Kelem Dolmasi (Azerbaijan)

"This recipe is from week 18 of my food blog, Travel by Stove. I am attempting to cook one meal from every nation on Earth, and Azerbaijan is my 18th stop. Kelem dolmasi can be served as an appetizer or main course, and is traditionally made with lamb though you could easily substitute beef. Be sure to use enough salt to bring out the complex flavors in the filling."
 
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photo by GiddyUpGo photo by GiddyUpGo
photo by GiddyUpGo
Ready In:
1hr
Ingredients:
13
Yields:
24 Dolma
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ingredients

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directions

  • Boil the rice for eight minutes. Drain and set aside. Meanwhile, peel and finely chop the onion. .
  • Chop the herbs and chop/mash the chickpeas. Mince the lamb and the lamb fat, then with your hands mix in the onion, spices, chickpeas, rice and chopped herbs. Add salt and pepper.
  • Fill a large saucepan with salted water and bring it to a boil over high heat. Now pull the outer leaves off of the cabbage (save them) and drop the rest of it, whole, into the water. Let it boil for three or four minutes, turning it if the water level isn't quite high enough to completely cover it.
  • Carefully take the cabbage out of the water (but keep the water boiling) and let it cool for a minute or two so you don't burn your fingers. Carefully pull the leaves off the cabbage, cutting them at the base if you have to do so to loosen them. Try to get them off in one piece. If the inner leaves are still crispy, return the cabbage to the boiling water for another three or four minutes. Repeat until all of the useable leaves are free.
  • Now put the leaves on a cutting board and cut out the tough stalks (save them). Cut the largest leaves in half.
  • Put a heaping tablespoon of the filling in the middle of each leaf, making a short cylinder shape. Fold the ends over the filling, then roll tightly (as if you are making a tiny burrito.
  • Put all of the discarded cabbage leaves, stalks etc. into the bottom of a stockpot. Carefully place the dolma on the bed of cabbage leaves.
  • Add water to the stockpot up to about the top of the discarded leaves. Don't cover the dolma.
  • Place a metal pie pan or another oven-safe dish on top of the dolma and use a heavy object to weigh it down. This is done so the dolma don't unwrap during cooking.
  • Bring the water to a boil, then simmer for 25 minutes.
  • Meanwhile, make a simple tomato sauce out of the tomato paste and water. Heat it up for a few minutes over a medium flame. After the dolma have been cooking for 25 minutes, pour the sauce over them and cook for another five minutes.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I am a mother of two with another one on the way! I am married to an Englishman and we own a small business in our local area. We live in a very small town called Rough and Ready (yes there really is a place called Rough and Ready!) I am a part-time writer and full time mom. My kids were born 15 months apart and keep me so busy I barely have enough time to cook and no time at all for my other passion, horseback riding. I once had four horses but am down to two; my Arab mare Argo and old Denver. Both of them spend the vast majority of their time standing around in my back yard eating hay. I get to feed them and look at them, but until my kids are all in school (and I stop having more kids) that's about it. <img src="http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b399/susied214/permanent%20collection/Adopted1smp.jpg" border="0" alt="Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket">
 
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