Tray Bake Ratoutoille with White Beans and Smoked Almond Fetta Crumb šŸ€

in #hive-120586 ā€¢ 2 years ago

Every now and then I crave ratoutoille, a traditional French casserole made with eggplant, zucchini, garlic, tomatoes and herbs. When I read @attn's recipe for it last week, I eyed my vegetable crisper and noticed I had all the ingredients - and given it was a cold, rainy day, a hot winter stew was definitely in order.

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People will tell you all kinds of ways to cook it, and to be honest, it can be complicated if you want all the vegetables to be done to the same consistancy - no one wants hard potatoes and mushy squash. But I do it a little differently, adding most of the vegetables to a oven proof tray first, before adding the tomatoes. I also add two secret ingredients - smoked paprika and olives - and instead of potatoes, I add white beans. Given it's all in the one tray, there's very little mess.

My secret ingredient is smoked paprika. I don't think I make a tomato dish without it. It gives a lovely richness to the dish and is very common in any Spanish cooking. I've had this tin for nearly twenty years and just top it up at Wholefoods. It's so essential in my kitchen that it's above the cooktop with the salt and pepper.

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The first thing to do is chop your vegetables into chunks. I find eggplant, zucchini and capsicum take reasonably the same amount of time cut into cubes, and to be honest, I like my eggplant roast so it's creamy. You can also add chopped onion, garlic, salt, pepper, and a ton of smoked paprika. Sprinkle liberally with olive oil. I also add a pinch of chilli flakes, but of course this is optional.

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Now as you know I'm a massive fan of fresh herbs, and thyme is just great with tomatoes (and potatoes, and mushrooms!). I add a few twigs to the dish as the leaves will fall off as it cooks and I just remove the twigs later. It's so easy and simple to do it this way!

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The vegetables go into the oven at about 220 C for about half an hour. I then check and stir, and when the vegetables are done, I add a liberal handful of black olives, a can of tomatoes, and a can of white beans. The dish then returns to the oven for another twenty minutes or so, so that the flavours all fuse together.

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Then I make a crumb out of smoked almonds and fetta. If I'm feeling particularly cheesy I add a little parmesan as well as I love it's sharp flavour. It's basically half fetta, half almonds (say a cup) whizzed up in the blender. That gets sprinkled on top and then back into the oven for another ten minutes or so. Voila!

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It's delicious in a bowl served with crusty bread, or even without bread - and so easy and flavoursome.

I must apologise for this final blurry photo, but it's still winter in Australia, sos by the time dinner is on the table, it's quite dark and the lighting is understandably terrible! I sprinkled a little extra parmesan on mine as well as I find it hard to resist!

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I mean, people do some pretty fabulous versions of it - look at this gorgeously presented plates from Unsplash below! But you get the premise, right? Courgette, aubergine (zucchini and eggplant if you're in the US), tomato, garlic - marriage made in heaven.

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How do you make ratoutoille? What's your favourite one tray dish?

With Love,

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That looks yummy. We experimented with ratoutoille when we were flooded with zucchini earlier this season. I know our gardens are out of sync (north/south hemisphere), I didn't think about our recipes being out of sync šŸ˜

Zucchini pie, zucchini fritters, grated zucchini, zucchini noodles, zucchini fritters, zucchini cake, zucchini muffins, frozen zucchini, dried zucchini, fried zucchini, barbecued zucchini, zucchini juice, zucchini smoothies, zucchini roasted, baked, fried, zucchini and cheese scones....................

The title made my mouth water.
I can only imagine throwing the smell and taste on top of that..

Yes it's really good.

As I have a massive pile of zucchini on my counter and about 300lbs of tomatoes lurking in my laundry room, the title of your post snagged my attention hard. But then....you said the magic words, smoked paprika, olives, and feta!

Good grits and gravy! That tray bake made me quite literally drool, um YUM!

Now, I know what I'll be having for dinner tonight, thank you so much for sharing such splendid cuisine inspiration!!

Oh let me know if you make a version of it!

I like all the vegetables you used for your recipe, it looks delicious

Feels like one of those 'Nailed It' shows - your version vs the Unsplash one.
In which case, there's only two words I can say.

Nailed it.

The meal looks like it would taste fab; I'm partial to a stew myself!

Thanks mate, yeah it's a good one. Hope you are keeping dry up there. Still stew and casserole weather down in Vic.

I hear you... smoked paprika and tomato dishes... yum! We just used our last bit of smoked paprika, so we will have to go on a mission again to find it. Not an easy task here. But we have some friends returning from Europe, so I am hoping they can bring me some.

Love the ratatouille. Haven't had one for ages. Would be perfect on this tropical rainy day but I got a Morrocan-inspired stew with preserved lemons in mind for today.

Have a beautiful day!

That looks utterly scrumptious. Itā€™s so true that the veggies need to be prepped to end up at the correct consistency. Yummy, šŸ˜‹ YUM!

Oh yes it's delish! I might make it again this week, weather is windy and cold!

aubergine (zucchini and eggplant if you're in the US)

Or brinjal in South Africa or the UK...

I do ratatouille a lot in season. You asked how I make it: I thought I'd done a post on it, specifically, but haven't. I have [four posts] that refer it it in different ways and different ways I do it. My recipe(s) don't include potatoes. That said, your addition of beans and olives - and smoked paprika - is making me think.

I cannot wait for all these veggies to be back in season - this is one of my (many) favourites!

Oh they call it brinjal in SA? I thought that was an Indian thing and I never heard it called brinjal in the UK unless it was an Indian dish. Interesting!

Yes it's meant to be a hearty one pot dinner with beans and/or potatoes. The beans are extra protein for us too. Sometimes black beans or actually many beans work well! Yeah, I can't wait for them to come out of my garden either!

It is, and all of the above - in South Africa. My parents were British and spent years in East Africa so our calling it brinjal could be connected with the Indian connection there šŸ¤·ā€ā™€ļø

That looks great and appetizing, it is a great recipe, I recently tried it, but I failed, because I could not get it to be tidy and without falling apart when I put it on the plate, I do not know how they do it, however, in the end the important thing is the taste, right?

Looks delicious, l was making piles of in in the summer, my version varies depending on whatā€™s ready to pick, I also use beans rather than potatoes, we love it.
Iā€™ll take a nice crusty bread to please šŸ˜ƒšŸ‘

Oh yes, seasonal recipes are great and how good are beans!