Bamia Matbookha
- 1 3/4 pounds small young okra (called bamia in Egypt)
- 3 tablespoons sunflower or vegetable oil
- 2 large onions, chopped, or 3/4 pound baby onions, peeled
- 2 cloves garlic, chopped
- 1 teaspoon ground coriander
- 1 3/4 pounds beef, lamb, or veal stew meat, cut into 1 1/4-inch cubes
- 1 pound tomatoes, peeled and sliced
- 11 1/2 tablespoons tomato paste
- Salt and pepper
- Juice of 1 lemon
- Wash the okra and trim the stem ends, cutting round the cap to form a little cone.
- Heat the oil in a large pan and fry the onions until soft and golden.
- Start on low heat with the lid on, then uncover and turn up the heat to medium.
- Add the garlic and coriander and put in the meat.
- Turn the pieces until they change color all over.
- Add the tomatoes, cover with water, and stir in the tomato paste.
- Season with salt and pepper, stir well, and simmer over low heat for 11 1/4 hours.
- Stir in the okra, adding water if necessary, and cook for 20 minutes, or until the meat and okra are tender and the sauce is reduced.
- Add lemon juice and serve hot with rice.
- In the Said, in Upper Egypt, they boil the meat (about half the quantity) first in water, then lift the pieces out and cook the okra in the stock along with 2 cups tomato juice and 2 small chopped chili peppers.
- When the okra is very soft, they mash it with a fork (you can use a food processor).
- They put the meat back in the pan with the mashed okra and add a sauce called takleya made by frying 5 crushed garlic cloves with 1 teaspoon ground coriander in 2 tablespoons oil until the garlic is golden.
- The dish is quite soupy.
- For an Iraqi version, add 2 dried limes (see page 44) from the start.
- Crack them open with a hammer before you put them in, or pierce them with a skewer when they have softened in the stew.
- Omit the fresh lemon juice.
- The dried limes give a distinctive and delicious flavor.
- A Syrian version adds 2 tablespoons pomegranate syrup (molasses or concentrate) in mid-cooking.
- Omit the lemon juice.
- For a Turkish version, add 2 tablespoons wine vinegar.
young okra, sunflower, onions, garlic, ground coriander, beef, tomatoes, tomato paste, salt, lemon
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/bamia-matbookha-373404 (may not work)