Ingredients

2 large leeks
2 tablespoons butter or oil
250g lamb mince
1 tablespoon currants
2 tablespoons pinenuts
1 teaspoon dried dill (or a handful of fresh dill instead)
½ teaspoon cinnamon
a pinch allspice
½ teaspoon salt
⅓ cup risotto rice
300ml chicken stock
1 tablespoon tamarind paste
1 teaspoon sugar
yoghurt & dill sauce, to serve
flatbreads, to serve
YOGHURT & DILL SAUCE
1 cup thick Greek-style yoghurt
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon dried dill or 2 tablespoons fresh dill
grated zest and juice of ½ lemon

Leeks make lovely wrappers for fillings. For this it is easiest to use leeks that have a reasonable length of white (although a bit of green is also OK to use here). Wider leeks mean that you can make slightly larger parcels. I stuffed these with Middle Eastern flavourings; if fresh dill is available it’s good to add here, but parsley or mint is a great addition, too. I often find that I have some extra blanched leeks left over – I keep these for adding to a soup or frying for the base of another meal later in the week.

View the recipe collection here

Instructions

1.Trim the tougher green parts of the leek and reserve for another use. Cut off the root end and discard.
2.Cut a slit into the leeks going to the centre (don’t cut all the way through) and separate into leaves – you will have rectangular strips.
3.Set aside the very inner core that is too thin for stuffing.
4.Blanch the outer leaves in boiling salted water for 1 minute, then drain and plunge into cold water. This helps to make the leeks more pliable.
5.Finely slice the inner core of the leeks.
6.Heat a frying pan, add the butter, the sliced leeks and a sprinkle of salt and cook slowly until softened, about 4-5 minutes.
7.Set aside in a bowl to cool. Then add the lamb, currants, pinenuts, dill, cinnamon, allspice, salt and risotto rice to the bowl. Mix well.
8.Take a rectangle of blanched leek and put 2 tablespoons of the filling into one end corner.
9.Fold the corner to make a triangle, keep folding, then trim the edges.
10.Stack into a large, wide baking dish, seam-side down.
11.Repeat with the remaining mix and pack the triangles in close to each other.
12.When the leaves get too narrow you can put two together with a little overlap.
13.Alternatively you can shape the leeks into a roll. Line the filling along the base of the leek, roll up into a cylinder shape.
14.Heat the oven to 180°C.
15.Heat the stock with the tamarind and sugar and pour over the stuffed leeks.
16.Cover with a lid or a piece of foil and bake for 45 minutes.
17.Remove the lid and cook for another 30 minutes until the liquid has reduced to make a tangy sauce.
18.Serve hot or at room temperature. Spoon over the yoghurt and dill sauce and serve with flatbreads.
19.YOGHURT & DILL SAUCE
20.Combine all the ingredients and season with salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste.

Recipes & food styling Ginny Grant / Photography Aaron McLean / Styling Jess Hemmings