Moroccan-Style Pumpkin (With Lentils)

- Total Time
- 1 hour 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2tablespoons olive oil, plus a little more if necessary
- 1pound boneless leg of lamb, cut into 1-inch cubes and trimmed of fat
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 1large or 2 medium onions, roughly chopped
- 6cups 1-inch cubes pumpkin flesh
- 2teaspoons minced garlic
- 1teaspoon ground turmeric
- 1teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1teaspoon ground cumin
- 2fresh bay leaves
- ½cup dry white wine
- 2cups chicken, beef or vegetable stock
- 1½cups chopped ripe tomatoes with juices (canned are fine)
- 1cup lentils
- Chopped cilantro for garnish
Preparation
- Step 1
In a heavy pot with a lid, heat 2 tablespoons olive oil on medium-high heat. When hot, add the lamb; sprinkle with salt and pepper and cook until browned on all sides, 5 to 8 minutes total, stirring as needed. Remove the pieces of lamb to a plate and reduce the heat to medium.
- Step 2
If the pan is dry, add more oil. Add onions and cook, stirring occasionally, until soft, 5 minutes. Add pumpkin, garlic, turmeric, cinnamon and cumin; cook until pumpkin begins to soften, about 10 minutes.
- Step 3
Add bay leaves, wine, stock and tomatoes, and return lamb to the pan. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat and cook for at least 45 minutes on medium-low, partly covered. Stir occasionally; add more stock if needed.
- Step 4
Add lentils, and bring the mixture back to a boil. Adjust heat a simmer. Continue to cook, uncovered, stirring occasionally, until the lentils are tender and the liquid is thick, about 30 minutes. (If at any point it threatens to become too thick, add a bit of stock or water.) Taste, and adjust the seasoning. Remove the bay leaves, and garnish with cilantro before serving.
Private Notes
Comments
It's a Bittman recipe. He encourages people to play with his recipes. Maybe uselessness is in the eye of the beholder. And maybe it's not necessary to be mean about it.
I used butternut squash and doubled everything but the squash. Seasonings were onion, a lot of garlic, a good sized chunk of fresh ginger, a few cloves, about 10 crushed cardamon pods, two cinnamon sticks, a tsp. of cumin,
and 3 bay leaves. Sublime.
Mark mentions in his Kitchen Matrix cookbook that you can make this recipe vegetarian by substituting more pumpkin for the lamb. He says that a 4-pound pumpkin will yield about 8 cups of cubes. He recommends cutting the pumpkin just as if you were carving a jack-o'-lantern: cut a circle around the stem, then pull up on the stem and discard it. Using the cavity as a handle, peel the pumpkin with a sturdy vegetable peeler. Then cut the pumpkin in half and scrape out the seeds.
Use one acorn squash, butternut squash and honey nut squash. Doubled spices except for cinnamon per comments. Used mutton chops cut off bone. Used canned whole tomatoes cut up. Used yellow lentils that took so long to cook and still tasted dry to me when done but recipe was enjoyed for Xmas dinner.
The disastrous outcome of my attempt at making this recipe provides a lesson that not all recipes travel well - unless you really know local ingredients and the effects of altitude. I live at 6,200 feet in the central Mexican mountains. Pumpkin & brown lentils are different species here and cooking lentils takes longer. I should have pre-cooked the lentils and maybe roasted the pumpkin separately. I didn't know. Ended up with a terrible mush. Tasted pretty bland despite extra spices.
I made this vegan by cooking tempeh in olive oil with the tiniest bit of liquid smoke. I also added hot peppers. Added some nutritional yeast at the end of cooking as well. Very very good!
