Atakilt Wat

Atakilt Wat

Ethiopia's spiced cabbage stew, the gentle vegetable side that sits between the fiercer berbere-loaded curries on a shared platter and cools whoever's eating against the heat. You soften onions in oil with turmeric until they're pale gold, then bloom garlic, ginger and a small amount of berbere in the same fat - small because this is the mellow dish, not the fierce one. Carrots and potatoes go in first to soften; cabbage joins later. Cover, drop the heat, and let the lot steam-cook for forty minutes until the volume has halved, the vegetables have melted into each other, and the cabbage has almost disappeared into the sauce. Eaten with injera and a few spoonfuls of doro wat or misir wat alongside for contrast.

Ethiopian 50 minutes Serves4
Misir Wat

Misir Wat

Ethiopia's red lentil stew, the vegan everyday main that turns up on every fasting-day table and most non-fasting ones too. You cook onions slowly in oil or niter kibbeh until they melt and turn jammy - this is the same long, patient onion cook that doro wat relies on. Berbere blooms in, tomato paste deepens, lentils go in with water and simmer until they're soft and the stew has thickened to a coating consistency. A squeeze of lemon at the end brightens the deep berbere-rich base. Bright orange from the spice, eaten by mopping with injera, made vegan with oil or richer with niter kibbeh. Either way, the dish that anchors an Ethiopian meal.

Ethiopian 1 hour 5 minutes Serves4