
It’s uncommon to discover a recipe that checks all of the packing containers: fast, straightforward, low-mess, and full (that means no sides required). After I noticed Mariam Daud’s oozi recipe in her new cookbook, I Sleep In My Kitchen, I knew instantly that I’d discovered one such gem.
“Oozi is my lazy-girl meal, for these I-don’t-know-what-to-make-and-it’s-already-six-p.m. nights,” says Mariam. “The muse is rice, floor beef, frozen peas and carrots — substances I often have on-hand. It comes collectively in half-hour, and if you take away the lid of the pot, a plume of spice-fragrant steam wafts into the kitchen, and also you’re greeted with plump, colourful rice, dotted with fairly veggies.”
Mariam notes that this conventional dish is usually served with rooster legs, however makes for a fantastic, easy dinner by itself. “Don’t overthink it!” she urges. “The entire level of this recipe that it doesn’t take up an excessive amount of mind energy. The principle factor to give attention to is seasoning it effectively — let the spices cook dinner within the fats for a couple of minutes, so the flavors bloom. That’s what actually makes the dish. Aside from that, don’t fear.”
Oozi (Spiced Rice with Beef, Peas and Carrots)
From I Sleep In My Kitchen, by Mariam Daud
Serves 4-6
for the meat, peas, and carrots:
3 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
1 giant onion, finely diced
1 1/4 lbs. floor beef (80%/20%)
1 16-oz bag frozen peas and carrots, thawed
2 tsp tremendous sea salt
2 tsp curry powder
2 tsp floor allspice
2 tsp black pepper
2 tsp seven spice/baharat*
1/2 tsp floor cinnamon
1/2 tsp floor turmeric
*Be aware: For the seven spice/baharat, Mariam says: “Don’t fear about particular manufacturers. I seize no matter’s accessible at my native Center Jap retailer. In case you don’t have one close to you, you possibly can simply make it at dwelling. A easy batch is only a tablespoon of those seven spices: black pepper, cinnamon, cloves, coriander, cumin, nutmeg, and cardamom.
for the spiced rice:
2 cups basmati rice
3 tbsp ghee or olive oil
1 tbsp floor allspice
1 tbsp curry powder
1 tbsp seven spice
2 tsp tremendous sea salt
2 tsp Vegeta seasoning or rooster bouillon powder
2 tsp black pepper
1/2 tsp floor turmeric
1/4 tsp floor cinnamon
for serving:
Chopped recent parsley
Toasted pine nuts
In a big saucepan, warmth the oil over medium warmth. Add the onion and sauté till softened and translucent (3-4 minutes). Stir within the beef, breaking it aside with a spoon, and cook dinner till evenly browned (5-7 minutes). Add the peas and carrots, salt, curry powder, allspice, black pepper, seven spice, cinnamon, and turmeric. Stir to coat the meat and greens within the aromatic spices. Let the combination cook dinner for 5-7 minutes to meld the flavors. Take away the pan from the warmth and put aside.
Make the spiced rice: Rinse the rice beneath chilly water till it runs clear. This helps take away extra starch, so that you get separate, fluffy grains as a substitute of a gummy texture. In a big pot, soften the ghee over medium warmth. Stir within the rice, coating every grain with ghee, and toast for 3 minutes, stirring always so it doesn’t burn. Add the allspice, curry powder, seven spice, salt, Vegeta/bouillon, black pepper, turmeric, and cinnamon. Stir effectively to evenly distribute the spices. Add 4 cups water and produce to a rolling boil. Scale back the warmth to low, cowl, and let simmer — undisturbed — till the rice is absolutely cooked and tender, 15-20 minutes. Take away the pot from the warmth and let stand, lined, for 10 minutes to permit the rice to soak up any remaining moisture and turn into fluffy. “At all times let your rice relaxation for at the least ten minutes earlier than leaping in,” says Mariam. “It makes an enormous distinction within the texture.”
To serve: Fluff the rice gently with a fork and switch to a serving platter. Layer the spiced beef combination over the rice. Garnish with parsley and pine nuts.

Thanks a lot for sharing this dish with us, Mariam, and congratulations in your new book.
P.S. More quick dinners we love, together with one broccoli soup with six variations, and my best friends mom’s mushroom paprikash.
(Pictures by Jim Henkens. Excerpted from I Sleep in My Kitchen, on sale now from Clarkson Potter/Publishers, a division of Penguin Random Home, LLC. by Mariam Daud. Copyright © 2026 by Mariam Daud.)
