Welcome to our year of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet, a new catering service out of East Thetford, Vermont. Over the years Ryon's dad, Barry (the Barefoot Gourmet himself; check him out at barefoot-gourmet.com), has given his children, along with several of their well deserving friends, many of his recipes that are now famous among their circle. After receiving the latest additions, the cookbook includes about 111 recipes! The exact number is still a little fuzzy. As a New Year adventure, we decided to make our way through the entire cookbook. Yes, we have decided to cook (well Ryon to cook, Caitlin to eat) ALL of the BFG's recipes. We will blog regularly about the successes and tragedies of cooking with the Barefoot Gourmet and maybe add in a little about what is going on down here in C'Ville. Keep us posted on your attempts at the recipes...and don't forget, food tastes better when made with a wooden spoon and eaten with good company. Enjoy!

-Ryon and Caitlin

Saturday, April 3, 2010

#17 - Green Mountain Bobotie

By Ryon - For those of you who have never had or heard of bobotie, you are probably wondering what the heck this is and how to even pronounce this dish (bah-boo-tee). This is the South African version of meatloaf or, as my dad states in the recipe, "South African comfort food". As the name suggests, however, there is a New England-style twist to this version of the South African favorite and that twist is... you guessed it... maple syrup. Seriously, is there anything that maple syrup doesn't make better? (Think about it for a moment.... ok, now move on.)

Be prepared to get your hands dirty. This essentially requires making a huge messy meatball with ground beef (or lamb), soggy bread, eggs and onions. I'd say it's fun mixing this all together, but really it feels kind of gross.

The hardest part for me in the making of this recipe was finding a pan to fit inside of another pan for the actual cooking process. I'm not sure what this is supposed to achieve, but the recipe calls for placing the bobotie dish inside a larger baking dish filled halfway with water. No matter what combination of pans I tried, I could not get it to fit. I eventually just used a cookie sheet and filled it with as much water as it could hold. Mission accomplished? I think that requires me to know what my mission was trying to accomplish in the first place. Oh well. It came out great.

This makes tons of leftovers and so we enjoyed the bobotie multiple ways: on it's own, with naan and sweet mango chutney, over rice with spicy chutney, etc. It keeps well in the fridge or you can freeze it for later when you need a delicious meal and don't feel like cooking!

This particular bobotie was made with a curry powder that had no heat and therefore gave a sweet, mild flavor to the dish. You can play around with different curries that will give you much different flavors. Next time I think I will turn up the heat a bit and try a spicier curry powder.

A note from Caitlin- I brought some of this bobotie with me to school for lunch and my professor, Antoinette, essentially stopped in the middle of her sentence to ask what I was eating and where I had gotten it. This dish has such a distinct and delicious aroma that I think we may have some new followers to our blog!

Rating: RHC

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