For the pepperpot:Wash the stewing beef and pat it dry with paper towels. Cut the meat into cubes around 5/8-inch thick and transfer to a large ovenproof
casserole or heavy-bottomed
saucepan. Combine the beef with the liquid, thyme,
ginger, onion, garlic,
bay leaf, and allspice berries, then adjust the seasonings with salt, and pepper. Bring the ingredients to a boil,
skim the froth from the top of the liquid, cover with a lid, reduce the heat, and
simmer for 30 minutes.
Cook's Note: If you are using chicken, simmer for 15 to 25 minutes.
Peel the yams,
sweet potatoes, and pumpkin. Cut the yam into pieces the size of large potato wedges. Cut the sweet potato and pumpkin into 1 1/2-inch chunks. Discard the
pumpkin seeds. Bash the
green onions with a heavy knife to release their flavor.
Dice the chiles (wear gloves), and add with the vegetables to the pot along with the
coconut milk and lima beans. Stir the ingredients, and simmer gently, covered, for another 25 to 35 minutes, or until the meat and vegetables are tender, and cooked through. Add the
greens around 13 minutes before the cooking time is up.
For the dumplings:Meanwhile, to make the dumplings: Mix the flour and salt together in a mixing bowl, and then gradually stir in the water to form a
dough. Pull off 24 small pieces from the dough 1 piece at a time, and roll them into rounds or long pointy-ended ovals.
Cook's Note: If you want bigger dumplings, use a double-sized piece of dough, and roll it into a round, pressing a small indentation into the top of it with your thumb.
Drop the dumplings into the
hot pot immediately after rolling, around 8 minutes before the cooking time is up.
Cook's Note: The larger dumplings will need around 12 minutes to cook. We call them Spillers' Dumplings perhaps because they spill over the top of the full dish of pepperpot, so make sure that the pot is covered.
Taste the
dumpling, and add extra salt, and pepper, if necessary.
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By sgsurlord
on May 09, 2011
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I learned about Pepper pot stew about 8 years ago on vacation and was ecstatic to see Levi prepare it with his mother. I love, love, loved it. So much so, I have added the sunshine kit and root vegetables as a pantry staple. And I am making it for dinner tonight for the 5th time this year. For anyone who likes American comfort foods like beef stew, or Sunday pot roast and in need of a change, this is a really surprising alternative. Be careful with how many scotch bonnets you use (especially if you have small children, my family has graduated from 1, to 2 and we are good at 3 in one pot.
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