I set about cooking a mutton & vegetable potjie this past weekend. The images below, in order of ingredients added, tell their own story.
This is value-for-money type cooking as the “tougher” type meats are ideal.
Cooking is slow and sociable as persons present can gather around the pot, which is usually outside, and tell stories / sip on a glass of wine / beer.
Visit Potjiekosworld and read about our South African culture.
Here is a taster from them: “When the first Dutch settlers arrived in the Cape, they brought with them their ways of cooking food in heavy cast iron pots, which hung from the kitchen hearth above the fire.
Long before the arrival of the early settlers in the Cape, the Bantu people who were migrating into South Africa, learned the use of the cast iron cooking pot from Arab traders and later the Portuguese colonists.
These cast iron pots were able to retain heat well and only a few coals were needed to keep the food simmering for hours.
They were used to cook tender roasts and stews, allowing steam to circulate inside instead of escaping through the lid.
The ingredients were relatively simple, a fatty piece of meat, a few potatoes and some vegetables were all that was needed to cook a delightful meal.”
Read more here.
Delicious!!! Wrote myself once the Dutch part of the history of Potjie. The Dutch themselves forgot about it but travellers from Holland are bringing their history back home nowadays…
To just sit, sip and hear the pot quietly bubbling away..
Yep!!! 🙂 🙂 🙂
Looks Yummy!
It was!
yummy. I often make a potjie 🙂 *Brigid
Hi I have nominated you for 2 awards in 1, congratulations! http://aristonorganic.wordpress.com/2013/06/30/2-awards-in-1-combined/
Thank you. Unfortunately unable to accept https://snapflycook.wordpress.com/2012/10/20/no-more-awards-thank-you-life-balance/
that is fine, acknowledge and select someone randomly 🙂