Ottolenghi’s Courgette and Manouri Fritters

1 year ago 5




Ingredients

3            3 medium courgettes (580g), trimmed and coarsely grated

2            small shallots (50g), finely chopped

2            garlic cloves, crushed

finely grated zest of 2 limes

60g        self-raising flour

2            eggs, lightly beaten

2½ tsp  ground coriander

1½ tsp  ground cardamom

150g     manouri (or halloumi or feta), roughly broken into 1–2cm chunks

about 150ml              sunflower oil, for frying

coarse sea salt and black pepper

For the lime and cardamom soured cream:

200ml   soured cream

5g          coriander, roughly chopped

½ tsp     ground cardamom

finely grated zest and juice of 1 lime

Method

1 Mix together all the ingredients for the soured cream sauce in a small bowl, along with 1/4 teaspoon of salt and a grind of black pepper. Set aside in the fridge until ready to serve.

2 Place the grated courgettes in a colander and sprinkle over 1 teaspoon salt. Set aside for 10 minutes, then squeeze them to remove most of the liquid: you want the courgettes to keep a little bit of moisture, so don’t squeeze them completely dry. Transfer to a large bowl and add the shallots, garlic, lime zest, flour, eggs, ground coriander, cardamom and a grind of black pepper. Mix well to form a uniform batter, then fold in the manouri cheese gently so it doesn’t break up much.

3 Pour enough oil into a large frying pan so it rises 2–3mm up the sides and place on a medium heat. Once hot, add 4 separate heaped dessertspoons of mixture to the pan, spacing them well apart and flattening each fritter slightly with the flat side of a slotted spoon as they cook. Cook for 6 minutes (or according to the cooking instructions above, if your fritters are quenelles), turning once halfway through, until golden and crisp on both sides. Transfer to a kitchen paper-lined plate and keep somewhere warm while you continue with the remaining two batches. Place 3 fritters on each plate and serve at once, with the sauce alongside or in a bowl on the side.

by Yotam Ottolenghi, Ramael Scully from NOPI: The Cookbook

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