I've never heard of shakshuka prior to walking into a small, neighbourhood eatery here in Kerrisdale (
Gaia Bistro).
From the name, which sounded to me vaguely Africanesque and very exotic, I would never have guessed that the dish consists of tomatoes and peppers with a sunny-side up egg, with flavours so home-y and comforting belying the name.
From researching the dish, I discovered that shakshuka is a popular Jewish dish eaten during Sabbath, when no cooking is to take place. It can be done in advance (the day before Sabbath) and tastes even better when it has had time to sit in a pot, to be eaten the next day.
I jokingly said to TS that maybe we can take our own little vacation from cooking by cooking up a big, big pot (8 L) of it and having ourselves just heat-and-eat as we go throughout the week.
[ts]To make this, I thought I'd throw in some bell peppers with some canned tomatoes and that would be that.
So, I started dicing some onions and bell peppers. Then I thought that perhaps I should do a little research. I came upon how to make
"real shakshuka" on Jewlicious.com.
Well, I certainly didn't have time to roast the peppers first, and cook them with tomatoes for hours. We wanted food now! So, I decided to wing it. Although there weren't supposed to be onions in shakshuka, I already diced mine, so in they went.
[ts]I sautéed the onions with some garlic and chili flakes in olive oil. Then, while rooting around in the pantry, I realized we didn't have any canned tomatoes in the house. We did have fresh tomatoes, so I used that. To amp up the tomatoes, I added some tomato paste as well.
[js]We added chickpea to our shakshuka because we wanted to add some more protein to the dish.
[ts]Diced bell peppers went in next. I let the mixture cook until the bell peppersd were soft. For seasonings, I added just a hint of cumin, then some sweet paprika. I adjusted the final flavors with salt and a pinch of sugar.
[ts]Now the eggy part. I scooped some of the stewed pepper mixture into a smaller pan, plopped an egg in the middle of it,. and waited for the egg to cook.
[ts]Voilà! Look at that yolk-y goodness.
The shakshuka at Gaia Bistro is served either with sausage or cheese. So feel free to add those into yours.
[js]Eaten with warm pita bread, this lunch hit the spot. It would be good breakfast and dinner too.
[ts]As mentioned, we actually also ate this atop our
Cuban Arroz con Salchichas.
Recipe
Shakshuka
2 onions
chili flakes/chili peppers
garlic, as much as you want
2 tablespoons tomato paste
3 tomatoes, roughly chopped
1 cup drained canned chickpeas
4 to 6 bell peppers, large dice
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1 tablespoon Hungarian sweet paprika
salt
sugar
eggs
In a pot over medium heat, heat olive oil. Sauté onions, garlic and chili flakes until soft. Add tomato paste and cook for about 2 minutes, until tomato paste has darkened in color. Add the chopped tomatoes and chickpeas and cook until the tomatoes have broken down. Add the diced bell peppers. Add cumin and sweet parpika into the pot as well. Bring to a boil, then cover and simmer until the peppers are soft. Adjust seasoning with salt and sugar.
To serve, scoop desired amount into a small pan. Heat over medium heat. Break desired number of eggs into the pan and cook until desired egg doneness. Serve with warmed pita or other flatbread. 

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Comments (8)
Now this is something I could definitely like eating.
Oooh, looks yummy. Except I dunno if I'd include the bell peppers. I hate cooking bell peppers, I think they taste so much better raw.
looks good. I would roast my peppers.
this made me think of what i eat for breakfast everyday. it probably doesn't taste near the same, but anyway, i just make eggs and mix them with picante sauce, it is sooooo good.
Sounds like something I would enjoy. =)
WHY stew veggies?
LOOKS SO GOOD.
Looks utterly succulent! and fun to make, too! thanks for sharing.