Florence Knight’s chickpea, Swiss chard and soft-poached egg
View the full article on guardian.co.ukMakes 6 small plates
- 300g dried chickpeas
- 3 onions
- 0 extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tsp dried chilli flakes
- 2 tsp coriander seeds
- 0 salt
- 2 sticks celery
- 3 cloves garlic
- 1 bunch Swiss chard
- 1 bay leaf
- 175g white wine
- 1 400 g tin plum tomatoes
- 1 malt vinegar
- 6 eggs
- 0 black pepper
Step 1
Put the chickpeas in a large bowl, cover with cold water and soak overnight.
Step 2
When you are ready to cook, drain and rinse the chickpeas under cold running water.
Step 3
Place them in a pan and add water until it covers them by about 2.5cm.
Step 4
Peel and halve 1 onion and add it to the pan with a little olive oil, the chilli and the coriander seeds.
Step 5
Bring the chickpeas to the boil then reduce the heat and simmer until tender, checking after 30 minutes.
Step 6
Once the chickpeas are cooked remove them from the heat, drain them (reserving the cooking liquor) and season to taste.
Step 7
Meanwhile peel, halve and dice the remaining 2 onions.
Step 8
Put the onions in a heavy-bottomed pan with a glug of olive oil and a good pinch of salt, cover with the lid and cook slowly over a low heat for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Step 9
While the onions are cooking, peel, halve and dice the celery and carrot.
Step 10
Submerge the garlic cloves in warm water and leave for a few minutes – this will help the skin to pop off easily.
Step 11
Then cross-chop or use a pestle and mortar to mash the garlic with a good pinch of salt until it becomes paste-like.
Step 12
Rinse the chard under cold running water and trim the ragged stalk ends.
Step 13
Using a small knife, remove the stalks from the leaves following their natural shape.
Step 14
Roughly chop the stalks into thin strips.
Step 15
After the onions have been cooking for 10 minutes and are soft and tender, stir through the celery, carrot, garlic and chard stalks and add the bay leaf.
Step 16
Stir through and combine and cook for a further 15 minutes.
Step 17
Pour over the wine and leave to reduce by half over a medium heat.
Step 18
Add the tomatoes and 300ml of the chickpea cooking liquor followed by the drained chickpeas.
Step 19
Give the mixture a good stir through and simmer for about 20 minutes until almost all the juices have been absorbed into the chickpeas.
Step 20
Season well while still warm, then fold through the chard leaves and cover with a pan lid to help them wilt into the mixture.
Step 21
Place a pan of water with a splash of malt vinegar in it over a medium heat and bring to a simmer.
Step 22
Crack an egg into a glass or cup.
Step 23
Swirl the water around in a circular motion and once the water settles slightly and there is a tornado effect in the centre, lower the cup into the middle of the swirl so that it almost touches the water and tip the egg out in a quick fluid motion.
Step 24
Lightly poach for 3 minutes or until the white is just set.
Step 25
Remove the egg with a slotted spoon and drain on kitchen roll before placing on a plate.
Step 26
Repeat the poaching process with the remaining eggs.
Step 27
If you’re confident, poach 2 at a time.
Step 28
Ladle the chickpeas into bowls.
Step 29
Place a poached egg on top of each serving of chickpeas and finish with a little extra virgin olive oil, a pinch of salt and some black pepper.
Step 30
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