I’m not sure how many of you are readers of The Washington Post but a few weeks ago in their online edition in the food section was a recipe adapted from Unforgettable: The Bold Flavors of Paula Wolfert’s Renegade Life, for Megadarra. It’s a Turkish dish of brown lentils, rice and caramelized onions. It was one of those recipes that called me from afar. Paula Wolfert has been a food hero of mine from way before she became ill.
Along with the dish she served a sauce of drained yogurt, water, garlic,mild red pepper flakes, lemon juice and seasoning. That sounded good to me too. I had everything but a fresh lemon and dried mint so I headed to the supermarket and I bought $60 worth of groceries and came home without the dried mint. Don’t do that.
I washed and picked the lentils and put them in 4 cups of water and brought them to the boil and then to a simmer for 10 minutes. Then I washed the rice and let it drip and went to cut the onions. The onion cutting is the only thing that takes time and I didn’t spend more than 5-10 minutes on it. I sprinkled them on a tea towel and left them to dry a bit before frying.
When the lentils were half done, I put in the rice and made sure it was covered in water and brought that to the boil and then to a simmer for 20 minutes. When it was done, I removed it from the heat.
Then I started on the yogurt sauce. I found the muslin (which is never where you think you left it) and drained the yogurt for 20 minutes. While it was draining I made a paste out of garlic and salt and squeezed a fresh lemon.
Once the yogurt had drained for 20 minutes I whisked in garlic until I liked it. The recipe called for water but I liked it without any. Then I put in the red pepper flakes, mint and lemon juice and whisked it well.
In a large frying pan I added the olive oil and brought it to medium, tested one slice of onion and then turned the lot into the pan. It took about 15 minutes on medium low to caramelize the onions. I popped them on a cooling rack and in minutes they were crunchy. Half went into the lentil and rice mixture and half went on top of the dish with a shake of dried mint.
This was a seriously easy vegetarian dish to make. I took a few minutes after eating to look up megadarra and other people make it differently. One recipe called for the lentils to be sauteed in butter or olive oil before adding the water and it called for cumin and ground allspice and I think I would have liked that one better than this. I found the megadarra to be good but not outstanding.
What WAS outstanding and I beg you to make this, is the Turkish Yogurt Sauce. It’s the best dip I’ve made in a long time. John came in while I was making it and he asked if he could have some. I wandered off to write my post and when I came back in, there wasn’t a drop of sauce left. He used it as a dip and ate it with some fresh mushrooms and carrot sticks and some crackers.
- 1 medium yellow onion
- 1½ cups dried brown or green lentils, picked over, rinsed and drained
- 4 cups water, plus hot water as needed
- 1 cup long-grain white rice (uncooked)
- 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
- Sea salt
- ½ cup extra-virgin olive oil
- Crumbled dried mint leaves, for garnish
- Mild red pepper flakes, such as Aleppo, for garnish (I used standard chilli flakes)
- 2 cups plain Greek yogurt or 1 quart regular plain yogurt
- 3 cloves garlic
- Flaked sea salt
- Up to ½ cup water
- Pinch sugar (optional)
- Up to 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
- Pinch mild red pepper flakes, such as Aleppo (I used dried chilli flakes)
- Freshly ground black pepper
- 1 tablespoon crumbled dried mint leaves, plus a few fresh mint leaves, for garnish
- 2 tablespoons olive oil to drizzle on top just before serving
- Line a baking sheet with a clean dish towel.
- Slice the onions from top to bottom into ⅛-inch slices. Gather them in a separate clean dish towel and squeeze out as much moisture as possible. Spread them in a single layer on the lined baking sheet. Let sit for 1 hour, at room temperature. This step ensures the onions will be crunchy when you take them from the cooking oil.
- Meanwhile, combine the washed and picked lentils and water in a saute pan over high heat. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to medium and cook for 10 minutes; at this point the lentils should still be slightly firm.
- Wash and rinse the rice under cool running water, until the draining water runs clear. Shake to drain well.
- Add the rinsed rice to the lentils, along with the black pepper and a pinch of salt. If the liquid level in the pan doesn’t cover the rice-lentil mixture, add just enough hot water to make that happen. Increase the heat to high and bring just to a boil, then reduce the heat to low, cover and cook for about 20 minutes, until the rice and lentils are tender. Remove from the heat and let cool.
- Meanwhile, line a baking sheet with several layers of paper towels. Set a wire cooling rack on top of it.
- Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. (I only needed medium heat) Once the oil shimmers, add an onion slice to test the temperature; if the onion sizzles on contact, add the rest of the slices and fry for about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally and adjusting the heat so that the onion doesn’t burn. They should become a rich golden brown.
- Use a slotted spoon to transfer them to the wire rack; season right away with a pinch of salt. Let stand for 30 minutes to 1 hour, so the fried onions can drain and dry/crisp up.
- Use a long fork or chopsticks to fluff the rice-lentil mixture, cover partially and let stand till the onion is ready.
- Add half the fried onions and their cooking oil to the rice-lentil mixture. Stir gently to incorporate. Let stand, uncovered, for 10 minutes.
- To serve,fluff that mixture once more, then transfer to a large platter, mounding it. Scatter the remaining fried onions on top, along with the dried mint, a sprinkling of the salt and the red pepper flakes. Add some Turkish Yogurt Sauce on top and start eating!
- Line a fine-mesh strainer with cheesecloth and set it over a bowl. Spoon the yogurt into it and let drain (see headnote); it should reduce to the consistency of a thick sour cream. Transfer to a shallow bowl.
- Use the flat side of a chef’s knife to crush the garlic. Sprinkle with ¼ teaspoon of the salt and mash to form a paste.
- If the yogurt is too thick, whisk a tablespoon of water in until creamy and smooth. Whisk in the salted garlic ¼ teaspoon at a time, tasting along the way. If the mixture becomes acrid, stir in the optional pinch of sugar. Let sit at room temperature for 1 hour.
- Add the lemon juice (to taste) and the red pepper flakes, then season lightly with salt and black pepper. Whisk in the dried mint. Cover and refrigerate for at least 20 minutes, or up to overnight.
- Just before serving, drizzle the oil over the yogurt and garnish with fresh mint, if desired.
Krista Bjorn says
This dish has been on my To Make list for AGES!!! It sounds so good, and you make it look beautiful. 🙂
John/Kitchen Riffs says
I’m always going to the grocery store and forgetting to pick up one of the main things I need. So now I never go without a list. Our motto is: If it’s not on the list, it doesn’t exist. Too true, in our case. Anyway, Paula Wolfert is a god. Have you read her _Paula Wolfert’s World of Food_? My favorite of her cookbooks. Anyway, this looks like my kind of dish — thanks.
Maureen says
It’s worse! I had a list and the dried mint was on it! I have no excuse.
Eva Taylor says
It’s too bad the Megadarra didn’t hit your tastebuds, our lunch was like that today, not sure why because I’ve made the dish we had a million times. The yogurt sauce reminds me a bit of tzatziki sauce, which I love, so I’m sure I’d love it too!
Gerlinde says
I even forget to buy items that are on my list, oh well. This looks like an interesting dish, I never made anything like it. I have to try it.
Sues says
Oooh yum! This dish looks right up my alley, but I agree that cumin must make it even better!! That yogurt sauce sounds perfect 🙂
A_Boleyn says
This dish (mujaddara in my records) is on my to do list as well. I’ve tried the version a local restaurant makes and really enjoyed it. This video and the recipe that goes with it is what I’m going to try.
http://titlisbusykitchen.com/recipe/mujaddara
Maureen says
I saw a few different recipes other than Paula’s but she’s my hero so I tried hers first.
SallyBR says
Your trip to the grocery store could be the soundtrack of my life… seriously…. I do that type of stuff ALL THE TIME!
so we can keep each other’s company!
Love Paula, also huge fan of her, long before her health problems became public.
this recipe you made is a real masterpiece… if only Phil could enjoy onions, I have to live vicariously through you on this one
Healthy World Cuisine says
I had to start putting my grocery list on my phone. Most generally I don’t forget my phone…well generally speaking… but some days… lol Do you ever put a bay leaf in your lentils while they are cooking. I love doing that it gives it so much more flavor. Wishing you a super week!
The Ninja Baker says
Thank you for the intro to Paula Wolfert and these tasty recipes =) The yogurt dip would be a great accompaniment to crudite, too.
Liz Posmyk (Good Things) says
Sounds quite tasty, Maureen. I agree, the muslin does seem to go walkabout!
Roberta Hunter says
OH MY!!!!!!! I am not much of a vegetarian. But this looks and sounds fabulous!
Maureen says
I know. It was really tasty and the yogurt sauce made the dish.
