South African Bunny Chow – my vegetarian version with Chickpeas

South African cuisine is a titillating mix of Indian, British, Malay, Portuguese and Indonesian food. Every group of settlers has left its own mark on the country’s cuisine. Bunny Chow, also called ‘bunny’ is one of the Indian community’s contributions to South African cuisine. Indian immigrant laborers are credited with inventing this dish nearly 200 years ago. They used hollowed out loaves of bread to put their curries in – an easy way to transport their curries while working in sugar cane plantations. The concept of bunny chow is not unlike India’s own pav bhaji – bread eaten with curried vegetables.

Camps Bay in Cape Town

When I first heard about Bunny Chow from a taxi driver in Cape Town, I was intrigued. But this African street food is usually made with meat, and I couldn’t find a vegetarian version while I was in South Africa (I should have searched harder because the original bunny chow was vegetarian!). I was disappointed to say the least. When Meeta announced South Africa as the theme for her monthly mingle, I jumped at the opportunity to make a vegetarian bunny chow.

I used chickpeas as the filling. I also decided to go with a more elegant presentation and used mini ciabatta rolls, instead of the traditional white bread loaf. The mini rolls worked well, they looked cute, were easy to eat and reminded me of panera style bread bowls! The bread ‘bowls’ soaked up all the curry and got finger licking good!

Intrigued? Want to read more?

Cook Sister’s bunny chow recipe
Afar blog’s bunny chow recipe
Bunny chow etiquette

If you dont want to bother hollowing out bread or dont want use as much bread, you could serve the chickpea filling on top of slices of crusty bread – tapas style! But ofcourse, it wont be bunny chow anymore ;)

South African Bunny Chow with Chickpeas Recipe

makes about 6 mini bunnies

2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 onion, finely chopped
1 tablespoon garlic paste
1 tablespoon ginger paste
1 carrot, diced (1/2 cups when diced)
1 small green pepper, diced (1/2 cup when diced)
1 large tomato, diced
1 tablespoon curry powder ( may need more or less depending on the brand)
1/2 teaspoon turmeric, optional
1/2 teaspoon paprika, optional
1 cup canned chickpeas, drained
2 teaspoons tomato paste
1-2 cups water
1-2 teaspoons lemon juice
salt
cilantro for garnish

6 mini ciabatta or other bread rolls (or 1-2 regular sized loaves of white or crusty bread)

Heat oil in a pan. Add chopped onions and cook on medium heat till the onions are brown. Then add ginger and garlic paste and saute 30 seconds. Add carrot, green pepper, and tomato and cook till the vegetables are soft. Now add salt, curry powder, turmeric and paprika if using, cook 1 minute on medium-high heat.  Add chickpeas, tomato paste, 1 1/2 cups water and bring to a boil. Stir to make sure tomato paste has dissolved. Boil for about 2 minutes. Add more water if the curry it too thick. Turn off heat. Taste,and add lemon juice according to taste.

Cut the tops off the mini bread rolls and gently scoop out the bread inside. Fill the bread ‘bowls’ with the chickpea filling. Garnish with chopped cilantro. Serve along with the scooped out bread for dipping.

If using larger sized loaves of bread, halve or quarter (depending on the size) the bread loaf. Scoop out the bread to form a bread bowl. Fill with chickpea filling. Be careful not to scoop out too much bread, your filling might leak out!

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Comments

comments

35 thoughts on “South African Bunny Chow – my vegetarian version with Chickpeas

  1. Ah! lovely bunny chow. Good idea of chick-pea filing. Thanks for vegetarian version. All pics are just drool-worthy. :)

    [Reply]

    Neel | Learn Food Photography Reply:

    Agree with you. The photography here is too awesome… wonderful composition here. love the colors and use of dof in various photos…

    Totally awesome… thanks for sharing.

    Neel

    [Reply]

  2. I wanted to send someting for meeta too, but i have enver had any really typical food from there, my SIL went there for 2 weeks and told she there she had lots of indian food :-)
    Love the way they are served in those buns.

    [Reply]

  3. this is the second batch of this that i’ve seen in as many hours, and i love it! bread bowls alone excite me, and the filling just seals the deal. :)

    [Reply]

  4. I love the name of the dish! And what a great story, learning of it from a taxi driver. I think I’d prefer the veg version, they should bring it back! Beautiful pictures, as usual.

    [Reply]

  5. Thanks for stopping by n for ur lovely words on my recipe dear…Camps bay is one of my faaav place in Capetown , i like Capetown than Joburg nice weather n got nice places to visit. Buny chow is my faaav SA recipe i usually have sugar beans or chicken bunny chow taste yummy..Your’s soo different n very delicious dear..

    [Reply]

  6. i really enjoyed the story behind the bunny chow, makes so much sense. and your take on it is simple creative. it does remind me of pav bhaji if we substitute the chickpea with potato and add a lot more garlic – incidentally i have been CRAVING pav bhaji of late. the presentation in the cute bread bowls tops it! one can now fill it with all sorts of substitutions – yam, sweet potato, potato, cauliflower..
    excellent idea!!

    [Reply]

  7. Love the ciabatta rolls, they’re so cute! I only ever came across bunny chow by reading Jeanne’s (cooksister.com) blog. Even though I use shortage of time as an excuse for my flimsy styling I don’t think I’ll be able to reach your standards if I had all the time in the world!

    [Reply]

  8. Great post!
    Veg bunnies are extremely popular in S.Africa.
    They are filled with either, mixed vegtable curry, sugar beans (barlotti) or the most popular one which is a butter bean curry – Yuuuum.

    [Reply]

  9. Wonderful, easy recipe! My husband, who doesn’t like chickpeas OR curry, couldn’t stop saying how great it was. I’ve also made your paella-style tomato rice, and now I have permission to try anything from your blog, anytime!

    [Reply]

  10. Being South African, I adore bunny chow – so much fun and super tasty! I’ve never thought of a vegetarian version! i think I’m going to give that a try – good idea! :)

    [Reply]

  11. I’m surprised that you struggled to find a vegetarian option for bunny chow while in SA. You usually get 3 versions – lamb, chicken and veggie :) And I’ve always found them readily available from the places that have them on the menu ;)

    [Reply]

Leave a Reply to Rosa Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>