See the tip at the bottom of the recipe for how to make a veggie version, too.
Ingredients
Serves Four
2 tbsp oil, ideally olive oil
250g/9oz pork fillet (tenderloin), trimmed and cut into small cubes
1 onion, thinly sliced
1 red pepper, sliced
1 medium courgette/zucchini (roughly 185g/6½oz), ends trimmed, halved lengthways and sliced into semi circles
2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
½–1 tsp smoked paprika, hot or sweet
400g/14oz tin chickpeas, drained
400g/14oz tin chopped tomatoes
1 chicken or pork stock cube
salt and freshly ground black pepper
Method
1. Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a large non-stick frying pan or wide-based casserole.
2. Season the pork with salt and pepper and fry over a medium heat for 2 minutes until lightly browned. Remove from the pan and set aside on a plate.
3. Add the remaining oil, the onion, pepper and courgette to the pan. Cook for 5 minutes, or until softened and lightly browned, stirring regularly.
4. Add the garlic, paprika, chickpeas and tinned tomatoes. Half-fill the empty tomato tin with water and add to the pan (roughly 200ml/7fl oz water). Crumble in the stock cube and add the cooked pork. Bring to a gentle simmer for 10 minutes, or until the sauce has thickened and the pork is tender, stirring regularly.
Each serving provides
22g protein, 18.5g carbohydrates (of which 8g sugars), 12g fat (of which 2.5g saturates), 6.5g fibre and 1.3g salt.
Recipe Tips
For a vegetarian or vegan version of this stew, cook a large cubed aubergine/eggplant instead of the pork in the first step, adding an extra tablespoon of oil once it begins to fry.
See original recipe idea and video guide here
Recipe Tips
For a vegetarian or vegan version of this stew, cook a large cubed aubergine/eggplant instead of the pork in the first step, adding an extra tablespoon of oil once it begins to fry.
See original recipe idea and video guide here
You will find a variety of recipe ideas within this blog, and not all may be suitable for you. If you may have any food allergies, or underlying health issues these must always be taken into account. If you are a diabetic and not sure how certain foods may affect your blood sugars, test is best, i.e. use your meter.
All the best Jan
All the best Jan
27 comments:
Sounds filling.
Sounds delicious!
...I love stew!
Sounds delicious-I love a good stew or soup happy midweek
Kathy
This looks delicious!
I do love stews!
Gracias por la receta, te mando un beso.
Looks delicious.
Thank you - and thank you for the vegetarian option - though you would need to replace the stock cubes as well.
It looks delicious, and such a quick meal too.
Hello,
Looks delicious, thanks for sharing another great recipe.
Take care, have a happy day!
Yum!
Sounds yummy and it would go down a treat here today it's freezing!.
Looks YUM!
That sounds really good, Jan. It is still stew weather here...18˚F here with wind chill factored in. xo Diana
Beef stew is the only kind of stew I've ever made. I should branch out!
I've never made pork stew.
Looks good but not a fan of chickpeas.
Sounds delicious, but you had me at minimum washing up! Take care and have a great evening, Sue xx
Looks delicious. Lovely tulips!xxx
Nothing beats a good stew!!
Sounds easy and delicious
I don't believe I have ever had pork cut up in a stew like that before, but sounds good
This looks so good. Have a nice day.
A one-pot and easy meal is just what we like, Jan. This recipe will be on a future rotation very soon.
The vegetarian option sounds wonderful. No pork for me, please.
Looks so delicious! Stews are always great.
Se ve muy bueno. Besos.
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