CHICKPEAS AND WILD RICE WITH
TOMATOES
This is one of those really great recipes. It tastes wonderful, but it’s simple, inexpensive, easy to cook and uses food that
you - or at any rate I - always have to hand. To me, it’s so delicious that it’s fit for
a celebration or to give to guests. I love it, and every time I make
it, I only wish that I’d made twice as much!
If you don't have wild rice on board, or it's beyond your budget, substitute your normal brown. It will still make a lovely meal.
serves 2
Ingredients
1 onion, chopped
2 tbsp olive oil (preferably from a jar
of sun-dried tomatoes in olive oil)
1/2 cup rice
1/4 cup wild rice
2½ cups water
1/2 cup chickpeas, soaked
1 tsp Annie's Mixed Herbs or a handful of chopped parsley
1/2 tsp (heaped) Annie's Seasoned Salt
400 g/14 oz can tomatoes*
1 garlic clove
cracked black pepper
Method:
- Heat the oil in the pressure cooker and add the chopped onion. Cook for a few minutes until softened and transparent.
- Add the rice and wild rice and cook for a further 5 minutes, stirring frequently until the grains of rice become opaque.
- Pour in the water and bring to the boil. Add the chickpeas and the dried mixed herbs (if you're using fresh parsley, keep this until the end). Stir well and put the lid on the pressure cooker. Bring up to pressure and cook for 15 minutes.
- Reduce pressure at room temperature. Add the salt. Dice the garlic and add to the pan.
- Drain the tomatoes and put the juice aside for another recipe. Add the tomatoes to the pressure cooker and chop them very roughly with your spoon – they should stay in big chunks.
- Season generously with pepper, check the salt and reheat, with the lid on, over a low flame.
- If you are using fresh parsley, chop this finely and mix it through before serving.
Note:
- If you're somewhere that tomatoes are affordable, this is a good meal to use them, so that you don't have to store the juice. Peel them first, if you want to and cut them in quarters or eighths, depending on how big they are. I can't suggest how many to use, but cut up, they would measure a generous cup and a half.
- Fresh parsley truly enhances this dish.
You will find many more rice recipes here
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