Not only can you serve this dish instead of a dip, but you can also use it as part of a meal, just serve a wedge on the side. Although this recipe can easily be made as dip by leaving the agar agar out, it is nice for a change to present it in solid form. It's low fat and has a lovely light, flavoursome texture :-)
Recipe type: side dish, condiment
Cuisine: vegan, cooked (roasted)
You need
300gr beetroot (peeled weight)
½ cup coconut yoghurt
1 large clove of garlic, minced or finely chopped
4 good quality black olives (mine were dried, delish!), chopped
30gr red onion, chopped
3 tsp dried dill
⅛ tsp salt
a good grind of pepper
1 cup oat milk or other non dairy milk
3 tsp agar agar powder
To do
preheat oven to 190-200C
wash beetroots, place in a dish and then in the oven, bake till soft (or almost soft), which would be about 45minutes, depending on their size
let cool down, then peel skin off, cut in pieces, add to the small bowl of your food processor (see note)
add coconut yoghurt, chopped onion, garlic, olives, dill, pepper, salt, blend till fine, taste and tweak flavours
before the next step, make sure you have your moulds or slightly oiled ramekins ready to be used; this last phase needs a bit of pace
in a small sauce pan, place oat milk and sprinkle the agar agar powder on top, heat the milk, whisk powder in, and you'll find that as soon as the milk starts to boil, the mixture will go thickish
take immediately of heat and, with your machine running, pour in the agar mixture
let blend for a short while, making sure the agar is well mixed through
pour mixture into moulds, and tap them to fill up nicely, place in fridge and they're done when solid
Notes
You can make this dish with a stick blender, just make sure the beetroots are quite soft and that you have somebody to pour the agar mixture in while you stir thoroughly.
Recipe by VaVaVoom Vegan & Organic Recipes at http://eerainuh.com/beetroot-coconut-terrine-w-olive-dill/