How to Use a Moroccan Tagine: Origins, Culinary Uses, and seven Tagine Recipe Ideas
If
you’ve been lured into purchasing a Moroccan tagine for the first time and
wonder what delicious dishes can be made in its cone-shaped ceramic
vessel—you’ve come to the right place. This traditional cookware is ideal for
rich, slow-cooked stews of meat, poultry, or fish, and makes a perfect one-pot
meal to share at a dinner party.
What Is a Tagine?
A tagine sometimes-spelled “tajine,” is a traditional Moroccan cooking vessel made of ceramic or
unglazed clay with a round base and low sides. A cone-shaped cover sits on the
base during cooking. The conical lid traps steam during cooking and returns the
liquid to the clay pot, resulting in a moist dish with concentrated flavours.
Tagine is also the name for a Maghrebi, or North African, dish
cooked in the tagine pot. Tagine is closely associated with Moroccan cuisine,
where slow-cooked savoury stews made with meat, poultry, or fish, are cooked
with vegetables, aromatic spices, dried fruit, and nuts.
How to Use a Tagine
Follow this
step-by-step guide to using a tagine.
Recipe Ideas for Your
Moroccan Tagine
Now that you’ve
mastered how to use your tagine, see below for some creative recipe ideas using
your tagine.
1. Moroccan lamb tagine: Tender
seasoned lamb stew meat with chickpeas, dates, oranges, and almonds is a
classic sweet and savoury Moroccan dish. Serve over couscous to soak up its
delicious sauce.
2. Moroccan chicken with preserved lemons and olives: A
fragrant chicken stew with spiced bone-in chicken thighs or chicken breasts
cooked with tangy preserved lemons, sautéed onions, and savoury green olives.
Finish with sprigs of fresh cilantro.
3. Moroccan chicken and apricot: The
secret to this dish is using the North
African spice blend, ‘Ras El
Hanout’, made with cardamom, clove, ground cinnamon,
coriander, ground cumin, paprika, mace, nutmeg, peppercorn, and turmeric. The
spice blend adds a bold flavour to the chicken and makes a rich sauce. Dried
apricots, tomatoes, and honey are added to the dish for a combination of savoury
and sweet.
4. ‘Kefta Mkaouara’ (Moroccan
meatballs): A Moroccan meatball dish in a zesty tomato sauce.
Eggs are often added to the dish at the end of cooking, resulting in poached
eggs perfect for dipping with crusty Moroccan bread.
5. ‘Mqualli’ (Fish
tagine): A classic fish dish with potatoes, tomatoes, and bell
peppers. Any firm fish can be used such as swordfish, sea bass, or Dorado. The
sauce base is typically made with ginger, saffron,
and extra virgin olive oil.
6. Moroccan vegetable tagine:
A vegetarian-friendly tagine made with chickpeas, carrots, russet potatoes, and
sweet potatoes. Seasoned with ‘harissa
paste’ and a touch of sweetness from honey and
golden raisins.
7. ‘Shakshuka’: Shakshuka is a
simple and delicious dish of eggs that are poached in a spiced tomato sauce
that is cooked with onions, chili peppers and garnished with herbs. Shakshuka
is traditionally cooked in a tagine, but it can also be made in a cast-iron pan
or skillet.
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