Chorizo and Chick Pea Stew

Chorizo and Chick pea stew

In a rare display of creative fervency, I’ve decided to post more than one thing in any given week… So I hope you’re all realising how lucky you are… and are basking in the happy glow that only my biting sarcasm can provide.

You may have just read my post on The Pony Club restaurant… a tapas restaurant Sharon and I went to visit recently. The other part of the story that I didn’t share was that we had a little encounter as we were leaving. As we were strolling out the door and down the steps, mumbling to ourselves at how much of a rip off it was, and how we could have made better at home quite easily, when suddenly we heard a “snap”, turned around, and there was a photographer standing on a ladder with her camera pointed directly at us.

“Can you do that again ?” she said…

“What? Walk out ?”

“Yeh… but a bit slower this time”

“Yeah sure, why not”

So Sharon and I spend the next 5 minutes walking up and down the stairs and looking at the menu on the door with introspective contemplation, while she continued to take shots of us, to be used somewhere down the track in a review of the Pony Club for the Qantas inflight magazine.

I thought it was all quite hilarious, and being an amateur photographer of increasing aplomb, I swiftly handed her my card and let her know I’d appreciate a copy of them. None have arrived yet, but that might just be because the review hasn’t turned up in the magazine yet. If their review was anything like mine I somehow doubt it will… but then I can’t see Qantas magazine putting a byline of “Overpriced Spanish Flavoured Crap” on any of their reviews in the near future.

So after wandering off feeling like C-grade celebrities, we headed straight for Fresh Provisions to pick up supplies for this very dish. With keen determination to make it better and significantly cheaper than we’d just experienced.

Chorizo and Chick Pea Stew

  • 1 Chorizo sausage (I use Mondo’s Hot Chorizo)
  • 1 can whole peeled tomatoes, or tomato puree
  • 2 whole tomatoes (chopped)
  • 1 can chickpeas
  • 1 red onion (chopped)
  • Splash of red wine
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 tablespoon paprika
  • 2 chillis (leave them out if you don’t like it hot)
  • 1 lemon
  • Anything else you want to add ie: capsicum, whole paprika, olives, etc

How I made mine

So simple it’s not even funny. Fry your chorizo in a little olive oil and then add the splash of red wine to deglaze. Wait til it’s absorbed into the chorizo a little and then add the garlic and onion. When they’re starting to soften, add the tomatoes, tomato puree, and chickpeas, then stir through well. When it’s thickening up nicely, add the paprika, chilli, and any other spices you might find, stir it through well, turn down the heat, and walk away.

Come back in about 20 minutes or so and you should hopefully have a nice thick hearty, spicy concoction, worthy of any drunken Spaniard.

Serve with a few thick pieces of crusty bread smothered in butter, and a wedge or two of lemon for a continental tinge.

So easy and quick and tasty… and with the volume I made of it, possibly worth a small fortune in a trendy tapas restaurant. Fortunately I am a VIP in my own dining room, I don’t think I could afford to eat there otherwise…

13 thoughts on “Chorizo and Chick Pea Stew”

  1. I think that comment was even almost… feisty. Anyway, tapas restaurants were/are all the rage here as well, last year I got so sick of Spanish-type cuisine (because once we went to Spain, it was clear that what was being served in NYC was *not* what was being served in Spain).

    Anyway, this sounds really yummy, but I’m not a fan of spicy food. Do you think it translates well with a sweet chorizo instead?

  2. It was meant as a compliment. I enjoy your writing immensly. I have a link to Abstract Gourmet from my blog. But then again I am a feisty, fiery redhead. As I said before, Well Done.

  3. Oh… I’ve been misunderstood :( No no, I meant Matt’s comment “overpriced Spanish flavoured crap” was almost feisty. And it’s a compliment when I call people feisty… unlike when they call ME that… haha. Hence the title of my blog, Feisty Foodie. Ah… people generally say “My, aren’t you a feisty one” when they actually mean “You are such a bitch”. :)

  4. I ate at Pony Club a few weeks ago…thought it was vaguely spanish
    inspired but definitely overpriced. I thought their chorizo dish was good though, so will definitely give your recipe a try!

  5. Yesterday I was looking for some simple Spanish inspiration and found this page. I made it last night for me and my fiancé and we had it with olive bread. It turned out so great I’m planning to make it again for a dinner party we’re having in a few weeks. I just added some mushrooms and a capsicum and made it quite spicy. The funny thing I browsed around your site a bit and saw the photo of the scallop and pork cheek dish from Andaluz and thought, hang on? I just ate that! That’s when I realised you’re in Perth. I’m from Melbourne but I was actually in Perth for the first time just last week for work and that’s one of the places I went out for dinner! Funny coincidence, especially since this post is several years old.

    1. What is ever more of a coincidence is that I was in Andaluz last week and happened to overhear a conversation from a guy who was from Melbourne and said it was his first time to Perth, and who happened to get my order of scallops by mistake !

      Actually no that didn’t happen, but freaky things like that happen in Perth all the time.

      Glad you enjoyed the recipe anyway, and esp glad you found a great place to eat in Perth. Hopefully you have some good stories to tell the other Melburnians who think the world ends at the last tram stop :)

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