Smoky Lentil Stew With Leeks and Potatoes
Published Nov. 4, 2020

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups small lentils, such as Pardina or Puy (12 ounces), or use any size green or brown lentil
- 1medium onion, halved, plus 2 bay leaves and 2 whole cloves
- Kosher salt and black pepper
- 4 or 5medium potatoes, peeled and sliced ¾-inch thick
- 3tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling
- 2medium leeks, white and tender green parts, chopped in ½-inch pieces
- 1teaspoon chopped garlic
- 1large thyme or rosemary sprig
- 2tablespoons pimentón dulce or smoked sweet paprika
- ⅛teaspoon ground cayenne, or to taste
- Small pinch of saffron (about 12 strands), soaked in ¼ cup cold water
- 1cup chopped canned tomato with juice
- 2tablespoons sherry vinegar
- Chopped parsley (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Rinse lentils. Put them in a Dutch oven or large, heavy-bottomed pot and add 8 cups water. Pin a bay leaf to each onion half using a whole clove and add to the pot. Bring to a boil over high heat, add a large pinch of salt, then reduce heat to a simmer. Cook with lid ajar for about 30 minutes, until soft. Turn off heat.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, bring a medium pot of salted water to boil, and cook the potato slices until just done, about 10 minutes, then drain and spread out on a baking sheet to cool.
- Step 3
Put 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. When the oil is wavy, add leeks and stir to coat. Season with salt and pepper. Let leeks cook briskly, stirring frequently until soft but still bright green, about 5 to 8 minutes. Turn heat to medium, stir in chopped garlic, thyme, pimentón and cayenne.
- Step 4
Add saffron and soaking water, the chopped tomato and vinegar. Turn heat to high and let everything simmer for a few minutes. Pour contents of skillet into Dutch oven with lentils. Add the reserved potatoes.
- Step 5
Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer. Cook covered with lid ajar for about 10 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning, then cook for 10 more minutes. The lentils will be quite soft and the potatoes will start to break. Discard onion and thyme sprig.
- Step 6
Finish with a drizzle of extra-virgin olive oil and chopped parsley, if you wish.
Private Notes
Comments
Good flavor combinations, but seriously, 3 different pots? This needs exactly one pot. Cook onions, add potatoes and lentils, and other ingredients, and done.
Did all in one pot. Added six carrots, one yellow pepper. Used a little less than two tablespoons of Smoked paprika (two not quite full spoons). Used can of roasted tomatoes. Used coconut vinegar instead of sherry vinegar. Used dried thyme. Used Aleppo pepper instead of cayenne. Started with 1/8 teaspoon and ended up sprinkling more. Two cloves of garlic. Started with leaks. Added garlic. Then carrots. Then can of tomatoes. Then potatoes. Then lentils. Instead of 8 cups of water, I used 4
Nice, very flavorful stew. A few things: 1) I like stewed onions. Why would I remove one? It's delicious. 2) I'm done with discarding the green part of leeks, especially in stews. I pay by the lb for these things, so why throw them out? Trim off the frayed parts, Wash them. Slice thinly, and include with the rest. They're delicious. 3) Why peel the potatoes? 4) The saffron. I had it, so I included it. It was lost in this dish. I'll omit it next time. And, there will be a next time.
Delicious recipe in my opinion ! Cooked everything in one pot and added four crumbled merguez for some extra protein.
This stew was delicious and filled the apartment with a wonderful aroma. Made it just as written. Half recipe was plenty for two people with some leftovers.
Cooked with the prescribed number of pots and pans, which made things less stressful for some reason. Everything came out just right. Even used the frying pan to make croutons before cooking the leeks. It made a tasty dish gor the first meal, but developed more flavor by the next day. Due to tomato allergies, I substituted grilled peppers and ajvar sauce for the tomatoes, and used black beluga lentils because they were what I had. I did need to add extra salt and used a combination of smoked salt and natural vegetable bouillon powder. It’s a great winter dish which we will enjoy again
