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Kachumbari (Tomato and Onion Relish)
![Kachumbari (Tomato and Onion Relish)](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2022/04/06/dining/05passoverrex2/merlin_204759438_113af34b-7d8d-45cd-8ab0-8c4e0436286f-articleLarge.jpg?width=1280&quality=75&auto=webp)
- Total Time
- 15 minutes, plus resting
- Rating
- Notes
- Read community notes
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Ingredients
- 4ripe but firm tomatoes, very thinly sliced
- 2medium red onions, halved then very thinly sliced
- 1carrot, peeled and sliced
- ½cucumber, peeled and sliced
- 1lemon, juiced (4 to 5 tablespoons)
- 1tablespoon chrain (beet horseradish) or regular prepared horseradish
- ½teaspoon red-pepper flakes
- ½teaspoon garam masala or curry powder
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Preparation
- Step 1
Place the sliced tomatoes, onions, carrot and cucumber in a bowl. Squeeze lemon juice over the mixture and add the horseradish. Sprinkle with the red-pepper flakes and garam masala, then season with salt and pepper. Toss together to mix.
- Step 2
Allow flavors to develop at room temperature for at least 30 minutes or up to 3 hours, then serve as a relish or salad.
Private Notes
Cooking Notes
This recipe looks delicious. I learned to make this from rural Tanzanian women. They would slice the onions, then add an incredible amount of salt. They worked the salt into the onions, until the onion slices were separated and completely soft. Then, they washed the salt off the onions with 2+ rinses. Then added the tomatoes and lemon juice. It was served primarily as a garnish for rice or ugali (a corn flour paste), but if meat were available, it would garnish it as well.
This dish is actually Indian in origin. It is the Swahili adaptation of the Indian work Kachumber. You can also add cilantro to the recipe for an additional flavor profile.
I make a lot of Japanese tsukemono, so your salt-ahead strategy appealed to me. I massaged the red onions for about two minutes, until soft; then I added the cucumbers and massaged them too for another minute. I used Penzey’s excellent Maharajah curry powder. This relish added pizzazz to crab cakes from Jenny Fitch’s Fearrington House Cookbook. Cheers!
Marvelous recipe! The tomatoes at the store didn’t look so promising (it’s still April), so I went with cherry tomatoes, and chopped them in a food processor. Whether it’s salad or relish, it’s wonderful enough to enjoy by the spoonful like soup.
If people are strictly kosher for Passover, it should be noted that many ingredients in curry powder/garam masala are kitniyot, including cumin and coriander.
It says 30 mins to 3 hrs.. does that mean this can’t be made a day ahead?
Next time I'd use only 1.5 red onions - besides that it was delicious!
If people are strictly kosher for Passover, it should be noted that many ingredients in curry powder/garam masala are kitniyot, including cumin and coriander.
Marvelous recipe! The tomatoes at the store didn’t look so promising (it’s still April), so I went with cherry tomatoes, and chopped them in a food processor. Whether it’s salad or relish, it’s wonderful enough to enjoy by the spoonful like soup.
I lived in East Africa during the 90s: Uganda and Kenya. I loved roasted goat (nyama chomo). It was always accompanied by ugali and kachumbari. The latter was always very simple and delicious: finely chopped tomatoes, onions, tons of cilantro and fresh chopped chilis. Nothing else. Wonderful. Keep it simple!
This dish is actually Indian in origin. It is the Swahili adaptation of the Indian work Kachumber. You can also add cilantro to the recipe for an additional flavor profile.
This recipe looks delicious. I learned to make this from rural Tanzanian women. They would slice the onions, then add an incredible amount of salt. They worked the salt into the onions, until the onion slices were separated and completely soft. Then, they washed the salt off the onions with 2+ rinses. Then added the tomatoes and lemon juice. It was served primarily as a garnish for rice or ugali (a corn flour paste), but if meat were available, it would garnish it as well.
I make a lot of Japanese tsukemono, so your salt-ahead strategy appealed to me. I massaged the red onions for about two minutes, until soft; then I added the cucumbers and massaged them too for another minute. I used Penzey’s excellent Maharajah curry powder. This relish added pizzazz to crab cakes from Jenny Fitch’s Fearrington House Cookbook. Cheers!
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