Minestrone Soup with sprouts
If winter comes, er.. wait a minute! If winter comes we enjoy winter! Why think about spring now! Let’s savour the beauty of winter…
Tomorrow is the beginning of winter in Oz. This morning when I went out, there was a layer of frost on the grass, our breaths puffed out little clouds, people rushed to work bundled in layers and layers and the ubiquitous black coats and jackets and the maple trees looked uncomfortable as if they couldn’t wait to shrug off the last of the lingering leaves.
I remembered landing in Melbourne one cold winter morning with my young family. Coming straight from the Middle East and then with a month of an Indian summer behind us, we were sadly under prepared for the cold! Although numbed with excitement and adventure and tired after a long holiday and travel, the one thing that we felt was “Oh! It’s so cooooldddd!”
How time has gone by! We are already about to enter the sixth month of the year and our twelfth winter in Melbourne!
It’s time to make all the soups, one dish casseroles, pastas, risottos, Indian one dish meals like dal dhokli, bisi bele bhat, khichdis, bajra khichada and undhiyu! Can’t wait! And yes, this winter I must make the santra bhat with the yummy sunny mandarins and also the santra kheer that my friend Jaya has told me about!
And winter eating is fairly guilt free, as I tell myself that being vegetarian, we need to eat a bit more fat (read butter/ghee) to fuel up our bodies to keep warm!
I would like to welcome another Melbourne winter with this very easy, hearty one dish meal!
Ingredients
1 or 2 carrots cut into small pieces
1 onion – diced
½ cup pumpkin cubes
1 cup shredded cabbage
½ cup red pepper- cut into small pieces
1 cup chopped celery sticks
1 cups mixed or any sprouts
1 cup any short pasta
1½ cup or 1 can skinned and chopped tomato
4 cups homemade vegetable stock
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tsp. oregano
1 tsp. basil
1 tsp. parsley
1 tsp crushed garlic
Sugar to taste (optional)
Freshly ground black pepper
Salt to taste
Chopped coriander or flat leaf parsley to garnish
For the vegetable stock
I hate the Maggi stock cube flavours of shop bought stock so prefer to make this at home. Boil This is one of the simplest things one can make
All or any of the following in amounts available and as desired:
Hard and slightly woody stems of cauliflower, broccoli, thick outer layers of cabbage, a handful of green beans, one medium carrot sliced, one medium potato diced, empty pea shells or a handful of snow peas, a few small corn cobs- throw them in whole and remove at the end of the boiling to serve on the cob with a knob of butter!
Wash all the vegetables thoroughly and trim them to medium size pieces. Boil in plenty of slightly salted water till reduced to half and you get a nice brown- green and fragrant broth.
For the soup
In a big sauce pan, heat the olive oil and sauté onions adding garlic a little later. Add the sprouts, veges and the stock. When it starts boiling, add the pasta and bring to a boil again. Then add the tomatoes. Keep stirring from time to time and reduce the heat to a simmer. Cook for 15 minutes or until tender. Add the herbs, salt, pepper and adjust the taste.
Serve hot, garnished with coriander or parsley and with garlic toasted bread.
Thursday, 31 May 2012
Monday, 28 May 2012
Roots and Shoots- Nature's special bargain!
Radish roots and shoots stir fry
Nothing is more annoying than seeing shoppers tearing out
leaves of vegetables like radish, kholrabi, beetroot and turnip. Some do it to
weigh in more of the vegetable to get VFM while others don’t want to carry home
rubbish! Little do they realise they are spurning a genuine BOGOF offer, nay
gift, from Mother Nature!
Our modern lives are to be blamed for this bald, arid existence
sans leaves. In our increasingly busy lives many of us prefer to shop in
supermarkets for green grocery packaged in attractive but leafless ways. How
often do we go to the vegetable mandi or farmer’s markets to shop locally for
locally grown produce? How often do we think of the buying local produce for
the variety of umbrella reasons -to eat fresh and healthy organically grown food;
to reduce the carbon foot print by not patronising out of season, cold stored
produce that needs transport or storage; to promote local economies and trade
and agriculture? And wouldn’t it be nice to chat with local grocers and vendors,
get tips from them and connect with the produce of the soil.
Leaves of most root vegetables are a store house of
nutrients and fibre. They are at times more nutritious than the roots
themselves and are a significant source of calcium, iron, magnesium, folate,
vitamin A, C and K. And they taste great too!
Using a mooli in a pulao may seem ridiculous and unbelievable,
but a friend of mine taught me to grind mooli leaves into a coarse paste and
add to vegetable pulao- the taste is
unbelievingly rich!
My mother used to pick bunches of moolis and kohlrabis with
the maximum amount of foliage and use the leaves either in dals or stir fries
along with sprouts, dals or with the roots themselves. I follow her suit and in
my home, any vegetable with leaves is venerated as if it is a special bonus.
Here is a radish or mooli roots and shoot stir fry subji, a dish from my mother’s repertoire!
