Recipes By Yotam Ottolenghi

117 recipes found

Butternut Squash, Leek and Za’atar Pie
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Butternut Squash, Leek and Za’atar Pie

This comforting pie makes a great vegetarian centerpiece, ideal for a celebration. It benefits from being assembled the day before, receiving a good amount of time to set in the fridge and thus involving a lot less work on the day you plan to enjoy it. You can also bake the whole thing a few hours in advance, then just reheat it in the oven for 20 minutes, if you like. Use any extra pastry trim to cut out fun, festive shapes like holly leaves or stars to personalize your pie. Serve this alongside roasted veggies or a big leafy salad.

4h8 servings
Grilled Portobellos With Chile Sauce, Sour Cream and Corn Nuts
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Grilled Portobellos With Chile Sauce, Sour Cream and Corn Nuts

This is a wonderful vegetarian main dish to serve in the center of your table, with tortillas or rice and a zesty green salad. Be sure to ventilate your kitchen well when you’re grilling the mushrooms and onions indoors, but, if weather permits, you can always grill them outdoors. If you’d like to make this less spicy, then feel free to leave out the dried chiles, making a simple bell pepper sauce instead. Keep this dish vegan by swapping out the sour cream for a nondairy alternative.

50m4 servings
Brown-Butter Butter Beans With Lemon and Pesto
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Brown-Butter Butter Beans With Lemon and Pesto

These roasted beans are treated in much the same way as toasted gnocchi, and yield similar results: They’re nicely browned on the surface, then coated in an unctuous, lemony, buttery sauce. Make sure to have your pesto and warm brown-butter sauce ready to pour onto the beans right when they come out of the oven, so that the beans remain crispy and the sauce nice and loose. For a vegetarian version, you can swap out the anchovies for some briny capers and leave out the Parmesan. The whole experience is quite rich, so serve these with some lightly cooked leafy greens.

45m4 servings
Turmeric Fried Eggs With Tamarind and Pickled Shallots
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Turmeric Fried Eggs With Tamarind and Pickled Shallots

These fried eggs, as good enough to eat as they are to admire, get their wonderfully eccentric appearance from turmeric and chile. You can serve this easy, punchy breakfast as is, or with some hash browns if you’re having them for brunch. Feel free to make this dish your own by swapping out the spinach for another leafy green, using red onion in place of the shallot, or by leaving out the chile for a milder, more kid-friendly version.

15m2 to 4 servings
Potato and Celery Root Gratin With Caper Brown Butter
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Potato and Celery Root Gratin With Caper Brown Butter

This is the perfect side dish to a Sunday roast or winter spread. Cutting the vegetables into batons as opposed to thinly slicing them lends a wonderful texture to the dish, and it looks pretty funky too. If you can’t find celeriac (celery root), then swap it out for an equal amount of Yukon Gold potatoes or similar semi-waxy potatoes. This is the kind of dish that tastes better as it sits, so feel free to serve it at room temperature if you prefer, adding the brown butter just before serving.

2h 30m4 to 6 servings
Spicy Coconut Greens With Tomatoes and Shrimp
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Spicy Coconut Greens With Tomatoes and Shrimp

This dish is loosely inspired by laing, a Filipino dish of dried taro leaves cooked in coconut milk that is traditionally made with pork and bagoong, a fermented fish or shrimp paste. This is quite a diversion, prepared with braised chard and topped with burst tomatoes and seared shrimp. You use only half the chard stems here, so you should reserve the extra stems to throw into soups, stews or your morning eggs. Get ahead by making these coconut greens up to two days in advance, then reheating to serve; the flavors will only improve over time. Serve with jasmine rice for a complete meal.

1h 15m4 servings
Fried Tagliatelle With Chickpeas and Smoky Tomatoes
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Fried Tagliatelle With Chickpeas and Smoky Tomatoes

Two pantry staples, chickpeas and pasta, come together to give you this hearty vegan main. (Do check the ingredient list on the packaging for your tagliatelle, as some may contain egg.) Frying the pasta nests before cooking them provides plenty of texture, even as the pasta softens and releases its starches into the chickpeas and their cooking water. Feel free to play around with the smoky tomato oil, adding different chiles or spices, such as cumin or coriander seeds. And be sure to start the night before by soaking your chickpeas. However, if you’re running low on time, you can also use two drained 14-ounce cans of chickpeas, adjusting liquid levels as necessary.

9h4 servings
Oven Fries With Tahini Yogurt and Smoky-Sweet Nuts
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Oven Fries With Tahini Yogurt and Smoky-Sweet Nuts

This is an alternative take on loaded fries, but the cheesy sauce is replaced with tahini yogurt and the bacon bits with smoky-sweet nuts. It’s no less decadent, however, and a great one to dig into and share. Double up on the smoky-sweet nuts, if you like. They’re an easy way to introduce both texture and flavor to dishes, and are particularly good spooned onto hummus.

