knitgirl wrote:For those who don't know of it it's an Israeli/Middle Eastern dish of eggs poached in a spicy tomato sauce.
raydle wrote:I had a version at Beatrix for brunch. It wasn't as great as the Shakshuka I had in Jaffa, but it was pretty good. I believe Italians also make an "eggs in purgatory" dish that seems quite similar
albpd wrote:The new/north iteration of Bangers and Lace serves a version on its brunch menu.
nsxtasy wrote:albpd wrote:The new/north iteration of Bangers and Lace serves a version on its brunch menu.
I didn't think their Evanston location is open for brunch...
nsxtasy wrote:knitgirl wrote:For those who don't know of it it's an Israeli/Middle Eastern dish of eggs poached in a spicy tomato sauce.
In case I'm not the only one who immediately thought of huevos rancheros...
Shakshuka vs Menemen Vs Huevos Rancheros. What’s The Difference?
jlawrence01 wrote:nsxtasy wrote:knitgirl wrote:For those who don't know of it it's an Israeli/Middle Eastern dish of eggs poached in a spicy tomato sauce.
In case I'm not the only one who immediately thought of huevos rancheros...
Shakshuka vs Menemen Vs Huevos Rancheros. What’s The Difference?
The MAJOR difference that I have seen between Shakshuka and Huevos Rancheros is the preparation. In Shakshuka, the raw eggs are cooked in the tomato sauce. In every preparation of huevos rancheros I have ever seen, the eggs are prepared separately and the sauce poured over AFTER cooking. Personally, I think that there is a major difference in taste.
Having said that, when I prepare Shashuka, I generally fry a couple of eggs hard and pour over the sauce as my wife REFUSES to eat poached eggs.
edc wrote:nsxtasy wrote:albpd wrote:The new/north iteration of Bangers and Lace serves a version on its brunch menu.
I didn't think their Evanston location is open for brunch...
albpd is referring to the one in Roscoe Village.
http://bangersandlaceroscoevillage.com/menu/
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edc