Good-quality ingredients are important for each of today’s recipes. For the chicken or the lamb, always look for the Bord Bia Quality Assured mark and support our great Irish farmers.
The salsa is a good thing for children to learn how to make. This salsa also goes well with baked ham, or prawns. You could use pineapple instead of mango. The chilli gives it a kick. You could leave out if you want, but I find that people are becoming more adventurous these days. Folláin and Thai Gold each make a very good sweet chilli sauce.
Lamb is so versatile and this is a nice aromatic lamb dish. And it tastes even better the next day. Our Irish lamb is second to none. If you can’t get butternut squash you could use carrots, and Simply Better have very good harissa spice.
Happy cooking,
Neven
Chicken quesadillas with mango salsa
Makes two
¼ red onion, thinly sliced
4 soft flour tortillas
1 mild red chilli, cut into rings (optional)
225g leftover cooked chicken, sliced (or use ham or a mixture of both)
2 handfuls red Cheddar and mozzarella
For the mango salsa
1 firm ripe mango, peeled and finely diced (stone discarded)
1 tbsp rapeseed oil
1 small roasted red pepper, peeled, seeded and diced
2 tbsp sweet chilli sauce
Finely grated rind and juice of 1 lemon
2 tbsp chopped fresh basil
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
One-pot lamb & butternut squash curry
Serves four to six
1 tbsp Donegal rapeseed oil
1 large onion, finely chopped
2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
2.5cm (1in) knob fresh ginger, peeled and grated
2.5cm (1in) knob fresh turmeric, peeled and finely grated (optional)
4-6 tbsp harissa paste (chilled from a carton is best but from a jar is also ok)
250ml (9fl oz) Greek-style yoghurt
400g (14oz) can chopped plum tomatoes
1 butternut squash, peeled, seeds removed and cut into cubes
500g (1 1/4lb) boneless lamb, trimmed and chopped into bite-sized pieces
2 large handfuls baby spinach leaves
Toasted flaked almonds and fresh coriander sprigs, to garnish
Mediterranean wraps and tzatziki, to serve