Tuesday 17 September 2013

Tamale Pie

Winter is coming… 
Though I have to say it feels as though it has already arrived here. Returning home from the heat of Georgia (that's the Caucasus Georgia and not the Southern State) I felt in desperate need of something spicy and warming, and after rummaging through semi-bare cupboards for inspiration I came up with a can of pinto beans, a can of kidney beans, creamed sweetcorn and quarter of a kilo of masa harina in addition to an elderly red sweet pepper that needed to be used up ASAP.
Sounds like everything I need for tamale pie!
As a disclaimer, I have to say I have never eaten tamale pie, nor seen it with my bare eyes. I do have however considerable experience in eating tamales and a liking for pies. A quick perusal of the internet threw up lots of recipes all calling for shop bought cornbread mix, which I neither have nor could probably find in my local supermarket, so I decided to stay true to the name and make tamale masa for the topping.

The pie filling itself was a pretty basic vegetable and bean chilli. I haven't included the recipe here as it was a 'throw it all in the pan until it's done' sort of meal. For bulk and extra carbohydrate (It's winter…) I added the remnants of a pack of Israeli couscous (bigger than your average couscous) and a handful of bulgar wheat. Extra beans or lentils probably would have been the more sensible, however as I said, the cupboards were bare.


For the masa
250g masa harina
100g margarine
500ml stock
2 tsp cumin
1 tsp salt (can omit depending on the saltiness of the stock)

 


1. Put the masa harina and spices in a large bowl
2. Melt the margarine
3. Stir into the dry ingredients, it should look like damp sand
4. Now slowly add the stock, the mixture may not need the full 500ml, the texture you're after is smooth peanut butter on a warm summer's day. Feel free to whisk your masa thoroughly if you have the energy…
5. Spoon the vegetable chilli into an ovenproof dish, add some grated cheese at this stage if you want
6. Put the masa on top, to ensure a good coverage I spooned it on and then smoothed it into an even layer using a sheet of cling film
7. Bake in an oven preheated to 220C for 30-40 minutes, the top should be golden brown and sound hollow when you tap it
8. Eat. It may not be haute cuisine or fine dining but it's just what is needed on a bloody cold night. And because one can never have enough carbs (Atkins diet? Nah…) I added some rice and frijoles refritos just to up the stodge level

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