1h 15m4 servings
Sunset Pavlova With Sweet Vinegar and Rosemary
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Sunset Pavlova With Sweet Vinegar and Rosemary

A Pavlova is among the best desserts to serve at a dinner party, as it brings the wow factor but is also very forgiving. If the meringue cracks in places, you don’t need to fuss as you’ll be covering it with cream and fruit. You can play with the flavoring of the cream and change up the fruits. If you can’t find kumquats, feel free to swap them out for muscat or green seedless grapes, or an orange, peeled and sliced into rounds. You can make the meringue base up to two days in advance, as long as you let it cool completely before storing in an airtight container. Keep it in the coolest part of your kitchen, away from direct sunlight, to avoid any humidity. 

1h 15m8 to 10 servings
Devil’s Food Cake With Hazelnut Praline
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Devil’s Food Cake With Hazelnut Praline

The best thing about chocolate cake is that it doesn’t really need a specific season or, arguably, a specific reason to be made. The malted cream and hazelnut praline make this cake what you could call “pure joy” in dessert form. You’ll make more smooth praline than you need; keep any extra in a jar in the fridge to spread onto toast, or to mix with cocoa powder for a Nutella-esque experience. You surely won’t regret it.

1h 30m8 servings
Brown Sugar Roulade With Burnt Honey Apples
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Brown Sugar Roulade With Burnt Honey Apples

If the flavors of winter could be rolled into one, then this meringue roulade would be the result: Warming cinnamon, burnt honey, sweet apples and tangy orange come together to make a dessert fit for the festive season. Make sure all your individual components have completely cooled before assembling, as you don’t want to create any excess moisture in the roulade. Get ahead by making the apples and cream the day before, then keeping them refrigerated until needed. Feel free to make this roulade your own by swapping out pears for apples, cardamom for cinnamon or more whipping cream for mascarpone. So long as you stick to the basic technique, the flavors are yours to play with.

1h 30m8 servings
Soba Noodles With Ginger Broth and Crunchy Ginger
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Soba Noodles With Ginger Broth and Crunchy Ginger

This noodle dish celebrates the pungent, spicy notes of ginger by both infusing it in stock to create a warming broth and frying it with shallots and panko to create crunchy ginger crumbs you’ll want to sprinkle onto everything: eggs, rice or even a savory porridge. Feel free to double the amount of the ginger crumbs, if you like; they’ll keep in an airtight jar at room temperature for up to one week. Serve these noodles with your protein of choice — tofu, fish, leftover roast chicken — or any cooked vegetable for a complete meal.

45m4 servings
Cheese and Spinach Phyllo Rolls
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Cheese and Spinach Phyllo Rolls

Tangy and bright, these phyllo rolls make for a great appetizer when you’re preparing food to entertain or to share. The star here is the sumac onion filling, which adds a wonderfully sharp surprise inside crispy phyllo. Though these rolls gain complexity from feta, halloumi, toasted pine nuts and fresh spinach, mint and parsley, they’re also quite forgiving in that you can always use different cheeses, herbs or nuts. Feel free to play around with different phyllo shapes; thicker cigars or even triangles both look great.

1h 30m21 rolls
Five-Spice Butternut Squash in Cheesy Custard
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Five-Spice Butternut Squash in Cheesy Custard

Orange butternut squash, golden custard and fiery-red pepper and sesame topping reflect the colors of fall in this dish. It’s perfect for a festive brunch, as it’s filling enough to keep you going until the big feast, and special enough to really feel like you’re celebrating. Serve this with some lightly cooked greens, if you like.

1h 30m4 servings
Grilled Cucumbers With Tomato-Cardamom Dressing and Mozzarella
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Grilled Cucumbers With Tomato-Cardamom Dressing and Mozzarella

Grilling cucumbers gives them a nice charred flavor while retaining their bite. Try to buy Persian cucumbers that are thicker as the thin ones can often be too flimsy to cook. Torn mozzarella adds richness to the cucumbers doused with a garlicky, spiced tomato dressing. (Feel free to cook the cucumbers on an outdoor grill, treating them in the same way.) If you’re into creamy cheeses, then burrata works very well here, too — or, you could keep this dish vegan by leaving out the mozzarella completely. It will still have a wonderful umami flavor without it. Make this a complete meal by serving alongside your protein of choice. 

