Braaied pumpkin and marrows




“Pumpkin, butternut, patty pans, baby marrows... Cooking any kind of squash on the braai accentuates its natural buttery sweetness and adds smokiness, which goes brilliantly with the apricot harissa.” - Khanya Mzongwana
Ingredients
Method
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For the harissa:
- 1 t cumin seeds
- 1 t coriander seeds
- 1 T paprika
- salt, to taste
- 3 medium tomatoes
- 1 large red pepper
- 4 whole dried chillies, rehydrated, stems and seeds removed
- 3 garlic cloves, peeled
- 2 bird’s-eye chillies, seeded and chopped
- 100 g Woolworths soft-eating Turkish apricots, roughly chopped
- 1⁄2 cup extra virgin olive oil For the seed brittle:
- 100 g caster sugar
- 100 g mixed seeds
- 400 g mixed marrows
- 1 organic orange pumpkin 1 (about 1.2 kg), thinly sliced
- 4 T extra virgin olive oil
- sea salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Method
Ingredients
1. To make the harissa, toast the cumin and coriander in a pan, then grind using a spice grinder or mortar and pestle. Add the paprika and salt and combine. Char the tomatoes and pepper over hot coals until the skin is blistered. Peel and place in a blender with the spice mix and the remaining ingredients. Blend until smooth.
2. To make the seed brittle, melt the sugar in a saucepan until dissolved and light brown. Add the seeds and stir until combined. Pour the mixture onto a sheet of greaseproof paper and spread to a thickness of 5 mm. Allow to set, then break into shards.
3. Cut the marrows in half. Place all the vegetables in a bowl and rub with the olive oil, salt and pepper. Grill over hot coals until charred and softened. To serve, smear a generous amount of harissa onto a serving plate and top with the charred veggies. Sprinkle over the seed brittle.
Cook’s note:
If you don’t have dried apricots, chopped canned peaches work just as well.
Photography: Myburgh Du Plessis
Food assistant: Lerato Motau
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