Nadia's dolmades
This recipe is from Nadia Stoke's, trader at Borough Market and co-owner of Gourmet Goat. It first appeared on the Borough Market website as part of my series, I Am What I Eat, where I interview Borough Market traders about the foods that are important to them and why. This dish is a recipe that Nadia used to cook with her grandmother as a teenager in Cyprus.
Nadia learned to make vine leaves with her grandmother in Cyprus. One of her favourite parts of the process was going out and collecting the fresh leaves. In London she lives near a small, organic vineyard run by the local community in Enfield. “I called them up one day and said ‘Could I please come and collect some of your vine leaves? I just really, really miss them’ and they said, ‘Yeah sure, come, knock yourself out.’” If you aren’t lucky enough to have an organic vineyard on your doorstep, then she says the ones you can get in a jar, dry or in brine, are fine.
Nadia was particularly keen to share this recipe because she thinks that the dolmades “that you get in the shops here are an abomination”. Two key differences with the ones from her childhood are that her recipe contains meat—“if you do them just with rice, we call them orphans”—and they are served warm.
Ingredients
2 tbsp olive oil
1 large onion, finely diced
1 tbsp tomato paste
500g free range kid goat mince or lamb mince
½ cup baldo rice
Juice of 1 lemon
100g parsley, finely chopped
1 tbsp dried mint
Approx. 50 vine leaves
To serve:
250g Greek yoghurt
Fresh bread
Method
Heat the oil in a large, heavy-based saucepan over a medium heat. Brown the mince, stirring constantly to break it up. Add the onions and cook until softened. Add the tomato paste and stir thoroughly.
Remove from the heat and stir in the rest of the ingredients, except for the vine leaves. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste. Leave to cool.
Prepare the vine leaves by soaking in cold water then rinsing. Add to a saucepan and cover with cold water. Simmer for 30 mins or until the leaves begin to soften a little. Remove from the heat and cool with cold water.
To roll the dolmades, place a vine leaf on your worktop with the veins facing upwards. Place 1-2 heaped tsp at the base of the leaf in the centre. Fold the bottom over, then each side to create an envelope, then roll forward. Don’t roll too tightly, as the rice will expand when cooked.
Save the large or torn leaves to line the base of a large saucepan with a single layer of leaves. Place the dolmades in the pan, folded side down and pack them as tightly as possible so they stay wrapped. Place a heatproof plate on top then add a cup of water. You want to braise, rather than boil them.
Cook over a low heat for approximately 30 mins. Serve warm with fresh bread and Greek yoghurt.
You can read my interview with Nadia here or on the Borough Market website.
Reader Comments (2)
I was just talking the other day about dolmades and how good they are and how much I miss them. I don't think Nadia would approve of the ones I miss however, as I am quite a fan of the 'orphans'.
This recipe looks great though - I saw a place just up the road from my house that sells vine leaves so I will try this out soon!
Hi Cha, you sometime veggie, course you like the orphans ;-)