Difference between revisions of "Bunny Chow"
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− | Recipe by [[: | + | Recipe by [[:Category:Allahu Snackbar's Recipes|Allahu Snackbar]] Wikified by [[User:Drimble Wedge|Drimble Wedge]][[Category:African]][[Category:Baking]][[Category:Bread]][[Category:Curry]][[Category:Stew]][[Category:Main Course]][[category:Allahu Snackbar's Recipes]] |
Bunny chow is a name derived from several sources. Chow comes from the slang borrowed from the Chinese to describe some general foods. Bunny is a word originating from an Indian tradesman caste that immigrated to the area called Baniyas. From there it gets hazy. Depending on where you hear it, it's either the Indian street food merchants way of serving the racially segregated customers during Apartheid, or it was a day laborer takeout invention for sugarcane workers during the Great Depression, or it was a way to economically feed poor young kids. I've heard about a dozen, who knows, who cares I guess. Either way, it's stupidly good food like just about anything in South Africa. Here's how you do it: | Bunny chow is a name derived from several sources. Chow comes from the slang borrowed from the Chinese to describe some general foods. Bunny is a word originating from an Indian tradesman caste that immigrated to the area called Baniyas. From there it gets hazy. Depending on where you hear it, it's either the Indian street food merchants way of serving the racially segregated customers during Apartheid, or it was a day laborer takeout invention for sugarcane workers during the Great Depression, or it was a way to economically feed poor young kids. I've heard about a dozen, who knows, who cares I guess. Either way, it's stupidly good food like just about anything in South Africa. Here's how you do it: |
Latest revision as of 01:45, 22 October 2011
Recipe by Allahu Snackbar Wikified by Drimble Wedge
Bunny chow is a name derived from several sources. Chow comes from the slang borrowed from the Chinese to describe some general foods. Bunny is a word originating from an Indian tradesman caste that immigrated to the area called Baniyas. From there it gets hazy. Depending on where you hear it, it's either the Indian street food merchants way of serving the racially segregated customers during Apartheid, or it was a day laborer takeout invention for sugarcane workers during the Great Depression, or it was a way to economically feed poor young kids. I've heard about a dozen, who knows, who cares I guess. Either way, it's stupidly good food like just about anything in South Africa. Here's how you do it:
The Bread[edit]
No surprises here, it's formulaic white bread. I've taken some of the water out of this and replaced it with buttermilk. You can use water if you want to keep this vegan. This is enough for two loaves of bunny chow. Scale down if you prefer. I like baking two loaves because its not significantly more time than one, and you can keep the other in your bread box, keep the rest of the curry in the fridge, and make another bunny chow a few days later, or for friends!
Use this:
- 6 1/2 cups bread flour
- 4 tsp kosher salt
- 4 tsp active dry yeast
- 1 cup lukewarm water
- 2 cups lukewarm buttermilk
Combine salt & flour, make a well. Combine yeast and water. Let that rest for five minutes, and stir into a uniform swill. Pour into the well, and draw flour from the sides, stirring briskly to make a paste. Cover and let rest 20 minutes to sponge. Add about half of your buttermilk, stir in the flour as much as you can. If the dough is dry, add more buttermilk, but be careful not to get too moist. You want it lightly tacky on your fingers.
Turn out onto work surface, knead like crazy for ten minutes, then chafe it up, grease a bowl, plop it in and cover for about 90 minutes or until doubled. Punch down, chafe, split into two pieces with a sharp knife, and chafe into balls again. From here, you want to form into loaves and fit into greased loaf pans. Cover your loaf pans with a damp cloth for 45 minutes to proof.
You then want to preheat the oven to 425, and just before putting the loaves in the oven, give them a vertical slit across the top with a very sharp paring knife or scalpel. Pop those in. Let them bake for 40-45 minutes and turn out onto a wire rack.
Now for the curry[edit]
Here's what I used for my curry. If you have another curry you like, use it instead. It really doesn't matter. You could even take restaurant takeout curry and just pour that slop in if you're super lazy! Bunnies range from chicken to lamb to vegetarian so there's really no right or wrong.
If you are a stickler for making it like I did, here's what I used:
- 3 tbsp ghee (canola or olive oil if you want vegan)
- 1 tsp turmeric
- 1 tsp coriander seeds, slightly crushed
- 1 tsp mustard seeds
- 1 tsp fenugreek seeds
- 3 tsp kosher salt
- 1 tsp garam masala
- 2 medium yellow onion, diced
- 4 cloves garlic, crushed and minced
- 1 tbsp grated ginger
- 2 tbsp dried chili flakes
- One or two big tomatoes, roughly chopped
- 1 small potato, diced
- 2 cans black beans, drained
- 1 young-ish plantain, diced
- About six or seven ounces of coconut milk
- Big handful of cilantro, chopped
Start with your ghee in the pan, get it good and hot, just shy of smoking. Throw your turmeric, mustard seed, coriander, and fenugreek, and immediately turn the heat down. The spices will pop, so get ready to quickly cover for a moment. Immediately add your onion and garlic, and a teaspoon of your salt. Cook covered on low heat for about 10-15 minutes to sweat the onion.
From here, add your tomato, potato, curry leaf, ginger, and chili flakes. Ramp the heat up to boil for a minute or two, then back to a good hard simmer to break that tomato down and soften your potato somewhat. I'd say about ten minutes. Add both cans of beans and your garam masala. Another five minutes of covered simmer. In goes your plantain and coconut milk. Simmer for another ten to fifteen minutes.
Add your cilantro, then salt gently to taste. By now your curry should be quite creamy, but still with a bit of chunkiness. Take that off the heat.
Okay, now the fun begins!
Remember that bread? Go and get it! Measure about an inch down from the top, or about where it sort of puffs up if you made a conventional loaf like me. Carefully saw horizontally with your bread knife so that you remove the "lid" of the bread. Make your cut as even as you can.
Using a knife, carefully score the crumb of the bottom part of the bread, so that you make a rectangular outline. Then, rip out as much of the crumb as you can in big pieces. You want to create a nice little hollow. A good side note if you're a fiend for South African food like I am, these bits of the crumb can be air-staled for a day or two and used as the thickening binder if you want to make bobotie (minced meat curried casserole with fruit and egg custard on top)
Ladle the curry into the cavity. Let it sponge a little, and pack as much curry in there as you can fit. Wait, and then spoon in some more. Cover with the "lid".
Under any circumstances do not use any utensils to eat this. Your utensils are the bread. You tear some of the lid, or some of the bread wall, and use that to shovel curry into your mouth. If you eat this with a fork, spoon, knife, chopsticks, or whatever just make sure you have no South Africans near you because they are going to think you're a complete doos.
If you make this for friends, it feeds about six or eight, and make sure those ungrateful assholes bring beer, preferably a lager or IPA.