Recipe: Superbowl avocado & bean layer dip

February 7, 2010 · 11 comments

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Whilst my US friends are watching the Superbowl tonight they’ll be drinking beer & eating vast quantities of dips and chips.

Dips are a peculiarly American thing. Dips in the UK aren’t taken that seriously: most often they lurk in tiny plastic pots in the chill section of the supermarket. Upon further inspection they are usually radioactive in colour, full of E numbers (chemical additives), and leave a fatty film on the roof of your mouth.

There certainly isn’t a UK equivalent of the US tradition of time-honoured family recipes, and you won’t find dips in very many British cookbooks. Once I got past my twenties, the only dips I’ve ever seen at parties are houmous & taramasalata. But sour cream based?

Not so much.

When I moved to America I was amazed at the prevalence of dips, especially those quite substantial ones. (In the UK they are always quite liquid). It’s perfectly normal for a girlfriend to rock up to my front door for a TV party with a snazzy multi-layered dip, almost a meal in itself, made according to a honed family recipe.

So, in honour of tonight’s Superbowl, & my best friend in NY the wonderful Jill who knows as much about football as I do about fashion, I give you the LLG layer dip, a new addition to the LLG family canon.

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This has to be the simplest recipe. If you are familiar with nachos, then this will ring a few bells. It’s just layered beans, sour cream, grated cheese, guacamole, salsa and some olives.

And these:

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YUM

So: dice the onion. Heat a dessertspoon of neutral oil (sunflower is gd) & add half the chopped onion.

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and sweat (cook over a low heat) until the onions are translucent.

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Open a tin of beans — I used black eyed, but it works with refried, haricot, black or canellini — drain, and add to the onions with a small glass of water, a large pinch of salt and a tsp of cumin. Heat to a simmer and cook for ten minutes.

Chop up the tomatoes into small dice, making sure you keep the juice. Strip off the coriander leaves and finely chop. Mix the tomatoes & all the coriander bar a spoonful, with the leftover chopped onion. Add salt to taste and a generous dash of Tabasco. (I use my hands to mix it all, but feel free to use a spoon.)

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Skin the avocados.

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Add two large teaspoons of salsa, & tablespn of coriander, & a good squeeze of lime juice.
Get rid of some aggression by wielding that masher:

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Add salt, Tabasco to your taste. (I like a lot.)

Take up your masher again when the beans look like this:

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And half mash them. (You want a little texture.)

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Scoop all the beans into an ovenproof dish:

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Then add a layer of grated cheese, and then spoon over all the salsa:

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More cheese:

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Then a layer of sour cream (I used crème fraîche), and then all the guacamole, smoothed over the cream with the back of a spoon:

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Then the olives, chopped (optional), and a thin layer of grated cheese. Pop under a pre-heated grill/broiler until the cheese is melted but not brown.

Ta da! Scoop into mouth with chips. (Try not to spill down front.)

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INGREDIENTS:
I x can beans
1 x large white onion
1 x tsp ground cumin
small glass of water
salt
2 x soft avocados
200gms/8oz tomatoes
small bunch coriander
Tabasco
Grated cheese. In America I use Monterey or pepper Jack, but cheddar in the UK.
Handful of olives, chopped
Sour cream (I use crème fraîche)

METHOD
Cook beans
Make salsa
Make guacamole
Grate cheese
Layer all ingredients plus sour cream
Pop under pre-heated grill/broiler

If taking this to a party, I suggest putting in the guacamole before the layer of cream, to stop the avocado going brown.

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May 1, 2010 at 1:05 pm

{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }

1 hollarback February 7, 2010 at 7:34 pm

Hmm, interesting. I see you have taken to our customs :) The best thing about superbowl parties tends to be the dips.

BTW, you don’t have to skin the avocados — all you do is split them, remove the pit, then take a large soup spoon and scoop the meat out in one piece. Much much easier.

(I am in CA, we eat a lot of guac, gets to be second nature after a bit)

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2 shayma February 7, 2010 at 10:40 pm

to.die.for. i love bean and avocado layered dips. this recipe is wonderful. the guacamole looks so scrumptious, dear LLG. x

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3 Karyn February 8, 2010 at 6:07 am

OOh I actually just hand copied that into my old school recipe book. Don’t need the Superbowl for an excuse to eat that!

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4 mettebassett February 8, 2010 at 9:38 am

This looks so good. And it must be THE perfect accompaniment to a hungover DVD-watching day. Can’t wait to test it.

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5 MissMtheBeekeeper February 8, 2010 at 10:16 am

This looks so delicious LLG. Avocado and cheese are two of the world’s greatest foodstuffs IMHO. This is on the “to make” list..thanks for sharing.

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6 Sarah February 8, 2010 at 11:52 am

This is the kind of US recipe that looks half gorgeous, half gross and probably tastes amazing.

Mexican and Tex-Mex places are gradually popping up on the UK high street, but there’s still not enough guacamole in London for my liking. Yum.

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7 Olaola February 8, 2010 at 2:03 pm

Oh, LLG, that sounds DIVINE. And so it looks, too. I love your recipe posts — I’ve yet to try them, but they always look delicious.

I’ve just eaten a huge, huge dinner that I prepared for me and the boyfriend though, so I can hardly think about food ;)

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8 Lizzie February 9, 2010 at 1:21 pm

It looks great. Do you try and get all layers on the nacho as you dip, or do you work your way down layer by layer…?

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9 Fashion London Life February 11, 2010 at 4:41 am

Mmmh Thank you for this delicious little thing !

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10 Cha Cha February 18, 2010 at 10:46 pm

What kind of beans are those? they look like black eye peas. No?

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