Yotam Ottolenghi’s tandoori recipes | Food (2024)

16 in 2016: teenage special

I find it amazing that we’ll teach teenagers to drive before they can work the oven. Get them started with these easy recipes…

Yotam Ottolenghi

@ottolenghi

Sat 10 Dec 2016 10.00 CET

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The idea of kids’ food or teenage cooking is not a natural one for me. When I was growing up, I simply wanted to eat what my parents were cooking: there just wasn’t the option (or desire) for a separate and bespoke service. It’s only in recent years that I’ve realised how lucky I was to take this togetherness for granted. For many people, feeding children can be complex – traumatic, even – but I’m yet to be convinced that having a kids’ menu in a restaurant, or routinely offering to cook something different, is the way forward.

It’s the same with cooking. If you grow up regarding it as something that only grown-ups do, it’s no wonder so many teenagers come to “proper” cooking really late in life. I find it amazing that we’ll happily teach our teenagers to drive a car before a lot of them know how to work the oven.

I’m not suggesting that, out of the blue, you ask your 16-year-old to whip up a tandoori paste, rub it over a chicken and make Sunday lunch; but for any curry-loving teenager, the possibility should not be dismissed out of hand. Making things yourself – seeing the ingredients, how they are combined, why the end result looks the way it does – helps demystify the cooking process. If you can read, you can cook. And if you can cook, chances are you’ll be more receptive to trying out a much wider range of foods than teenagers are often given credit for.

Tandoori paste

This takes less than 10 minutes to make, and keeps well in the fridge for at least three weeks. These quantities make about 300g paste, so there’ll more than enough to make all three of today’s recipes. It’s easily doubled (or more), if you want to try it out on other things: on cubes of tofu or paneer, say, or root vegetables for roasting. The paste also works well as a curry base: just mix some with plain yoghurt and use as a marinade for cubes of meat or fish before they are grilled.

4 Kashmiri dried red chillies
2 tsp cumin seeds
4 tsp coriander seeds
2 tsp black peppercorns
20 cardamom pods
2 small cinnamon sticks
2 tbsp paprika
2 tbsp tomato paste (40g)
½ tsp ground turmeric
2 tsp mustard powder
1 tsp ground nutmeg
6cm piece fresh ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
2 large garlic cloves, peeled and crushed
2 tsp honey
60ml vegetable oil
Salt

Put the chillies in a small bowl, cover them with boiling water, set aside for five minutes to rehydrate, then drain.

Put the cumin, coriander, peppercorns, cardamom and cinnamon in a small frying pan on a medium heat, and toast for three to four minutes, until the spices start to brown and go aromatic. Grind to a powder (I use a spice grinder), then tip into a small food processor bowl. Add the rehydrated chillies, 90ml cold water, all the remaining ingredients and a quarter-teaspoon of salt, and work for a couple of minutes, until you have a smooth paste. Refrigerate until ready to use.

Tandoori chicken

Homemade tandoori chicken beats a ready meal any day. Serves four.

150g tandoori paste (see previous recipe)
200g Greek yoghurt
2 tsp lemon juice
Salt
1 chicken (2.2kg)
2 tbsp olive oil
5g small coriander sprigs, stems and leaves, roughly chopped

In a large bowl, mix the paste, yoghurt, lemon juice and three-quarters of a teaspoon of salt. Add the chicken and rub it all over with the mixture, until well coated, then set aside to marinate for at least an hour (or overnight in the fridge, if you’re preparing this in advance).

Heat the oven to 200C/390F/gas mark 6. Put the chicken in an oven tray lined with baking paper – you need a smallish one, so it fits snugly – and brush (or rub) all over with oil. Roast the chicken for 25 minutes, then baste, cover with foil and roast for another 45 minutes, basting twice more. Turn up the heat to 210C/410F/gas mark 6½, remove the foil and roast for a final five minutes.

