Potato curry

Autumn is upon us, and it’s the perfect time for slow-cooked dishes. Slow-cooked food is ideal when you want rich flavours without having to spend the whole evening in the kitchen. Prepare your ingredients, pop them in the pan and leave them to cook on their own.

Ingredients

Potato curry
800 g waxy potatoes, e.g. Red Raja or Ditta
½ butternut squash or Hokkaido squash
2 tsp whole cumin seeds
12 black peppercorns
1 tsp coriander seeds
2 large onions
6 cloves of garlic
1 piece of fresh ginger (approx. 5 cm)
1 tbsp tomato purée
1 small piece of fresh turmeric
1 small fresh chilli, to taste and for heat
1 tsp cinnamon
2 tbsp garam masala
1⁄2 dl olive oil
Approx. 300 ml water
200 ml whipping cream
Juice of 1 lemon
Sea salt
Mint yoghurt
1 bunch of Moroccan mint
2 1⁄2 dl Greek yoghurt
Sea salt
Serving
3–4 spring onions
1⁄2 dl roasted peanuts
1 bunch of fresh coriander
1 jar of chutney
Naan bread

See video guides here

Instructions

Potato curry

Peel the potatoes and cut them into 2–4 large chunks. Peel the pumpkin, scrape out the seeds and cut it into pieces the same size as the potatoes.

Toast the cumin, black pepper and coriander briefly in a dry frying pan until they release their aroma.

Peel and finely dice the onions. Place the garlic, ginger, turmeric, chilli, tomato purée and all the spices in a mini food processor and blend to a smooth paste.

Heat the oil in a pan and sauté the onions for about 8 minutes, until they are soft and have taken on a little colour. Add the potatoes and continue to sauté for about 5 minutes. Then add the spice paste and continue to fry for approx. 2–3 minutes. Add water and cream, cover and simmer for 15 minutes, then season with a little salt.

Next, add the pumpkin pieces to the curry, stir gently and add a little extra water if needed, just enough to barely cover the ingredients, then put the lid on. Cook until everything is tender, stirring gently a couple of times without breaking up the potatoes and pumpkin. Finally, season to taste with lemon juice, salt and, if desired, a little fresh chilli.

Turn off the heat and leave the curry to stand for 10 minutes.

Mint yoghurt

Pluck the mint leaves and blend them with 100 ml of yoghurt and a pinch of salt using a hand blender in a tall glass. Fold the blended mint into the rest of the yoghurt

Serving

Finely slice the spring onions into small rings. Chop the roasted peanuts. Chop or pluck the coriander. Serve the curry in deep bowls, sprinkled with spring onions, peanuts and fresh coriander.
Serve the curry with mint yoghurt, apple chutney and naan bread.

Karry med forskellige urter og kød, der smager utroligt fra aamanns