
Much of Ethiopia's cuisine is in the form of stews or wats. These stews are generally paired with a type of flatbread that acts as a serving utensil. For tonight's meal, take your family on a faraway journey to Africa with an authentic chicken stew. Although it takes a little over an hour to prepare, it's simple to make. Serve with a cold beer or sweet Riesling to counteract the spiciness. To travel to Ethiopia in the comfort of your very own kitchen, read more

Doro Wat Ethiopian Chicken
From Ex Design
Image Source
3 lb chicken pieces
1/3 cup butter
1 large clove garlic, minced
3 oz. tomato paste
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1/3 cup peanut butter
1/2 cup chicken stock
2 onions, chopped
1 hard boiled egg per person
1 teaspoon berbere seasoning
flatbread, optional for serving
berbere seasoning:
1 teaspoon ground ginger
3 tablespoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
- Make berbere seasoning, mix and store in an airtight container.
- Remove skin from chicken, and score chicken meat so that sauce can penetrate meat.
- Melt butter in large pot. Saute the onions and garlic for 5 minutes.
- Add berbere, and then the tomato paste. Simmer 15 minutes.
- Stir in the chicken one piece at a time, stirring so the chicken gets well coated.
- Simmer about 20 minutes.
- Take out some liquid, stir the peanut butter into the liquid, and then return all to the pot. Stir.
- Lightly score the eggs, and gently place in the pot. Cover and continue cooking for 15 more minutes until chicken is done. Serve with flatbread if desired. This will keep in the fridge for several days or can be frozen and reheated.
Serves 4-5.
Print recipe with images | without images






Rebecca
Ikea
Milano
Yum, that sounds delicious!
1Sounds pretty good, but I've learned that even though I really like peanut butter, I don't like it IN things. Weird, huh?
2That sounds really good.
Not weird at all, ALSW, I have the same thing about bananas. I like bananas IN stuff, but would gag if I had to eat an actual banana.
3those eggs look delicious! now i'm jonesing for that Spanglish sandwich. lol
4Sounds good but I'd leave the hard boiled egg out. I just can't eat those! Now where can I find berbere seasoning?
5I loooove Ethiopian food and I'm sad that the only place nearby that serves it closed down! I'll definitely have to make this dish soon.
6This sounds wonderful! I'm a great fan of Moroccan food and I do believe they are similar. I'll definitely be trying this recipe and I'll let you know how it comes out.
7That does look good, I'd take this over the cheese dish any day.
8This is currently simmering away on my stove. I noticed there was no instructions for adding the black pepper and chicken stock, so I put it in with the tomato paste and seasoning. It smells great, and a little lick of the spoon revealed that it's pretty spicy (and I did 3 tsp of cayene instead of tbsp). Very excited to taste this!!
9Post New Comment
Please share your opinion with our community, but make sure it is on topic and follows our Community Rules. We moderate comments and prohibit personal attacks, threats, spam, lewd images, or the promotion of your personal website.