Lamb, spinach, and pistachio pie with harissa
This recipe is the eventual outcome of an experiment that started with quite fancying chachouka, but having both some lamb to use, and a boyfriend whose fondness for pie borders on the obsessional. I usually make the chachouka from the River Cottage Veg book, (someone's replicated the recipe here) but after all the tinkering, this has basically nothing in common with it. It's definitely a pie, though. Look, you can see the pastry.In fact, we get from there to here via the Braised eggs with lamb, tahini, and sumac recipe in Ottolenghi's Jerusalem, liberally crashed into spanakopita. The first iteration worked in pure flavour terms, but the textures were a wash out. So after a bit of work, this is what we end up with.
Fair warning: it is a bit of a faff
Ingredients:
Makes enough for at least six. The pie is mighty.
- Lamb shoulder, about 800g on the bone
- 2 onions
- 4-5 fresh tomatoes, or a tin, I guess
- Puff pastry, 500g
- Spinach, 400g (frozen is fine, as is fresh. Tinned is too mushy)
- Light stock, chicken or vegetable, around 400ml
- 2 eggs (1 for brushing, you can sort of just use milk)
- 100g pistachios
- 50g pine nuts
- Breadcrumbs - a generous handful in the 70g range
- Garlic, 2-3 cloves
- Fresh coriander, a decent bunch
- 1tsp oregano
- 1tsp cumin seeds
- 2tsp sumac
- 1tbsp harissa paste, less if it's feisty
Instructions:
Add the stock, ensure it's all well combined, and carefully put the lamb back into the casserole. It should be just covered, but it's not massively important if there's a little bit poking out at the top. Add the oregano, cumin, coriander, and sumac, and give it a stir. Then put the lid on and stick it in the oven on around 160 for an hour and a half.Toast the nuts in a dry frying pan or skillet, and very roughly chop them.After the hour and a half, the lamb should be starting to fall apart, and come off the bone. If not, give it another half hour or so, probably with the lid off to reduce.Remove the lamb and leave it to cool somewhere for a while, and when it's cooled enough to handle, shred it off the bone and back into the sauce. On the hob, gently simmer the whole thing to reduce, stirring to break up any chunks of lamb - it should be thick, sticky, and shredded. Drive off most of the moisture (I'd guess twenty minutes, stirring occasionally), then take it off the heat and stir in the harissa paste and nuts, leaving it all to cool.You can stop here and finish the pie much later if you like, or just eat it as a rich stew if you reduce it a little less.
To finish, wilt down the spinach in a pan (or thaw, for frozen) and press out the moisture. Rough chop it when it's cool enough to handle. Chop the remaining coriander. Mix the spinach, breadcrumbs, coriander, and an egg into the cooled lamb mixture.Be careful with the coriander - it's easy to add too much.Now it's time for the pastry. Reserve about a third for the lid, and roll out the rest to roughly a half cm thickness, and a round shape a little bigger than a generous cake tin. Place this on a greased baking sheet, and roll out a lid of similar diameter - we're going to lay it on top of the filling to make a funky kind of flying saucer shaped pie. Beat the other egg and set it to one side.
Heap the filling onto the pastry base, in a round in the centre, keeping it a couple of centimeters from the edges. Brush the edge with egg wash and lay the lid over the top. Press the edges to seal, and trim it all into a round (cutting around a cake tin or basin helps).You can finish by crimping the edges with a fork, or score the top, if you like. Put a little hole into the very top to let steam escape, then brush it with egg wash and put it into a 180c ish oven for about half an hour, maybe a bit longer. Basically until it's fluffy and golden.