Dolmades
I got this recipe from LeeAnn Langdon.
I've tweaked the amounts a bit to use almost all of the leaves in one of the bottles of grape leaves that I buy,
which will cover the bottom of my 9" diameter cook pot with a single layer of dolmades.
To use up all of the leaves I double-wrap five or six of the dolmades.
What you need:
- a 9" diameter cook pot (at least 3" deep)
- an 8 ounce (dry weight) jar of Mezzetta grape leaves
- a 14.5 ounce can of whole tomatoes
- lemons to make at least 1/4 cup juice
- scallions to make 1.5 cups chopped onion
- cilantro or parsley to make at least 1/4 cup chopped leaves
- olive oil
- long grain white rice
Preparation:
- Heat 2 T olive oil to a high temperature in the cook pot and add 3/4 cup uncooked rice. Stir it for a few moments so that it begins to change color, then add the scallions and continue to stir-fry for another moment.
- Remove from the heat, mix in the cilantro (or parsley) and the mint, and remove the mixture into a bowl.
- Rinse out the cook pot and place it on the counter next to where you'll be constucting the domades.
- Construct the dolmades:
- Carefully remove the grape leaves from the jar. (The original version of this recipe called for rinsing the brine off of them and adding salt to the recipe, but I just don't rinse the leaves.)
- Spread our a grape leaf bottom side up.
- Place about a teaspoonful of the filling on the leaf near the stem.
- Rull up tightly like a burrito.
- Place the domades seam side down, packed tightly together in the bottom of the cook pot. Filling up the bottom with a single layer helps keep them from shifting around and unrolling while they cook.
- Being careful not to jostle the dolmades around, add:
- 1 cup water
- 1 cup liquid from the canned tomatoes (squashing them produces more juice)
- 1/4-1/2 cup lemon juice
- 2 T olive oil
- Apply medium heat to the cook pot until the liquid is simmering gently, then cover it and turn it down low.
- Cook covered on low for about 45 minutes. They're done whenever the rice is cooked as much as you like: 45 minutes suffices for firm rice, but if you want softer rice cook longer.