Remove the chicken from the oven and leave to rest at room temperature for five to 10 minutes. Serve with any pan juices and the coriander sprinkled on top.

Grilled tandoori prawns and pineapple salad

These sweet, spicy prawns and pineapple are gorgeous with the crunchy iceberg lettuce. Make sure you scrape all the cooking juices from the baking tray into the salad, so you get all the flavour. Toast the mustard seeds in a small pan on a medium heat, until they just start to pop. Serves four.

1kg tiger prawns (ie about 20 prawns; defrosted if frozen), peeled but with the tails intact, and deveined
60g tandoori paste (see first recipe)
1 large garlic clove, peeled and crushed
Salt
2 tbsp groundnut oil
½ medium pineapple, peeled, cored and cut into 1cm-thick rounds
2 tbsp lime juice, plus 1 lime, quartered, to serve
½ large iceberg lettuce, cut into 3cm wedges
10g basil leaves
1 tsp mustard seeds, lightly toasted

Put the prawns, two-thirds of the paste, the garlic, a third of a teaspoon of salt and a tablespoon of oil in a bowl, mix to coat and put in the fridge to marinate for an hour.

Heat the oven to 200C/390F/gas mark 6. Put a ridged griddle pan on a high heat and ventilate the kitchen. Once the griddle is very hot, grill the pineapple slices in batches for about a minute each, turning them halfway. Once all the fruit is grilled and cool enough to handle, cut each slice into 10 little triangular wedges and put them in a large bowl.

Put the prawns on the griddle and grill for a minute, turning them once halfway, until blackened on both sides. Add the prawns to the pineapple bowl with the remaining tandoori paste and a tablespoon of oil. Toss to coat, then spread out on a medium oven tray lined with baking paper, and roast for five to seven minutes, until the prawns are just cooked through.

Spoon everything into a large bowl – make sure you get every last scrap and all the juices – then add the lime juice, a quarter-teaspoon of salt, the lettuce, basil and mustard seeds, and toss. Spoon on to a large platter (or into individual bowls) and serve at once with the lime wedges.

Tandoori cauliflower wedges

These are gorgeous: serve just as they are as a side, or maybe with plain yoghurt, or turn them into a starter or light meal in their own right by serving with a bowl of rice. Serves four as a side dish.

1 large cauliflower (1kg), leaves left on, first cut in half vertically through the root (so each half stays intact) and then each half cut vertically into 4 thick wedges
50g ghee
50g tandoori paste (see first recipe)
1 small preserved lemon, seeds discarded, flesh and skin finely chopped
1½ tsp honey
Salt
30g flaked almonds, lightly toasted

Heat the grill to its highest setting.

Put the cauliflower in a large bowl. Put the ghee, paste, lemon, honey and half a teaspoon of salt in a small saucepan and put on a high heat. Stir until the ghee melts, then pour over the cauliflower wedges. Mix well (don’t worry if the wedges break up slightly), then arrange on a large oven tray. Put the tray under the grill about 10cm away from the heat source, and cook, turning regularly, for about 25 minutes, until charred all over and cooked through.

Put the charred cauliflower wedges (and any bits and pieces that have broken off) on a large serving plate, scatter over the flaked almonds and serve hot.

• Yotam Ottolenghi is chef/patron of Ottolenghi and Nopi in London.

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Yotam Ottolenghi’s tandoori recipes | Food (2024)

FAQs

What to serve with Ottolenghi tandoori chickpeas? ›

I served it with a coriander mint yoghurt but you can swap that out with coconut yogurt, or just some herbage on top to keep it completely vegan. Serve with flatbreads, with rice, over baked potatoes!

What is Ottolenghi style food? ›

From this, Ottolenghi has developed a style of food which is rooted in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean traditions, but which also draws in diverse influences and ingredients from around the world.

Are Ottolenghi recipes complicated? ›

Some of the recipes are fairly straightforward but he does have a reputation for including some hard to get ingredients and some recipes can be very involved. I really enjoy his recipes and find they are very tasty.

