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Chorizo!

This is my sausage and chickpea stew recipe as recommended by sojourner

6 slim beef and/or lamb sausages. The ones I got were quite spicy. You could use Spanish chorizo, Polish kielbasa, Italian salami or French Toulouse sausages, ( or any good quality British pork, beef, lamb or chicken bangers). If you are using salami or kielbasa, you should cut them into pound-coin-sized rings and cook a little in a dry frying pan on a very low heat so they release their fat and go succulent and golden round the edges.

4 red peppers, cut in half, de-stalked and de-seeded. These go under the hot grill with the sausages, skin side-up first, until the skin is slightly blackened. Then flip over them over and baste the insides a little with the fat from the sausages, or some olive oil.

4 red onions, rough-sliced.
Rough-chopped garlic
1 fat red chilli, chopped and de-seeded ( watch you don't wipe your hand across your chapped lips like I did - owch)
Tin of chickpeas, drained
Some chopped mushrooms, about 3 handfuls
Pinch of sweet paprika
Salt, pepper, bayleaf

Half a jar of passata ( Italian sieved tomato sauce - you could also use a tin of chopped tomatoes and some tomato puree)
A glass or two of red wine.

Sweat the onions and garlic in a casserole dish or deep pan over a low heat. Add the chopped chilli and mushrooms, and paprika, mix well. Turn up the heat to medium. Add the chickpeas and mix it all again. When it is all frying gently and releasing a sweet steam, add half a jar of passata (or the tin of tomatoes and spoonful of puree) and a bayleaf and the salt and pepper. Add the chopped sausages. Give it a good stir.

Have a glass of red wine yourself. It's cold outside.

Peel off the skin from the grilled red peppers ( a quick way is to put the warm peppers in a plastic bag, tie a knot in it and let them sweat for a few minutes. Then slit open the bag and peel the peppers, slice them up, (licking your fingers as sweet sticky soft peppers will get all over your hands), and put them in the casserole or pan.
Top up the casserole/pan with red wine ( I used almost 2 glasses) until the liquid just covers the ingredients. Season to taste. Simmer for about half an hour. Or longer if you like, on a low-ish heat.

There's probably about half a bottle of wine left. Hmmmm.....

Serve with steamed broccoli with a squeeze of lemon
 
I would like to try it, but the other half doesn't like chick peas. :rolleyes:Or broccoli, come to that. :rolleyes::rolleyes:
 
Mash gives him hearrtburn, he doesn't like butternut squash or couscous! He will eat peppers though, I could it with peppers and tomatoes and rice, maybe.
 
I seem to have ended up with three different types of french dried sausage today. I assume that there wouldn't be much harm in substituting them, at least in terms of basic principle?
 
I have used the dried French snaggers in casseroles before and they are ftw. I cooked them a bit first with some onion, in slices and not much oil as they release oil when they cook. Went all juicy.
 
Slice into discs and cook in red wine in the oven - again best done with cooking chorizo.
 
Chop an onion and fry it in a little olive oil, cube or slice the chorizo into chunks and add that to the onion until cooked through. Add either some home-made tomato pasta sauce or one from a jar with some herbs and simmer for 5-10 minutes. Serve with pasta of your choice.
 
Chop an onion and fry it in a little olive oil, cube or slice the chorizo into chunks and add that to the onion until cooked through. Add either some home-made tomato pasta sauce or one from a jar with some herbs and simmer for 5-10 minutes. Serve with pasta of your choice.

That's quite similar to what I'm cooking, which is chorizo (obviously) aubergine, red & yellow peppers, tomatoes and pasta.
 
Not sure if it was on this site, but recently there was another thread about chourico, might be worth having a look.
 
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