Eha says
I have regularly prepared this as Lebanese ‘mujadarrah’ for at least three decades. Methinks it is wonderful even without any sauce [since one oft eats Mid-Eastern food at room temperature it was a favourite for Sunday sailing lunches on Sydney Harbour 🙂 ! Must really get Paula’s book . . . . was for years in her foodie group in the US and absolutely adore this wonderful lady: and so brave still to carry on . . .
Glamorous Glutton says
This sounds delicious and I love the way you walk us through your recipe. Beautiful shots too. GG
Anna @ shenANNAgans says
Ha, went to the shops 3 times in a day (even had a flamin list) the other day. I blame the cyclone for my mind being a bit weird. Not sure what my excuse was before that.
Megadarra sounds really interesting, will totes give it a go. 🙂
Tricia @ Saving Room for Dessert says
Oh I missed this one but do read their food section (we live about 50 miles south of DC) This looks amazing and I love an occasional meatless meal. I love the sauce too – sounds great! Have a happy weekend Maureen!
Chris Scheuer says
This will definitely be on my “to try” list, it looks amazing. I don’t blame John for eating all that sauce. He might have had to fight me for it if I’d been there!
Julie says
Yum!
I love lentils, all those flavours sound fabulous, and so healthy . lol about going to the shop for two items, spending $60 and forgetting mint, that’s me everyday of the week!
Thanks for sharing
Julie
ThermoKitchen
Hotly Spiced says
I’ve never had a dish like this. It does sound wonderful and it looks amazing – your first photo really grabbed my attention. I think the yoghurt sauce would be excellent with it. Too many times I’ve been to the shops and not come back with the one ingredient I set out to buy – you could kick yourself xx
Nancy | Plus Ate Six says
Story of my life I’m afraid going out with a list and still coming back without an essential ingredient! This has been on my to-do list for the longest time and I have no excuse really – I practically have everything here apart from the dried mint!
Jackie Garvin says
You are so industrious to make homemade yogurt for the sauce! That’s on my to do list. Generally speaking, I love legumes and rice. I’ve never thought about a sauce for them. Thanks for the inspiration.
Liz says
When I saw the name of this dish, I was wondering “What the heck is megadarra???” Now that I know, I want to devour that whole bowl!! It sounds amazing.
Karen (Back Road Journal) says
The Megadarra sounds like an interesting dish that I would like to experiment with. I think John eating an entire bowl of the yogurt sauce says it all…I’ll definitely give it a try. 🙂
Laura | Tutti Dolci says
That yogurt sauce sounds incredible! I have a feeling I’d eat it as a dip, just like John – such a great appetizer idea!
Ruby & Cake says
oooo i got seriously hungry looking at that dish and that glorious yogurt sauce!
Pam says
This is new to me and it sounds delicious! We need more meatless meals here and this would be great to try. I will be checking out more of Paula’s recipes. Thanks!
Norma Chang says
You were showing your human side. I have, on more than one occasion, came home without item/s on the shopping list. Thanks for the crispy fried onion tip.
mjskitchen says
This is exciting – I’ve never heard of Megadarra nor Paula Wolert – a new dish and a new chef. YAY! Your megadarra looks quite delicious. I don’t eat lentils much, but with caramelized onion, it’s definitely worth giving them another try. Thanks Maureen! Headed to check out Paula W.
GiGi Eats says
WHENEVER I am reminding of TURKEY I get soooo pissed. I get pissed because when I went back in 2010 I was not as adventurous with my eating as I am now…. THUS I DID NOT take part in the shawamra/gyro! THE F is wrong with me!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Amanda (@lambsearshoney) says
I love this dish, but don’t make it nearly often enough.
I’m a big fan of Paula Wolfert’s too. I interviewed her a few years back. What was supposed to be a 10 minute Q&A turned into a hour long chat. She’s a remarkable lady.
Maureen says
I have envy!!
Emma @ Bake Then Eat says
I must say that dip does look really good 😀
Mary Frances says
Sounds totally delish! Particularly that yogurt sauce and Steve needs to eat yogurt now…
Megan Davis says
My mom taught me this Megadarra recipe, but I could never get it as perfect as hers though this looks easy! 🙂 I’m making this for the weekend, thank you!
Dr Martin Huang says
I love the yogurt sauce. It just make the dish even tastier.
Jahanzaib Khan says
This is exciting it’s definitely worth giving them another try. Thanks Maureen i will try it.