The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement
Good Food logo

Jamie Oliver's eggplant dhal with handmade chapatis

Jamie Oliver

Advertisement
Jamie Oliver's eggplant dhal with handmade chapatis.
Jamie Oliver's eggplant dhal with handmade chapatis.David Loftus

If you cook this dhal well and season it with love, it’ll be delicious, incredibly economical, and sociable, fun eating. Our tasty friend Mr Dhal does have the tendency to be quite ugly, but I think, rolled up in these handmade chapatis with fluffy rice, roasted aubergine, crispy curry leaves and chilli, then presented to one’s gob – it’s a beautiful experience. So I say, no more ugly dhal, dress it up, baby, because it’s all about the confidence!

Advertisement

Ingredients

  • 1 large eggplant

  • 2 red onions

  • 4 cloves of garlic

  • 10cm piece of ginger

  • 4 tablespoons rogan josh curry paste

  • groundnut oil

  • 500g yellow split peas

  • 1 vegetable stock cube

  • 250g wholemeal flour, plus extra for dusting

  • 2 tablespoons olive oil

  • 1 mug (320g) of basmati rice

  • 1 fresh red chilli

  • 1 handful of fresh curry leaves

  • 1 teaspoon mustard seeds

Method

  1. 1. Preheat the oven to 180C.

    2. Cut the eggplant into 2cm chunks, peel and slice the onions and garlic, peel and finely grate the ginger.

    3. Put all this into a large high-sided roasting tray with the curry paste and a lug of groundnut oil. Toss together until well coated, then roast for 20 to 25 minutes, or until sticky and caramelised.

    4. Remove half the roasted veg to a large pan to start your daal and return the tray to the oven to keep warm – turn the oven off so that the veg don't dry out.

    5. Place the pan on a low heat on the hob. Stir in the split peas, crumble in the stock cube and add 2 litres of boiling water.

    6. Simmer for around 1 hour 20 minutes with the lid on, or until the split peas are tender and the daal has thickened, stirring occasionally, and adding splashes of water to loosen, if needed.

    7. Meanwhile, place the flour in a large bowl with a pinch of sea salt and make a well in the middle. Add 2 tablespoons of olive oil and 150ml of water to the well and mix together with a fork.

    8. When it comes together as dough, tip it on to a flour-dusted surface, knead until smooth, then divide into 12 balls. Roll each one into a circle, nice and thin, turning as you go and dusting with a little extra flour, if needed.

    9. Put a frying pan on a medium heat and cook the chapatis for 1 minute on each side, or until cooked but not coloured. Stack them in tin foil as you go and keep them warm until needed.

    10. Put 1 mug of rice and 2 mugs of boiling water into a pan with a pinch of salt. Cook on a medium heat with the lid on for 12 minutes, or until all the liquid has been absorbed.

    11. Meanwhile, to make the flavoured oil (called a temper), finely slice the chilli and place it in a small frying pan on a medium heat with the curry leaves, mustard seeds and a good lug of groundnut oil for 1 to 2 minutes, or until crispy.

    12. Load up your warm chapatis with rice, daal and a scattering of roasted vegies, drizzle over the temper, roll up and tuck in.

    Jamie: Keep Cooking and Carry On, Fridays 7:30pm only on 10.

The best recipes from Australia's leading chefs straight to your inbox.

Sign up

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Similar Recipes