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Vegetarian Dish: Chickpea and Spinach Gratin Provençal

©Francois de Melogue
François de Mélogue · Provencal Recipes · Side Dish · Taste

The inspiration for my recipe for Chickpea and Spinach Gratin is Richard Olney’s delicious classic cookbook Simple French Food. It is a traditional Provençal vegetarian preparation that is easy to make and will impress your friends. In keeping with the book’s title, this recipe is an easy preparation that does not use milk or cheese for the gratin. Instead, the rich flavour comes from eggs, ground almonds, and saffron. Please take a look at my video for this recipe.

Chickpea and Spinach Gratin

Chickpea and Spinach Gratin

blankChef François de Mélogue
This vegetarian dish is made with chickpea and spinach gratin baked in breadcrumbs and drizzled in olive oil.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 33 minutes
Total Time 43 minutes
Course Side Dish
Cuisine French, Provencal
Servings 7 people

Ingredients
  

  • 2 quarts boiling water
  • 2 lbs baby spinach
  • 12 Marcona almonds
  • 1/2 tsp piment d’Espelette or piment d'Ville
  • big pinch saffron threads
  • pinch black pepper cracked
  • 2 large hard-boiled eggs separated
  • 2 cups chickpeas cooked **See how-to video in notes.
  • 1/2 cup tomato sauce
  • 1/4 cup breadcrumbs
  • 1/4 cup olive oil

Instructions
 

  • Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C).
  • Bring water to a rapid boil in a large stockpot and cook spinach for 3 minutes. You probably will not believe that all the spinach will fit into your pot, and you may even re-read the recipe to ensure you read it correctly. When the spinach is cooked, drain and keep BOTH the spinach and the spinach water. Reduce the spinach water in a pot over medium heat until 1 cup of liquid remains.
  • With a mortar and pestle, pound the almonds until they are smooth and almost like peanut butter in consistency. Add the piment, saffron, and black pepper and continue beating until they are well incorporated into the mixture. Add the egg yolks and mix until smooth and well combined. Separately, slice the egg whites and reserve them. You can use a food processor if you do not have a mortar and pestle.
  • Mix the spinach, spinach water, egg yolk mixture, egg whites, chickpeas, and tomato sauce in a large bowl. Taste and adjust seasoning to your preferences. Oil a 9X5 oval gratin dish with half the olive oil. Pour in the chickpea mixture. Top with breadcrumbs and drizzle the remaining olive oil over. Bake for 25-30 minutes or until bubbling and golden brown on top.

Notes

** To learn how to cook dried chickpeas, watch this video.
Keyword Chickpeas, Gratin, Spinach
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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Cauliflower Gratin
If you are looking for an easy and delicious side dish to complete your meal you should try this recipe!
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Cauliflower Gratin Easy Side Dish
White Asparagus Gratin
Depending on availability and preference, you can use green or white asparagus. This dish is a terrific, tasty way to celebrate spring. It serves 2 as a main course or 4 as a side dish.
Check out this recipe
Fresh Market White Asparagus Gratin @Cocoa&Lavender
Provencal Tomatoes and Potatoes Gratin
Easy side dishes to accompany roasted meats or fish or even just a green salad
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Side Dish Gratins Tomatoes Provence

 

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Chef François de Mélogue

François de Mélogue grew up in a very French household in Chicago. His earliest attempts at cookery began with the filleting of his sister’s goldfish at age two and a braised rabbit dish made with his pet rabbits by age seven. He eventually stopped cooking his pets and went to the highly esteemed New England Culinary Institute, where he graduated top of his class in 1985. Over the next three decades he cooked in a number of highly acclaimed kitchens across the country, including Chef Louis Szathmáry’s The Bakery in Chicago, Old Drovers Inn, a Relais & Châteaux property in New York, and Joël Robuchon’s restaurant Gastronomie in Paris, before opening Pili Pili, his wood-fired Mediterranean restaurant in Chicago. In 2003, Food & Wine named Pili Pili one of the ten best new restaurants in the world.

Today, François lives in St Albans, Vermont, with his wife Lisa and their son Beau, the self-proclaimed family saucier. At heart, he is a storyteller who works in two mediums, food and light. In the kitchen, his stories unfold in slowly simmered daubes and simple, thoughtfully crafted dishes that express their seasonality in every bite. With a camera, they become quiet images of food, honest products, and the rural landscapes of Vermont and Provence. He is the author of French Cooking for Beginners: 75+ Classic Recipes to Cook Like a Parisian, a book that wanders well beyond Paris into the markets and kitchens of France. You can explore his photographic work at https://www.francoisdemelogue.com/ and follow his Provençal-flavored writings on Medium in his column Pistou and Pastis.

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