Thursday, April 30, 2015


This is a humble dish. In fact, I’d say it verges on being downright homely, despite the bright pops of green peas against the brick-red sauce, the pepper-speckled egg whites and the dribble of canary-yellow yolk revealed when fork meets egg.  It’s not what I’d serve if the Queen ever came over for dinner (not that it’s a possibility, mind you, but I do like to be prepared for all eventualities).
It’s the kind of dish you eat when you’re surrounded by your nearest and dearest, and want to make something as un-fussy as possible so that you can devote yourself to what’s truly important – the people sitting around the table with you, rather than a finicky dish of deconstructed something-or-other than requires your full attention. There’s something to be said for good food that fades into the background, that provides a pleasant form of sustenance for a long evening of friendly conversation and reminiscences.

It’s also the kind of dish you can make when you’re on your own, and just want to curl up with a good book and a purring cat, so that you can soothe your woes after a yucky day at work. On those evenings, a simple meal that requires little effort, few ingredients and is accompanied by a big hunk of crusty bread is exactly what fits the bill.  Besides, there’s a zen-like serenity to be found in the small rituals of this dish, like shelling peas, cracking eggs and mopping up a saucy plate with the last bit of bread.
Braised Peas - Deconstructed
It’s the kind of dish I remember eating on many a school night after piano lessons or swim practice, perched atop one of the solid farmhouse-style chairs that sat around the giant table in our dining room, legs swinging back and forth in mid-air (though, in retrospect, it may just be that the table and chairs were a rather normal grown-up sort of size, whereas I wasn’t). A last-minute dish that could be made at the last minute to feed two starving, growing, impatient girls.
Portuguese-Style Braised Peas with Eggs


Most of all, though, it’s a dish I remember eating during an afternoon spent with my great-aunt-a-few-times-removed, Deolinda, in her cozy farmhouse kitchen in Portugal. We’d spent a few hours around the kitchen table, shelling fresh peas from her garden and trading family stories and updates. She apologized over and over for the humbleness of the dish, and how unsuited it was for a special guest who had come all the way from Canada… nevermind my assurances that it was the one thing I wanted her to make above all others. The truth is, no matter how hard I try, I cannot make my braised peas taste quite like Deolinda’s.
This, my friends, is happy food.  Pure and simple.
Portuguese-Style Braised Peas with EggsOh, and a quick note on the ingredients – chourico is a fully cooked pork and garlic sausage commonly used in Portuguese cooking.  It should be fairly easy to find in any Portuguese or Brazilian neighbourhood, but Spanish-style chorizo will do just fine if that’s all you can find… the two are more or less interchangeable.  You could even substitute some other kind of fully-cooked spicy pork sausage, such as andouille or linguica, if you absolutely must. Or omit it altogether and add an extra dash of smoked paprika for a vegetarian version.
But please, whatever you do…. don’t use Mexican chorizo, which is an entirely different thing altogether, being a raw, uncured sausage made from ground pork.


As for the peas, fresh sweet peas are the best option when they’re in season (obviously), but frozen peas will do just as well otherwise – just chuck them, still frozen, into the pan and simmer for a minute or two before cracking in the eggs. Canned tomatoes will also do in a pinch, when you’re in complete desperation mode and simply want a quickly assembled dinner.

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