Mouthful

What in the world are you eating?

Homecook essentials: The tajine

06 August 2008 | 14:27 - By Phil Lees

I'm normally the person who rails against the single use kitchen utensil. I like to think that I've whittled down my kitchen into a streamlined efficiency worthy of a launch into space, apart from the barbecues that I'm unwilling to give up.

"From my grease splattered hands", to paraphrase Charlton Heston .

I can also justify owning a tajine, the conical-shaped terracotta cooking pot synonymous with Moroccan food. I can think of at least five dishes to cook in it. That all of those dishes contain the word "tajine" in them is neither here nor there. I also received the tajine as a gift and cooking up the mechoui a few months ago has put me on a minor Moroccan food kick.

SBS's multiple tajine recipes left me with an awkward choice, but I went with the more recent chicken tajine with preserved lemon and olives recipe, mostly because my Mum had dropped by about three kilos of preserved Meyer lemons, and there is nothing better that you can do with them.

As a first impression of the chicken tajine recipe from Food Safari, it is always a good indicator that the recipe will work out if you can't stop eating the individual ingredients as you're cooking. I know that it is morally indefensible to snack on the chunks of salty preserved lemons and eat spoonfuls of the chermoula spice paste straight.

You can't stop me.

After eating my fill, I quartered up the chicken. I find butchery relaxing. Once you get the hang of it, where to make the cuts seem obvious and automatic. I mixed the pieces into the marinade and left it for five hours.

The generally accepted theory behind the tajine's conical shape is that it preserves moisture in the cooking process as the tall cone cools the steam from the food in a neat trick of thermodynamics. I have absolutely nothing to prove this is the case in a conclusive manner, except the observation that the base of the tajine was at boiling point while the top of the cone remained a few degrees above ambient temperature. This observation hardly makes me the Moroccan culinary equivalent of James Joule

The terracotta base insulates the food and seems to distribute the low heat evenly. I imagine that if you cooked with the tajine over a low, open fire that the dish would begin to soak up the smoke flavour and further intensify the warmth of the dish. Very little water is required – the quarter of a cup that goes into the recipe was more than enough, with a few drips boiling over the edge of the tajine.

When you lift the cone of the tajine at the table, a genie of steam and spice escapes into ether. The chicken comes from it warm and unctuous, the spices mixed evenly throughout. I'd burnt a few minor chunks of the tomato to the bottom of the tajine, but this seems to have made no difference to the dish.

Share article: 
top

Comments (7)

01 Nov 2008 8:12 AEST

Jeffrey

From: Palm Springs, CA

How to use a Tangine

Bought a large Tangine in Tunis last month. Don't know how to cook in it. On stove top or oven ? Would really appreciate any help on this subject or point me in the right direction. croteau_56@msn.com

Agree (0 people agree)    Disagree (0 people disagree) Report this
 

26 Aug 2008 23:23 AEST

Paul Lewenhoff

From: Bakers Hill WA

Tagine

Can be expensive for French ones but cheaper from E-Bay. Great for cooking any stew/casserole type meal, virtually foolproof as only requires low heat so difficult to burn anything. They make attractive serving dishes too and low heat cooking means cleaning is easy also.

Agree (0 people agree)    Disagree (0 people disagree) Report this
 

26 Aug 2008 11:01 AEST

SuzyQ

From: Victoria

tagines

Wonderful for cooking indian meals ,such a lovely result. Moisture plus.

Agree (2 people agree)    Disagree (0 people disagree) Report this
 

13 Aug 2008 8:38 AEST

Shirl

From: Richmond

Try some French casserols cooked using Tajine

I bought a beautiful large black Emile Henry Tajine since I saw SBS's Food Safari and it's now my fav kitchen item. I don't have a gas element so my partner and I use our Weber charcol BBQ to create an indirect heating effect for our Tajine, so far the best recipe we've found is a French orange and aniseed duck casserol. The flavour is just beautiful and the duck is tenderised in just 45 minutes! If you're interested just email me on shirley_dong79@yahoo.com.au to obtain the recipe.

Agree (1 people agree)    Disagree (0 people disagree) Report this
 

12 Aug 2008 18:31 AEST

Phil

From: Melbourne

Recipe printing

You could try cutting and pasting the recipe into a text file (or Word document) and then printing.

Agree (0 people agree)    Disagree (0 people disagree) Report this
 

12 Aug 2008 15:31 AEST

Sarah Viney

From: Werribee Vic

Printing the Tajine recipe

I would dearly love to cook the Chicken tajine with preserved lemon and olives but it will not print the middle page. The ingredients and last 3 lines are all I get. Can you help please

Agree (1 people agree)    Disagree (0 people disagree) Report this
 

07 Aug 2008 12:35 AEST

The Hammer

From: Randwick

Tangines

I love stews. I love to cook stews. But I have always refrained from cooking a prince of stews - the tagine - because I couldn't be arsed buying one of those terracotta UFOs you are supposed to make them in. It is, entirely, because there thing has no other household use, and it woulkd reduce the size my houses living space excactly by its volume. You article has almost convinced me to buy one... almost.

Agree (4 people agree)    Disagree (3 people disagree) Report this
 

Join the discussion

You have characters remaining.
Validation (
) :
This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.

PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.

About this Blog

A blog about what the world eats, when and where it eats it, and why it matters to us all. Only much less ambitious than that sounds and with more excruciating puns.

Phil Lees grew up in rural Victoria, the first generation in his family to not have lived on the farm and thereby not slaughter their own meat.

In 2005 he moved to Cambodia and started the nation’s first food blog, Phnomenon.com, named after the best pun that he has ever made. It turns out that Cambodian food is delicious and unlike the warnings in most guidebooks, is not likely to kill you with any immediacy. Gridskipper called him a “national treasure”. Lonely Planet’s Greater Mekong guide called him “the unofficial pimp of Cambodian cuisine”. The New York Times laughed at a funny hotdog he saw.

Phil makes a mean sausage, a hoppy pale ale, a modest laksa. He owns three barbecues and is in the market for a fourth. He’s never eaten at a Michelin-starred restaurant. There is more important food in the world to be eaten.

 
ADVERTISEMENT