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Millet, Roast Veggies, Pietro’s Egg + Pomegranate

By Peter Gordon

I Quit Sugar: Millet, Roast Veggies, Pietro's Egg + Pomegrante
  • 4 servings
  • Prep - 15 mins
    Cooking - 30 mins
  • Total - 45 mins
I Quit Sugar: Millet, Roast Veggies, Pietro's Egg + Pomegrante

Peter Gordon's Millet, Roast Veggies, Pietro's Egg + Pomegrante dish makes for a superb brunch dish, shared with friends. Peter says that millet is a "quick-cooking grain that's easily digestible, light and gluten free" and suggests serving this dish with buttery crusty toast and grilled chorizo.  

Servings: 4
Preparation: 15 mins
Cooking: 30 mins

Ingredients

  • 2 carrots, peeled, ends cut off and sliced on an angle 5mm thick.
  • 1 fennel bulb, trimmed thinly sliced lenthways.
  • 1/2 red onion, halved and thinly sliced.
  • 2 cloves garlic, sliced.
  • 1/2 medium-heat chilli, thinly sliced.
  • 85 g butter.
  • 125 g millet.
  • 150 ml extra virgin olive oil, for frying the eggs.
  • 4 large eggs.
  • 100 g baby spinach leaves.
  • 4 tablespoons pomegrante seeds.
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil.

Directions

1. Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/Gas Mark 4. Put the carrots, fennel, onion, garlic and chilli in a roasting dish and toss together with a little salt and pepper. Dot on three quarters of the butter and roast in the oven, turning them once or twice while they cook, until golden, about 25 minutes. Keep warm.

2. While the vegetables are roasting, cook the millet. Half-fill a medium pan with water and bring to the boil. Meanwhile, dry-toast the millet in a frying pan (skillet) on a medium-high heat for 3 1/2 minutes, shaking or stirring it several times to prevent it from catching. Tip the millet carefully into the boiling water and add the remaining butter and 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Cover the pan and cook on a low heat for 12 minutes. Taste a few grains: they should have a little bite. Drain the millet into a sieve, then return it to the pan, cover and keep warm.

3. To cook the eggs, it helps if you have a cardboard egg box to hand. Heat 7mm of olive oil in two medium (or one large) frying pans (skillets) until it gives off a shimmer of heat (at about 190°C/375°F/Gas Mark 5). Crack open the eggs and tip their whites into four individual cups or ramekins. Put the yolks in their half-shells back in the egg box (to keep them upright). Carefully lower the whites into the hot oil and cook until they begin to crisp on the outside edges. Using a metal spoon, carefully spoon a little hot oil over the white to make it firm a little. Lower the yolks back onto the now semi-cooked whites. Drizzle a teaspoon of hot oil over the top of the yolk to help secure it, then remove from the pan.

4. To serve, toss the veggies, millet and spinach together and divide among warmed plates. Sit an egg on top, scatter with pomegrante and drizzle with olive oil.


Note

The original recipe by Peter Gordon contained vegetable oil. We've swapped it to extra virgin olive oil, which you can still cook with at higher temperatures.

Peter Gordon's Millet, Roast Veggies, Pietro's Egg + Pomegrante dish makes for a superb brunch dish, shared with friends. Peter says that millet is a "quick-cooking grain that's easily digestible, light and gluten free" and suggests serving this dish with buttery crusty toast and grilled chorizo.

Ingredients

  • 2 carrots, peeled, ends cut off and sliced on an angle 5mm thick.
  • 1 fennel bulb, trimmed thinly sliced lenthways.
  • 1/2 red onion, halved and thinly sliced.
  • 2 cloves garlic, sliced.
  • 1/2 medium-heat chilli, thinly sliced.
  • 85 g butter.
  • 125 g millet.
  • 150 ml extra virgin olive oil, for frying the eggs.
  • 4 large eggs.
  • 100 g baby spinach leaves.
  • 4 tablespoons pomegrante seeds.
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil.

Directions

1. Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/Gas Mark 4. Put the carrots, fennel, onion, garlic and chilli in a roasting dish and toss together with a little salt and pepper. Dot on three quarters of the butter and roast in the oven, turning them once or twice while they cook, until golden, about 25 minutes. Keep warm.

2. While the vegetables are roasting, cook the millet. Half-fill a medium pan with water and bring to the boil. Meanwhile, dry-toast the millet in a frying pan (skillet) on a medium-high heat for 3 1/2 minutes, shaking or stirring it several times to prevent it from catching. Tip the millet carefully into the boiling water and add the remaining butter and 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Cover the pan and cook on a low heat for 12 minutes. Taste a few grains: they should have a little bite. Drain the millet into a sieve, then return it to the pan, cover and keep warm.

3. To cook the eggs, it helps if you have a cardboard egg box to hand. Heat 7mm of olive oil in two medium (or one large) frying pans (skillets) until it gives off a shimmer of heat (at about 190°C/375°F/Gas Mark 5). Crack open the eggs and tip their whites into four individual cups or ramekins. Put the yolks in their half-shells back in the egg box (to keep them upright). Carefully lower the whites into the hot oil and cook until they begin to crisp on the outside edges. Using a metal spoon, carefully spoon a little hot oil over the white to make it firm a little. Lower the yolks back onto the now semi-cooked whites. Drizzle a teaspoon of hot oil over the top of the yolk to help secure it, then remove from the pan.

4. To serve, toss the veggies, millet and spinach together and divide among warmed plates. Sit an egg on top, scatter with pomegrante and drizzle with olive oil.

Note

The original recipe by Peter Gordon contained vegetable oil. We've swapped it to extra virgin olive oil, which you can still cook with at higher temperatures.