A thick, verdant soup of dasheen leaves cooked with coconut milk, okra, pumpkin, and crab, blended until creamy. Trinidad's Sunday lunch essential.
Ingredients
1 large bunch dasheen leaves (or taro leaves or spinach)
1 cup coconut milk
6 okra, trimmed and sliced
1 cup pumpkin, peeled and cubed
1 medium onion, finely diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
3 sprigs fresh thyme
1 whole scotch bonnet pepper (kept intact)
2 cups water or vegetable stock
Salt and black pepper to taste
Instructions
1Strip the dasheen leaves from their stems, discarding any damaged or yellowed leaves. Wash the leaves thoroughly in several changes of water to remove any grit. Roll several leaves together and chop them roughly, making them easier to cook down evenly.
2Place the prepared dasheen leaves in a large heavy pot along with the coconut milk, water or stock, sliced okra, cubed pumpkin, diced onion, minced garlic, and fresh thyme sprigs. The pot should be generously filled as the leaves will reduce dramatically.
3Place the whole scotch bonnet pepper on top of the mixture without piercing or cutting it. The intact pepper imparts a gentle, aromatic heat to the callaloo without releasing the intense, searing spiciness contained within its seeds and membranes.
4Bring the pot to a boil over high heat, then reduce to medium-low and simmer for twenty-five to thirty minutes, stirring occasionally. The leaves and vegetables should be completely soft and the pumpkin should be falling apart, thickening the liquid naturally.
5Carefully remove and discard the whole scotch bonnet pepper and the thyme stems from the pot. Using an immersion blender, blend the callaloo directly in the pot until thick, smooth, and uniformly green with no visible chunks of leaf remaining.
6Taste the blended callaloo and adjust the seasoning with salt and black pepper. The final consistency should be thick enough to coat the back of a spoon generously. If too thick, thin with a splash of coconut milk or water and stir through.
7Serve the callaloo hot in deep bowls alongside steamed white rice, stewed meats, or provisions. In Trinidad, callaloo is a centerpiece of the Sunday lunch table and is considered incomplete without rice and some form of stewed or braised protein.
Did You Know?
Callaloo is considered Trinidad's national dish alongside doubles. The secret to good callaloo is the okra, which gives it its distinctive silky thickness.