What is the accompaniment for tandoori food? ›

The best side dishes to serve with tandoori chicken are greek yogurt, lentil salad, couscous, blooming onion, Calrose rice, yellow rice, biryani, rosemary bread, gluten-free bread, enchilada pasta, mint chutney, tomato cucumber chili salad, grilled potatoes, naan bread, chana chaat, moong daal, aloo samosas, beetroot ...

Why is Ottolenghi so popular? ›

The deli quickly gained a cult following due to its inventive dishes, characterised by the foregrounding of vegetables, unorthodox flavour combinations, and the abundance of Middle Eastern ingredients such as rose water, za'atar, and pomegranate molasses.

Is Ottolenghi a Michelin star? ›

So far, his books have sold 5 million copies, and Ottolenghi - although he has never even been awarded a Michelin star and without being considered a great chef - has successfully blended Israeli, Iranian, Turkish, French and, of course, Italian influences to create a genre that is (not overly) elegant, international, ...

Who owns Ottolenghi? ›

About us. Ottolenghi began in a small shop in Notting Hill, London in 2002. Chefs Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi were at the helm, creating a unique deli, restaurant, and bakery setting, which soon became a clear reflection of our obsessive relationship with food.

What is the hardest cooking recipe in the world? ›

  • Consommé Devilish dish: A clear soup made from meat, tomato, egg whites and stock, slowly simmered to bring impurities to the surface for skimming. ...
  • Turducken. ...
  • Béarnaise sauce. ...
  • Baked Alaska. ...
  • Croissants. ...
  • Soufflé ...
  • Macarons. ...
  • Beef wellington.
Jan 18, 2023

What is the most difficult recipe in the world? ›

Widely used as the metric of a chef's ability, consommé is one of the most challenging dishes to cook. Despite its light and small yield, traditional consommé requires a large amount of meat; which is why it was long associated with society's upper classes who could afford such extravagance!

Is Ottolenghi A vegan? ›

The guy's an omnivore but his recipes are overwhelmingly vegetarian and vegan. His vegetarian (not vegan) cookbook Plenty< spent years near the top of Britain's bestseller lists.

What is good to eat with chickpeas? ›

7 Ways to Use Chickpeas (That Don't Involve Hummus)
  • 01 of 07. Include Them in a Sandwich or Wrap. ...
  • 02 of 07. Make Tuna Salad. ...
  • 03 of 07. Sprinkle Them in a Grain Bowl or a Rice Dish. ...
  • 04 of 07. Smash 'Em on Toast. ...
  • 05 of 07. Add to Soup or Stew. ...
  • 06 of 07. Go for a Veggie Burger. ...
  • 07 of 07. Let Them Shine in Desserts.
Oct 18, 2022

What should I eat chickpeas with? ›

How to Use Roasted Chickpeas in Cooking
  • Sprinkle them onto a soup as a wholesome alternative to croutons.
  • Sprinkle over a salad for a crunchy topping and protein boost.
  • Pair with your favorite grain and sauce for a quick bowl meal.
  • Add to a wrap with hummus or guacamole.
  • Snack on them!
  • Stuff them into baked sweet potatoes.
Feb 13, 2021

What is a levantine arab dip made of chickpeas? ›

Hummus (/ˈhʊməs/, /ˈhʌməs/; Arabic: حُمُّص ḥummuṣ, "chickpeas"), also spelled hommus or houmous, is a Middle Eastern dip, spread, or savory dish made from cooked, mashed chickpeas blended with tahini, lemon juice, and garlic.

Is chickpeas and rice good? ›

Chickpeas find their perfect nutritional match. If chickpeas could speak, they would say to rice: “You complete me.” As reported in The Journal of Nutrition, the protein quality of chickpeas is increased when they are consumed with rice, as opposed to when they're consumed alone.

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