Dragonfire Delight Shakshuka

Dragonfire Delight Shakshuka with egg toast and avocado

Dragonfire Delight Shakshuka

Eggs poached in a warm and spicy tomato stew stuffed with herbs and spices from far off lands. The egg yolk, avocado, and cheese add a creaminess to an otherwise citrusy heat!
Course Main Course
Cuisine Mediterranean
Keyword bread, dungeons and dragons, eggs, gochujang, herbs, red pepper, shakshuka, spicy, tomatoes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings 4 Dragonborn
Calories 206kcal
Author TheEverhearthInn
Cost 10 gold

Equipment

  • Lidded skillet

Ingredients

  • 1 cup chopped yellow onion
  • 1 red bell pepper chopped
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • black pepper
  • 3 medium garlic cloves minced
  • ½ tsp smoked paprika
  • ½ tsp ground cumin
  • ½ tsp cayenne pepper optional
  • 28 ounce can crushed tomatoes
  • 2 tbsp hot gochujang paste strength and quantity to taste
  • 1 cup fresh spinach stems removed
  • 5 eggs
  • cup crumbled feta cheese
  • ¼ cup fresh parsley leaves
  • 1 avocado sliced
  • Toasted bread for serving

Instructions

  • Cook the onion, red pepper, salt, and black pepper in oil for about 8 minutes over a campfire, or stove, of medium heat.
  • Reduce your campfire to medium-low and stir in the garlic, paprika, cumin, and cayenne. After about a minute add the crushed tomatoes and gochujang. Simmer for 15 minutes.
  • Add the spinach and stir. Dig 5 divots into the stew and crack an egg into each. Cover the skillet and let them poach for about 6 minutes or until they are to your desired doneness.
  • Season with salt, pepper, and the remaining ingredients. Fan the avocado on the side for easy access slice by slice, and dip a slice of toasted bread in for scooping.
  • Serve and get back to adventuring!

Video

Notes

This is a wonderfully simple warm, creamy, and spicy stew for resting between adventures. We took a twist on typical shakshuka with using gochujang paste, a sweet and savory spicy paste that goes well on anything. We used 2 tbsp of hot gochujang and it came out with only a slight zing of spicy, but you can add more or less of hotter or milder paste to your taste. 
 
Keep a close eye on your eggs, they can go from raw to hard boiled pretty quickly. As soon s the whites get mostly set, be attentive and ready to pull the skillet off your cooking fire.
 
We used a cheaper loaf of bread for scooping the stew with as we expected most of the flavor to be in the stew itself, however there is certainly room for a nice bread to shine in this. We definitely recommend investing some of your gold there as the rest of the recipe is rather cheap.

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