or 'things to eat that don't have dead stuff in them'

Monday 27 April 2009

roast beetroot, sweet potato and haloumi salad

This is the love child of a donna hay recipe I read last year (oh how I miss living with Liz and her subscription) and a nadine abensur one I tested out on friends a couple of weeks ago. Both originals are divine, but the donnay hay is very filling and fatty and the nadine abensur was a bit oily and work intensive (who has time to make dukka when they get home at 6pm?)

Anyway, this is a combo of the two, but with my own touches (e.g. the sweet potato, which goes so well and looks so pretty...)

feeds 4

Ingredients:
4 Beetroot
2 Sweet potato (equal amount to beetroot)
Greens (not lettuce!): Baby Spinach, Rocket, Green Beans and/or Asparagus
3 cloves Garlic
dessert spoon of brown sugar
large handful of fresh sage leaves (must be fresh)
400-500g of haloumi (depending on whether it's a main or not, you can add / subtract haloumi)
good splash tabasco
olive oil
salt & pepper
juice of 1 lemon
half handful chopped parsley

1. Roughly chop sweet potato and beetroot and place in a baking dish (if you are serving at a dinner party and want it pretty use two baking dish, dividing the ingredients that follow so that the beetroot doesn't dye the potato pink)
2. Crush garlic and add to dish
3. Sprinkle over brown sugar, salt & pepper
4. Spread whole sage leaves through mixture
5. Splash with tabasco
6. Then splash with olive oil so that the veges are shiny and coated but not swimming in the stuff!
7. Use your hands to rub the flavourings into the veges making sure that garlic, sage etc are evenly spread around the dish
8. Bake at 180 degrees (celsius) for about half an hour-40 mins or until veges are cooked, but not mushy at all! It's nice when there is a firmness to the beetroot (though the potato can be super soft...mmmmm)

Just before they're cooked...

9. Arrange greens on plate
10. Fry sliced haloumi (in chunky chip sized pieces or larger if you prefer)
11. Pile roasted veges on the greens, place haloumi on top, sprinkle with parsley, squeeze on lemon juice and serve!

Notes re originals:
The Donna Hay was the above vege roasting process, but only with beetroot and cooked slower. Then the beetroot was placed on top of fettucine that had parmesan, marscapone and goats cheese melted through it. This is DIVINE.

The Nadine Abensur was with beetroot and fennel roasted with oil (too much oil), garlic, tabasco, salt, pepper. Then you stirred through dukkah and parsley and served on a bed of rocket with haloumi pieces and lemon squeezed over the top.

2 comments:

  1. :D it'd be awesome if you added photos of the completed dish! i'm sure they'd be delish looking!

    ReplyDelete