For those of us who are sensitive to wheat, it is a great find. It is not technically a grain and is in the Chenopodiaceae family which also includes spinach and beets. It has a balanced set of amino acids which other grains and rice do not have.
Even if you're not sensitive to wheat, it makes a tasty addition to your cupboards and comes in a variety of colors. Use it in place of rice or couscous or as a breakfast cereal. Tonight I combined red quinoa with a fresh fava bean sauce and made a tasty dinner.
Fresh Fava Bean Sauce with Quinoa
4 tsp olive oil, divided
1 1/2 tsp garlic, minced
1 T fresh oregano, finely chopped
1 boneless, skinless chicken breast, frozensalt and pepper, to taste
1 c. cooked, peeled fava beans
1 c. dry quinoa
(garlic powder, cayenne powder, dried oregano, dried basil, dash TABASCO® brand Chipotle Pepper Sauce)
1. Cover chicken breast with water. Add garlic powder, cayenne powder, dried oregano and basil and the Tabasco (I just add a little of this and a little of that). Cover and bring to a boil. Boil until chicken is done. Remove chicken breast to cool and save the "broth."
2. In pan, heat oil and saute garlic until light brown. Add fresh oregano. Add 1/2 c. of reserved chicken broth, 3/4 c. of the fava beans, and salt and pepper to taste. Simmer for approximately 3 min. Puree in separte container. Return to pan. Add additional 1/2 c. chicken broth or more to make a sauce. Add remaining 1/4 c. fava beans.
3. Bring 2 c. chicken broth or water as needed to a boil in separate pan. Add quinoa. Bring back to a boil, cover, and turn down to low. Cook about 15 minutes or until all the water is absorbed.
4. Dice chicken. Heat 2 tsp olive oil in large pan and add chicken. Add cooked quinoa. Pour fava bean sauce over chicken/quinoa and toss. Heat until warm.
5. Enjoy! Goes well with a green salad.
Note: There are a number of ways one could approach this recipe. You could use pre-made chicken broth and pre-cooked chicken. In that case, skip step 1.
4 comments:
I just adore quinoa. I tried to grow some last year but forgot the soaker hose was on and went to work last fall and killed the sprots. I'm going to plant some after I pick the plums from the tree next week and then I can plant up the space I left clear for the ladder (how's that for planning ahead?).
I admit - I have a terrible garden. It's mostly tomatoes. I've got broccoli raab, arugula, chard (coming in!) and some other things -- but I mostly have tomatoes. Not very self-sustaining, I admit. But I will have plenty of tomato paste and sun dried tomatoes all winter. :)
Yum, this sounds delicious. I'm glad to see people using their fava beans. I want to make some ful with mine.
At Holy Cow we served this as part of a Middle Eastern special--a scoop of warm favas on a scoop of cold hummus with olive oil, cilantro and pita. I guess served this way it is called "Musabacha" or "Masabacha".
Anton claimed that fava beans contain natural mellowing agents or something like that. All I know is that it was tasty!
101 Cookbooks, my favorite food blog, has some great quinoa recipes that you might enjoy:
http://www.101cookbooks.com/ingredient/quinoa
Thanks for sharing your recipe :)
Carley
I love quinoa! I do toast mine in the pan prior to cooking to help bring out the full nutty flavor.
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