Doro wat' recipe

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Rating:

4.5/ 5 stars 97 Votes
  • Cuisine: African

Wat’ or Wet is a red stew which may be prepared with chicken (doro wat), beef, lamb or a variety of vegetables, but always with spice mixtures such as berbere. The preparation of a wat is a revelation and differs greatly to the methodology of most western stews. It begins with chopped onions cooked in a dry pot ie oil and fat-free, until much of their moisture has been extinguished. Fat (usually nit’r qibe) is then added, and the onions and spices are sautéed before the addition of other ingredients. This method causes the onions to break down and thicken the stew. Wats’ are traditionally eaten with injera bread.
 

Ingredients

Wat
1 whole chicken
3 lemons
500ml of vinegar
5-7 kg onions
50g finely ground cardamom seeds
100ml olive oil
100ml Nit’r Qibe (spiced clarified butter) See separate recipe
6 tbsp berbere spice mix (chilli powder)

Mixed spice
2 tbsp cardamom seeds
2 tbsp nigella seeds
2 tbsp ajwain (or fennel seeds)
1 tbsp African basil leaves, seed and leaves
2 tsp black pepper corns
3 tbsp salt
2 tbsp ground black pepper
12 hard boiled eggs

Preparation

Remove the skin completely from the chicken and cut into 21 portions. (This is the traditional Ethiopian way.) Any excess blood or fat on the chicken needs to be removed, as it will affect the flavour of the sauce. After the chicken has been cleaned, soak it in some vinegar and lemon juice with some wedges of lemon.

Finely dice the onions and place them in a large pot with the lid on over a medium heat. Do not add oil or liquid. Cook the onions until they have reduced. This process usually takes about an hour.

Once the onions have reduced, add the olive oil cook for 30 mins.
Then add the spiced ghee (nit’r qibe) and berbere and stir into the mixture.

Add the 21 portions of chicken. Bring the mixture to the boil, then reduce the temperature and allow the chicken to cook through, making sure the onions do not stick to the bottom of the pot.

Grind together the mixed spice ingredients and once the chicken is partially cooked, add the mixed spice and stir through. Add salt. Allow the mixture to simmer slowly and stir occasionally.

While the mixture is cooking, prepare the eggs. Bring water to the boil, add salt and hard-boil the eggs. Once cooked, peel the eggs and allow to cool.

Cut vertical groves into the eggs to ensure flavour seeps in. Spoon out some of the excess oil that settles on top of the mixture. Add the eggs when you are about to turn off the heat.

The dish is traditionally served on top of injera.. It is best left to sit over night to let the favours infuse and eaten at room temperature the following day.

Note: If worried that the sauce might be too spicy, reduce the intensity by adding tomato paste when adding the bebere or chilli powder.
 


If you enjoyed this Doro wat' recipe then browse more African recipes, stew recipes, meat recipes and our most popular hainanese chicken rice recipe.

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Comments (22)

Previous Page 1 | 2 | 3 | Next
03 Feb 2012 07:48 AEST
Zainab
Canberra
Delish!
I cooked this and my family loved it. I made my own berbere and nitr kibbeh and added a little honey. The only unpleasant part was hand chopping all those onions. I wish I could find more Ethiopian recipes like this.
Agree(0 people agree)
Disagree(0 people disagree)
24 Aug 2011 01:12 AEST
Raymond
Perth
African basil leaves
What is African basil and how does it compare to ones we more commonly see. I am going to try this recipe.
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09 Oct 2010 04:42 AEST
Corinna
Oyster Bay
Berbere
http://www.gourmetshopper.com.au and search for Berbere. I have ordered spices from there before and will do again in order to cook some african dishes. Loved the show. Does anybody know a african food shop in Sydney if there is one anyway...thanks
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08 Oct 2010 01:44 AEST
Atong
Fitzroy, vic
Chilli
Hi there, i like the dishes. But can you cook it without chilli, because red chilli makes me sick. when are you going to make Sudanese food.
Agree(2 people agree)
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30 Jun 2010 10:47 AEST
keir
marrickville
more chilli!
The dish is one of my favourites, but this recipe needs more chilli. Chilli solves everything!
Agree(1 people agree)
Disagree(2 people disagree)
09 Jan 2010 12:18 AEST
carol
Hillarys,wa
nigella seeds
Please tell me where to find Nigella seeds & Ajwain & African Basil leaves?? or what can be used instead
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30 Jul 2009 08:10 AEST
Sherrye
USA
Berbere explained
I've made berbere.... it is a rather complex spice mixture. (check out berbere recipes on www.congocookbook.com) You can't replace it merely with chili powder (although a major ingredient IS dried chilis). all the spices are toasted in a dry pan and then powdered together. Trust me, it's worth the work!
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28 Jun 2009 05:26 AEST
Wal Frank
Geranium SA
Doro Wat
Surely the 5 - 7 Kgm onions can't be correct . Should this read 5 - 7 onions ?
Agree(14 people agree)
Disagree(7 people disagree)
   

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