On weekends, V likes to get busy in the kitchen. It’s his
“down-time”, he says. He picks whatever chillis he can find in the garden and
turns them into sauces of varying heat. And he bakes bread.
Chopped chillis from my garden ... a breathtaking array of colours |
Chilli plants of all variety fill a long strip of the
vegetable garden. They range from piquant bell peppers (the trade name is
“Peppadew”) to mild (ish) jalapenoes to insane naga. The latter is said to be
the hottest chilli in the world: even its skin is blistered, and I’m sure that
is because it’s so scorching, even to touch.
Close-up of the naga chilli |
Its name is interesting: “naga” apparently means “cobra” in
one of the major Indian languages; very similar sounding, “nyoka” means
“snake” in Xhosa. The heat of the naga is measured at more than a million Scoville
units, which is used to measure such things.
Me, I don’t eat too much in the way of chillis. Mostly, I
enjoy their array of colours, and I use them in my muti (medicine) to get rid
of bad goggas (insects).
Quite a kick
But I did enjoy the jalapeno slammers – quite a kick they delivered
– that V made on Easter Monday. And I
added the tiniest bit of his sauce to my rice and vegetables. Usually, the
chillis that he picks get finely chopped: my farmer cousin, D, loves to do
this, and he does it better than a machine, although he has insisted on gloves.
D often appears on a Sunday morning. “Where is it?” he asks.
“I want to chop.” It’s very sweet. Otherwise, the chillis are indeed shoved
into some sort of chopping machine.
Easter Monday’s pickings |
Blend
Then V gets blending. To the mixture of chopped chillis,
he’ll add some olive oil, a bit of lemon juice, maybe some dhania
(coriander), pounded peanuts, and a touch of mint. Every result is different.
Personally, I prefer the milder versions, softened with a
little extra of the peanuts and coriander. But his sauces are greatly enjoyed
by many of our friends, and their friends, too. He gets asked when he
will have some for sale, and he’s very proud of it all.
An art
At the same time, V will have got the bread underway. “Me
and Jamie,” he mutters. He means Jamie Oliver, who, in one of his earlier books
(The Naked Chef), talks about the
baking of bread as an art. You can find his recipe here.
V's flat bread being demolished |
Made by “me and Jamie”, he says |
The process lasts for hours: all the ingredients (from The
Naked Chef’s basic bread recipe) are mixed and kneaded, left to rise, bashed
into shape, and left to rise again.
Here, too, it’s a bit of a lucky dip: some
weekends, for example, we get cumin seeds or sundried tomato in our ciabatta; sometimes, we
could have olives pressed into crusty, herby flat bread.
It all gets demolished pretty quickly, every last crumb of
it, often smeared with the chilli sauce of the day.
This beautiful food is truly art. Thank you for the flat bread recipe. I'm definitely going to try it. V makes Jamie look like an amateur!
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