Some simple tips for how to thicken shakshuka sauce include draining the fresh tomatoes after dicing them or using a thickening agent in the sauce. Options for the latter include adding flour, cornflour mixed with cold water, a beaten egg, cream cheese, or making a beurre manié from equal parts softened butter and flour. Stir well and give your thickener of choice a few minutes to work its magic. The latter three options will add the most richness to the dish as they thicken the tomato sauce and, as such, make for tasty options. Using cream cheese or beaten egg will make for the most filling, enriched sauce. This is great when you want to make sure that you serve your family a suhoor meal that will leave them full and satisfied for many hours.
With our quick and easy shakshuka recipe in your repertoire, making an early morning breakfast during Ramadan is wonderfully simple. To learn more about the dish, read our answers to the most frequently asked questions about it below.
Cream cheese
|
6 tsp |
---|---|
Medium onion
|
1 |
Garlic cloves
|
2 |
Green bell pepper
|
150 g |
Tomatoes, diced
|
200 g |
Tomato paste
|
1 tsp |
Ground cumin
|
1 tsp |
Paprika
|
1 tsp |
Chilli flakes
|
1 tsp |
Salt and pepper to taste
|
|
Eggs
|
5 |
Baguettes for serving
|
|
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Fresh coriander and sliced green chilli for garnish
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Though it is originally from Maghreb, the most North-western part of the Arab-speaking world, creamy shakshuka with cheese is popular across many different countries and cuisines. Against the red tomato sauce and green garnishes, the white eggs and cream cheese simply look stunning. Both enrich the dish and make it creamy and filling. In addition, this soft, creamy cheese has a mild, yet rich, taste that balances and mellows the spicy shakshuka sauce so everyone can enjoy it.
No authentic shakshuka recipe is complete without a delicious tomato sauce in which to poach the eggs. When made with onion, garlic, green peppers, and fresh tomatoes in addition to a bit of intense tomato paste, this sauce gains a vibrant red colour, a slightly chunky texture with a bit of bite, and a perfectly balanced sweet-tangy flavour with hints of bitterness.
To ensure it is flavourful and perfectly spiced, it is seasoned with cumin, paprika, and chilli flakes. These shakshuka spices create heat and depth and give the tasty sauce its signature spicy and slightly smoky flavour.
Though it tastes great any time of day, this dish is a perfect suhoor meal. With its rich vegetable sauce, beautifully poached eggs, and rich cream cheese it is quite filling. Served with crisp, crusted, French bread slathered with cream cheese, a breakfast shakshuka is sure to keep you full for many hours to come. Also, since it does not take long to prepare, it is well suited to the early morning hours before a day of fasting.
In case you are looking for more delicious and filling suhoor ideas, we suggest checking out our recipes for fluffy pancakes with labneh, paratha sandwich, and mushroom and cheese omelette.
Although delicious as it is, you can easily make shakshuka with meat. A popular option is to make a lamb shakshuka with mince in the sauce. With a flavourful, gamey type of meat like lamb, a bit of additional sweetness can also be nice. If this appeals to you, you can add a few chopped carrots to the tomato sauce.
If you would prefer milder-tasting meat in the morning, a chicken shakshuka might be for you. You can either use minced chicken directly in the sauce or add cooked pieces of chicken breast or barbeque rotisserie chicken for the final few minutes of cooking to heat them.
Beef shakshuka also makes for a tasty breakfast. Rich, savoury ground beef mixed with the well-seasoned sauce of our original shakshuka recipe thickens and enriches it considerably. As such, a salty addition like crumbled feta cheese will also work beautifully.