Rwandan Brochettes

Serves     8

Ingredients

2 pounds meat – goat, beef, chicken, or pork, cut into no larger than ½-inch cubes
1 small onion, cut in half – dice one half finely (about ¾ cup), and the other half will be cut in half and separated for the skewers
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon paprika
1 (14-oz) can crushed tomatoes
1 or 2 hot chiles, minced – habanero, Thai-bird chiles, jalapeño, or red Fresno
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 teaspoon chopped garlic
1 teaspoon Kosher salt


Directions

Thread the meat cubes and onion slices onto skewers. You may want to soak the skewers in water for half an hour first if you are using wooden ones. Place the skewers on a sheet pan and sprinkle with some salt, the cumin, and the paprika.

Make the marinade by combining the crushed tomatoes, diced onion, garlic, chile, olive oil, and salt. I gave this a very quick pulse in the blender for a smoother marinade, but it’s not absolutely necessary.

Pour half of the marinade over the skewers and let sit for at least half an hour. Reserve the other half of the marinade for dipping sauce for the fries. Fire up the grill while the skewers are marinating. You could fire up the oven at this time as well if you are baking sweet potato fries or baking your skewers instead of grilling them.

Grill for 8 to 10 minutes turning a few times and brushing with the marinade until done to your liking. If roasting the brochettes, I’d recommend an oven temp of 425 – 450 for a quick hot bake.

Serve with sweet potato fries and perhaps a side of coleslaw. I’m a mayo with my fries kind of a girl, so I swirled some of the reserved dipping sauce into some mayo. Enjoy!


Country:
Rwanda


Notes and Instructions

While the typical meat used in these brochettes would be goat, use what you like and what you can find. I was able to source some goat and was glad to try something new to me. In comparing it to lamb I would say it is less gamey. Beef, chicken, lamb, and pork will work. We’ll marinate the skewers for about an hour or so, and then use some of the reserved marinade for a dipping sauce for the fries. Since Pili Pili chiles aren’t available here, use whatever kind of chile/heat you are familiar with.

These are best grilled outdoors, but you can certainly put them under the broiler or bake them in your oven. Since you’ll have the oven on for the sweet potato fries anyway, that might be a good option.


Recipe and photo credit: Linda McElroy