BABOTIE - A SAVOURY TREAT!!!

in food •  7 years ago 

This is a very traditional South African mince meat dish. Its origins date back to Roman Times a variant of Patinam ex lacte, a dish documented by the ancient Roman writer Apicius

babotie.jpg

Layers of spiced meat topped with a velvet smooth custard. Served with rice.

babotie3.jpg

Ingredients
1 fairly thick slice crustless bread (white or brown)
375 ml milk
25 ml oil
10ml butter
2 onions, sliced
2 cloves garlic, crushed
25 ml curry powder
10ml salt
25ml chutney
15ml smooth apricot jam
15ml Worcester sauce
5ml turmeric
25ml brown vinegar
1 kg raw mince
100 ml sultanas
3 eggs
pinch each salt and turmeric
bay leaves

Method
Soak bread in milk.
Heat oil and butter in large pan and fry onions and garlic.
When onions are soft, add curry powder, salt, chutney, jam, Worcester sauce, turmeric and vinegar and mix well.
Drain and mash bread and reserve milk.
Add bread to pan together with mince and sultanas.
Cook over low heat, stirring, and when meat loses its pinkness, remove from stove.
Add 1 beaten egg, mix well, then spoon into a greased, 28 x 16 cm baking dish and level the top.
Beat remaining eggs with reserved milk (about 300ml) and the salt and turmeric.

Pour over meat mixture and put a few bay leaves on top. Stand dish in a larger pan of water (this is important to prevent drying out) and bake, uncovered, at 180 degrees celsius for 1 hour or until set.
Serve with rice, coconut, chutney, nuts and bananas

IMG-20180126-WA0029.jpg

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://lifeaccordingtomazza.wordpress.com/2013/06/28/the-story-of-bobotie/

Love it, you seem to post a lot of my favorite meals. Thanks for the little lessons of origin you add with these, they really make it interesting and somehow makes the food more fun.