Rice
is one of the most common staple foods. Most families eat a rice
dish at least twice a week, either for lunch or for dinner.
There
are different ways of cooking rice: White, served with stew or sauce, Jollof, which is where the
ingredients are added into and cooked with the rice. We also have fried rice
and coconut rice among other rice recipes.
Let
us explore some of these recipes:
RICE
AND TOMATO STEW
With Tomato Stew, I mean stew used to prepare Jollof Rice
recipes: Jollof Rice, Coconut Rice, Rice & Beans, etc. This tomato stew
also forms the base for the Beef & Chicken Stew.
Please note that this tomato stew does not have any seasoning and other
ingredients because it is just a base.
Add beef/chicken or both, thyme, curry, Knorr, salt and pepper to Tomato
Stew to get the Beef & Chicken Stew used to eat boiled white rice.
Ingredients for Nigerian Tomato Stew
- 1.5kg
fresh plum tomatoes (referred to as Jos Tomatoes in Nigeria,
tomate pera in Spanish and pomodoro pera in Italian)
- 600g
tinned tomato paste (or watery tinned Tomato Puree: 1.2kg)
- Vegetable
Oil: a generous quantity
- 1 to 2
medium onions
Important notes on the ingredients
- Tomatoes:
Plum tomatoes are the best for the Tomato Stew because all the other types of tomatoes either have a
very strong taste, have lots of seeds or contain lots of water.
- Vegetable
Oil: There's always a debate about this one. But I will insist that you
need more than enough oil when frying the tomatoes. This is so that the
tomatoes will not burn till all the sour taste is gone and the water has
dried from the tomatoes. You will pour out the excess oil when the
tomatoes are well fried. Just think about this as "sort of" deep
frying the tomatoes. Not that you'll need that much oil but you get the
gist.
If you don't use enough oil, your stew will have a sour taste and it will
burn even if you stand there stirring frantically.
- Tinned
tomato paste/puree: The tinned tomato paste sold in Nigeria is usually
very thick and concentrated. If you try to fry this tomato paste as is, it
will burn straight away. There are
other types of tomato purees sold in Europe and the rest of the world and
these are usually watery. If that is the only type you can buy, then you
need to cook it with the fresh tomato puree (as explained below) to get it
to dry up a bit and get rid of the sour taste before frying.
One more thing; the tinned tomato paste/puree is optional. Its job is to
improve the redness of the tomato stew, making it look richer and more
appetizing. If you don't want to use it, replace with fresh plum tomatoes.
In Nigeria, it is common to use tatashe (Nigerian big red peppers) to
improve the redness of the tomato stew. Please note that tatashe is not
the same as bell peppers.
Before you cook Tomato Stew
- Wash and
blend the fresh plum tomatoes. Remember to remove the seeds unless you are
sure your blender can grind them very well.
- If using
the thick tinned tomato paste that is common in Nigeria, mix it with cold
water to get a softer consistency.
- If you are
using the watery tinned tomato puree that is common in Europe and other
parts of the world, open the tins or packets and set these aside, you'll
need them soon.
- Cut the
onions into small pieces.
Cooking Directions
- Pour the
fresh tomato blend into a pot and cook at high heat till almost all the
water has dried. If you have the watery tinned/boxed tomato puree, add
these to the pot and reduce the heat to low. Cook till the water in the
tomato puree have dried as much as possible.
- Add the
vegetable oil, the chopped onions and the thick tomato puree that you
mixed in step 2 above (if it's the puree you are using). Stir very well.
- Fry at
very low heat and stir at short intervals till the oil has completely
separated from the tomato puree. A well fried tomato puree will also have
streaks of oil, unlike when you first added the oil and it was a smooth
mix of the tomato puree and oil. Taste the fried tomato puree to make sure
that the raw tomato taste is gone. With time and experience, you can even
tell that the tomato puree is well fried from the aroma alone.
- If you are
happy with the taste and you are sure that all the water has dried as much
as possible, pour out the excess vegetable oil, then add the well fried
tomato stew to your cooking.
- If you are
not using it immediately, leave to cool down, dish in containers and store
in the freezer.
To use, bring out from the freezer and allow to defrost at room temperature.
Add pepper, seasoning, chicken, beef, fish, turkey etc to get the beef and
chicken stew, used for eating boiled white rice and other Nigerian staple
foods.