Smoked
Turkey Efo Riro is a play on your typical efo riro. Efo Riro, otherwise known as Vegetable Soup
in Nigerian Food lingo, is soup cooked with green, leafy vegetables like
spinach. Usually, Efo Riro is cooked with a variety of meats ranging from beef,
goat meat, shaki/tripe, cow’s foot, to chicken and seafood. As you can tell,
it’s a soup rich in meat!
Of course,
you don’t have to use all the aforementioned, either or, will work just fine.
I’m not a huge fan of smoked turkey, sometimes I can eat it, other times, I
just can’t get with it; no particular reason really! This time, however, I was
kinda digging it, so I thought why not feature it in a recipe. To be honest,
the first time I cooked smoked turkey, lawd have mercy, it was a mess, because
I cooked it like you would other meats, lol. The best part about this, is that
it doesn’t take as long to cook the entire dish
To make
Smoked Turkey Efo Riro, here’s what you’ll need:
10-15 m pieces smoked turkey drums
1 m red bell pepper/tatashe
4 scotch bonnet pepper/rodo/habanero
4 fresh garlic cloves
Ginger (size of garlic cloves)
1 m tomato
1 s red onion
1 bag fresh spinach OR 2 chopped frozen
packs spinach
1/2 cup palm oil
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 knorr cube OR 2 maggi cubes
1 tbsp curry powder
1. Pre-heat
oven to 350 degrees
2. Lightly
rinse smoked turkey drums, drain and set asideSmoked Turkey Drums, Efo Riro
3. Layer a
baking pan with foil & wax paper, spray wax paper with cooking oil spray;
add smoked turkeySmoked Turkey Efo Riro
4. Put
baking pan with smoked turkey into the oven, let bake at 350 degrees for 45
minutes
5. While
that’s baking, cut up peppers, add to blender with 1/2 cup waterSmoked Turkey
Efo Riro
6. Add palm
oil & vegetable oil to a pot, let heat up over medium heat; blend peppers
7. Once
blended, add peppers to hot oilSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
8. Add
seasonings (curry & knorr or maggi
cubes); let boil 30 minutes over medium heatSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
9. Rinse and
chop up spinachSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
10. Squeeze
and drain excess liquid from spinach (if yours is frozen), set asideSmoked
Turkey Efo Riro
11. Check on
smoked turkey in oven, if done, turn off heat & wait for peppers to boil;
if not, leave a few minutes longerSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
12. If
pepper tastes done (see notes for how to know), reduce heat to low, add baked
turkey drumsSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
13. Stir
turkey into pepper, still over low heatSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
14. Add
chopped spinach over turkeySmoked Turkey Efo Riro
15. Mix
chopped spinach into turkey stew thoroughly for even distributionSmoked Turkey
Efo Riro
16. Let
simmer over low-medium heat for about 5 minutesSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
17. And,
yes, you’re all done!
18. Let sit
for another 5 minutes before
servingSmoked Turkey Efo Riro
Smoked
Turkey Efo Riro
Notes:
Here’s the
deal with smoked turkey: it’s smoked, meaning it’s already been partially
cooked AND salted. Since it’s already been salted you don’t want to go
overboard with the salt, hence my using 1 knorr cube.
Also,
because smoked turkey has already been partially cooked, it doesn’t require all
the ‘feferity’ (lol) or extraneous stuff that comes with boiling meat or even
fresh turkey. By extraneous stuff I mean, like allowing the meat sweat, adding
seasonings and water and leaving it to boil.
The best way
I’ve found to further cook smoked turkey is to bake it for a good 30-45
minutes. For 30 minutes, you could increase the temperature of your oven to 400
degrees and 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
Smoked
turkey has an obviously smoky taste to it, but not so much that it overwhelms
the rest of the dish. It’s not a burnt kind of smoky either.
You don’t have to use wax paper if you
don’t have it. I bought it last year with the idea that I was going to use it
to bake cookies, but that never happened (almost a whole year later!) so I had
to find other uses for it, right? Foil paper alone will work just fine, be sure
to spray it down with cooking oil spray though, so the turkey doesn’t stick so
much to the foil.
The spinach was an extra bag of fresh
spinach I had and stuffed in the freezer, hence me having to chop it up. If
yours is already chopped, totally skip step 9, but still squeeze and drain as
in step 10.
You don’t have to use four rodo/habanero
peppers if you don’t like so much heat. 1 or 2 should do.
If you like you can stop at step 13 and
forgo the spinach, totally up to you!
You can find smoked turkey in most African
grocery stores, some Mexican/Caribbean specialty grocers might also carry it.
If you’re in Nigeria, I’m not quite sure where you can find it to be honest as
I didn’t come across smoked turkey till I left home. I do imagine though, that
if you ask your meat man/baba eleran/butcher, he might have an idea!
To know when blended peppers are cooked,
here’s how I know: typically, right after blending, if you try tasting the
pepper, it has an almost raw, unfinished taste to it and once you’ve boiled it
for at least 30 minutes, that raw taste goes away…once you taste it, you’ll
know.
If your pepper starts to burn a bit while
boiling, just add a tiny bit of water; say half a cup, use spoonfuls when in
doubt.
Don’t want to use palm oil? Try Annatto Oil
or skip it totally and make it ALL the way healthy. (It is a pretty healthy
recipe).
Canola or Corn Oil can also substitute for
Vegetable Oil.
If you’re usually pressed for time and
don’t always have the time to boil goat meat etc, I’d recommend trying smoked
turkey. It cuts out a good hour! That, of course, is if you like turkey.
Serving
Suggestions:
With white and fried plantains…(yeah the
plantains are a bit burnt..what? you never burned plantains before? pshhh
;)Smoked Turkey Efo Riro, White Rice, Fried Plantains
You can eat Smoked Turkey Efo Riro with
anything really. For instance, boiled yams, eba, iyan (pounded yam), amala,
wheat flour or even just plantains.
Or, just grab you some soft unsliced bread,
dig out the center and get to wacking with the efo riro! Have some cold coke
with it too!
Source: www.avartsycooking.com
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