When I think of Jamaica, and the short time I spent there over two decades ago, it is not the limestone cliffs overlooking the serene Caribbean Sea, the sound of the gentle waves lapping the majestic caves, or the perennially blue skies that I remember most. My strongest memory was, naturally, the food. And one dish in particular, a humble bowl of stewed greens that I was told was simply called ‘callaloo’. Here, I recreated the dish, from memory.
My memory tells me the leaves, which were similar to kale but more resilient than spinach, were stewed in tomatoes, and gently spiced. And then while wandering through a local greenmarket in Brooklyn, I came across these very leaves. Callaloo!
When I got home, with memory as my inspiration, I devised this little recipe of callaloo stewed in spices, coconut milk and tomatoes. I ate it with rice and it was divine. My kids loved it too, maybe more than that butter-flied roasted chicken I had made them.
Callaloo is not easy to come by but you may be able to find it at a Caribbean or ethnic supermarket. It is actually a member of the amaranth family, so you could substitute with amaranth leaves that you can often find in Chinatown. Short of that, you could use any leaf really – kale, cavolo nero, spinach, collards, gai larn leaves, or even ong choy (Chinese water spinach).