A spice grilled cheese with amazing tofu scramble. |
Ethiopian cuisine is starred by delicious injera-- a sour teff flour dough usually topped with a variety of spiced vegetables and legumes. It is custom to eat it with hands and feed it to loved ones and strangers.
Originally, I had planned to make injera, but fate had other ideas in store. In comes enqulal tibs-- a popular scrambled eggs dish prepared with nit'r kibbeh and berbere spice. I crumbled extra firm tofu and fried with leftover coconut nit'r kibbeh and homemade berbere. It doesn't stop there. The bread is grilled on both sides, lightly coated in the kibbeh, making for one of the most unique grilled "cheese" experiences ever. The flavors are outstanding.
By the way, while in the kitchen photographing my sandwiches, my passing housemate exclaimed," wow that looks and smells good. Everything you make always smells good!"
That was my happy, humbling moment of today.
Grilled Enqulal Tibs & Cheese Sandwiches Ingredients and Preparation
berbere spice from Imma
3 tablespoon smoked paprika
3 tablespoon paprika
1 tablespoon basil
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 tablespoon ground ginger
1/2 tablespoon cinnamon
1/2 tablespoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon black pepper (preferably white)
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon fenugreek
1 teaspoon cardamom
1 tablespoon cayenne pepper
Stir everything together, making sure to crush any balls and lumps like ground ginger. |
I poured mine in an empty black pepper grinder. |
Tofu Scramble
1 1/2 tablespoon coconut nit'r kibbeh
1 1/2 cup crumbled extra firm tofu
1 1/2 teaspoon berbere spice
1 teaspoon turmeric
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
bread (used Dave's Killer 21 Seeds Thin Sliced Bread)
Field Roast Tomato Cayenne Chao (or any dairy free alternative)
In a skillet, heat up coconut nit'r kibbeh.
Toss tofu scramble with berbere, turmeric, salt, and black pepper. Pour into hot skillet.
Stir tofu scramble around in the sizzling kibbeh, browning sides for five to seven minutes.
Scoop prepared tofu scramble into bread and top with vegan cheese.
Add more coconut nit'r kibbeh to the skillet and lay down the sandwiches, pressing on them with a spatula. Both sides should be toasty and brown.
Gorgeous sandwiches presented on a beautiful plate. |
Dig in. |
This looks amazing, and I'm sure the berbere spice made everything smell incredible!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Julie! It was a fabulous, indulgent breakfast. And yes, the berbere smells so pleasant.
DeleteI had berbere spice years ago and I loved it so much. I haven't been able to find it since. Thanks for posting a recipe!!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm always glad to be of help! I realize now that searching for berbere spice can be resolved by creating one's own.
DeleteWow, this sounds good! I'm glad you didn't post about injera after all, I never would have thought of this combination!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! I truly loved this breakfast. Injera (which sounds painfully difficult) for the future though lol.
DeleteMmmmm! I love Ethopian cuisine but I am sooo lazy. It has so many components to it. And I am afraid of having a huge injera fail. I think I made a similar dish (er... the scrambled egg part not this genius grilled sandwich part)
ReplyDeleteHaha! I feel the same! I too think injera would be a challenge, but someday I will attempt to make it.
DeleteThank you for your compliments! "Berbere spice for the win" is my new motto!