30m4 side-dish servings
Cheesy Bread Balls in Tomato Sauce
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Cheesy Bread Balls in Tomato Sauce

It’s hard not to love this combination of tomato sauce, melted cheese, bread balls and garlic oil, which is sort of like a pizza, deconstructed. If you prefer not to stuff the bread balls, you can skip that part and simply roll them until round, baking them in the same way. The extra cheese can then be added to the sauce around the bread balls just before broiling. This dough method isn’t complicated, but you could work with store-bought pizza dough to save on time.

1h4 servings
Yogurty Butter Beans With Pistachio Dukkah
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Yogurty Butter Beans With Pistachio Dukkah

This is the kind of mezze you’d want to serve at the first sign of spring, when the days are a little brighter, the air a little lighter and the cooler temperatures are finally behind us (we made it!). Of course, it’s delicious all year round. This dish is all about the layering of crunchy dukkah over tender butter beans with peas and herbs coated in a creamy, garlicky yogurt dressing for the perfect bite. Serve with crisp lettuce, or bread if you like, as a light lunch or as part of a mezze spread.

15m2 to 4 servings
Pesto Pasta With White Beans and Halloumi
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Pesto Pasta With White Beans and Halloumi

This vegetarian weeknight dinner comes together in half an hour and is made super special with the addition of halloumi. It looks like a fluffy cloud when grated, and it gives the pasta just the right amount of salty tang. Be sure to use a very fine grater, like a Microplane, when you prepare the halloumi, as it will only add to the fluffy effect (which is what you’re after). This is a full meal in its own right, but you can also serve it alongside a big green salad.

30m4 servings
Lamb Meatball and Semolina Dumpling Soup With Collard Greens
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Lamb Meatball and Semolina Dumpling Soup With Collard Greens

This hearty soup is a meal in a bowl. It is very much inspired by Iraqi kubba hamuth. “Hamuth” means sour in Arabic, which refers to the soup’s sour tomato and lemon broth. Traditionally, the soup contains lamb-stuffed semolina dumplings called “kubba.” The divergence here is that they exist as two separate components — meatballs and semolina dumplings — and add a wonderful textural contrast. If you can’t find collard greens, feel free to swap these out for an equal amount of Tuscan kale.

50m4 to 6 servings
Spinach and Chermoula Pie
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Spinach and Chermoula Pie

This pie is a great way to use up your freezer staples: that one bag of frozen spinach and that packet of puff pastry sitting in the back. Feel free to make this pie your own by playing around with the herbs and spices. You can also veganize it by leaving out the feta and using a vegan-friendly puff pastry. Typically used as a marinade or condiment, chermoula is a North African spice paste with a multitude of variations. Here, it is used twice, once to flavor the base and then again as a sauce to drizzle alongside.

2h4 to 6 servings
Roasted Grapes With Caramelized Wine and Yogurt Ice Cream
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Roasted Grapes With Caramelized Wine and Yogurt Ice Cream

In this recipe, grapes take on a floral, caramelized flavor from fresh thyme and honey. If your thyme is woody, discard the stems and just use the leaves. If you don’t have an ice cream machine, the ice cream mixture can be placed directly in the freezer without churning. It won’t be quite as creamy and smooth, but quite good enough. You will get more ice cream than you need for serving with the grapes, but eating the leftovers is no hardship. 

1h 30m6 servings
Grilled Carrots With Yogurt, Carrot-Top Oil and Dukkah
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Grilled Carrots With Yogurt, Carrot-Top Oil and Dukkah

You can serve these carrots with Greek yogurt, or with homemade labneh, if you start the night before (see Tip below). This recipe calls for making your own dukkah: You’ll have more than you need, but keep any leftovers in a sealed container to sprinkle over salads, grilled meat or fish. A bunch of carrots from your farmers’ market will work best here, but you can also use regular carrots that have been halved or quartered lengthwise. If you can’t find bunches of carrots with their fresh tops, you can prepare the oil using parsley instead, or double the tarragon for an even more herbaceous version.

1h4 servings
Herby Polenta With Corn, Eggs and Feta
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Herby Polenta With Corn, Eggs and Feta

Cooking polenta in the oven has turned out to be quite a game-changer for me, and completely contradicts the belief that polenta needs to consistently be attended to. Do try to find coarse cornmeal here rather than the quick-cooking kind, as that style of polenta simply won’t yield the same smooth and creamy result that you’re looking for. You can also swap out the chicken stock for vegetable stock or water if you’re looking for a vegetarian alternative. I like to serve this as a midday brunch with a zesty green salad, as it’s hearty enough to keep you going until dinner.

1h 15m4 to 6 servings
Blueberry, Almond and Lemon Cake
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Blueberry, Almond and Lemon Cake

A slice of this berry-dotted cake is perfect late in the morning, for afternoon tea or after dinner, with coffee. It keeps for up to three days in a sealed container, but is at its absolute best on the day it's made.

1h 30m8 servings