Remove the overly burnt pieces.
Place in a processor. Add the ground caraway and salt. I like to add some of the raw tomato pulp to the roasted vegeatbles. If you like the salad with a chunky consistency, omit the tomato pulp and process just enough to blend.
Cut the hardboiled eggs into quarters. Garnish the salata mashwiya with pitted olives and drizzle generously with olive oil. Serve with mixed grilled meat and freshly baked bread.
Thanks! The salata meshwiya I have had here seemed to have eggplant in them, so I might add some eggplant to grill as well.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome :) Eggplant makes it thicker so I sometimes need to use it, but the colour is brighter without it. I prefer to peel eggplants when I do use them for the same reason.
ReplyDeletewonderful-even if I forgot the chili, so I added some piment d'espellete (and some sugar, I think this would not be necessary when you can purchase the vegetables in a hot country)---but still it is a great dish, together with hummous, baba ganoush, lebaneh and ftat, which I'm in the middle of cooking in :)
ReplyDeletea great saturday-night-dinner for the typical northern-german tv-evening ;)
thank you-I'm new on your blog and I love it!
Hi yael, thanks for visiting the blog, I'm really glad you're enjoying it. Hope the ftat worked out for you. Nice eclectic collection of dishes there, shami and maghrebi :)
ReplyDelete