Ingredients
1 large radish (we get huge ones in Melbourne ) or 4-5 small with the leaves (you
should get about 2 ½ cups of slices and up to 1 cup of good leaves)
Method
Here is a radish or mooli roots and shoot stir fry subji, a dish from my mother’s repertoire!
1 tablespoon oil
½ teaspoon mustard seeds
¼ teaspoon turmeric
1 teaspoon chili powder (or to taste)
1 dry red chili (optional)
2 tablespoon fresh grated coconut
½ teaspoon cumin powder
Salt to taste
Pinch of sugar (optional)
A few tablespoons water if required
Cut the radish leaves out at
the base. Pick and select the best leaves discarding hard stems. Wash the
leaves and tender stems thoroughly in water. Chop finely and keep aside. Lightly
peel the radish, wash and cut each radish lengthwise into four and then slice
them into slices.
Heat a pan with the oil. Add
mustard seeds and when they start spluttering, add the hing, turmeric, chili
powder and the dry red chilly. Add the sliced radish and the chopped leaves.
Sauté for a minute and add a few tablespoons of water if required. Sometimes if
the radish has a lot of water content, it will let out its own juices which can
help cook the leaves and the radish. Cook covered until almost done. Add coconut,
cumin powder and salt to taste and the pinch of sugar. Remember, radish leaves
are salty. Finish it by cooking some more, this time uncovered to dry any
liquid the radish may have let out.
Serve hot with phulkas or dal
and rice.
Friday, 25 May 2012
The Pyramids of Koshari
Koshari on the streets of Melbourne!
Walking in search of a quick bite to eat in downtown Melbourne one lunch time, we found ourselves being led by the nose into a
newly opened Egyptian eatery. We were greeted by the owner, an effusive gentleman
speaking with a very strong yet attractive Arabic rhotic accent. The deep
baritone rolling the Rs added to the ambience of the little place that replicated
a roadside Cairo
restaurant, as did the plastic flowers, vinyl table covers and hubbly bubbly sheesha
hookas.
1 cup macaroni (or any short pasta) cooked al dente as per package instructions
3 large onions, sliced into thin rings and fried in oil until crisp and brown
For the sauce
Nodding enthusiastically at my rather timid but hopeful
query,” What’s that aroma? Is it something vegetarian?” he proceeded to
describe the dish that was giving out the tantalising aroma.
“ This is Kosharrri…the national dish of Egypt… it is rrrice
and macarrrroni and chickpeas and lentils and tomato sauce with cumin and
garlic and maybe a hot hot sauce with more garrrlic and chilli…you like chilli,
eh- you Indian? Raj Kapoor? Amitabacchan?
Hahhaa! I know, see?… and frried onions... I make frrresh frrresh for you!” The
singsong intonation continued, but I suddenly started worrying about what kind
of a dish he was talking about. Even in my most zealous ‘let’s clean the fridge
and finish all leftovers, there are starving people in India and here we are wasting so
much food’ I had not dared to mix such disparate things together and present
them with so much aplomb!
But hunger and curiosity both fuelled by the appetising smells, got
the better of us and after my routine tick and flick check on ‘no meat or
chicken stock, no fish sauce, use fresh pan, no contamination for religious
reasons (this one works for sure)’, we succumbed to his very hospitable offer
to sit down and wait for him to fix us a portion each of the mysterious dish
that smelt so good.
Bursting with curiosity and as is our wont with anything
new, we googled ‘Koshari’ on our phones to discover that it was a national dish
of Egypt, very traditional and popular, that is was a fast food, a street food,
very cheap and filling and even read a theory that the Koshari could possibly
be a cousin of the Indian khichdi introduced to Egypt by British troops in the
early 20th century - that makes sense, khichdi= hotchpotch= koshari!
………but then where does it leave the claim that the Koshari is a traditional
Egyptian dish?
When the plates arrived, heaped like little pyramids with
stuff covered with tomato sauce and crispy onions, the mystery (and
apprehension) deepened… but once we began our dig and excavated the mound, we
realised it tasted every bit as delicious as it smelt! The variety of textures,
the chewy pasta, the fluffy rice, the perfectly salted and floury chickpeas and
the thick skinned soft centred lentils set teeth and tongue to task. The tangy
and garlicky tomato sauce drugged with cumin facilitated the movement of the
hotchpotch around the mouth and the crunchy fried onion sent star bursts of
taste in between. The hot sauce, of which we had dared take only a little, was
most remarkable in its taste and heat of capsaicin.
We just loved this dish koshari! And like all the dishes we
love, I had to make this at home. So here it is…
Koshari is served as a mixture of the cooked ingredients smothered in the tomato sauce and topped with crispy fried onions. I have assembled the ingredients in this fashion to show them (off!) :)
Ingredients
1 cup brown lentils (sabut or whole masoor)
(soaked for 5-6 hours, cooked with salt until soft, excess liquid drained)
1 cup chickpeas soaked and cooked as above or 2 cans chicpeas (drain the brine)
1 cup long grain rice (cooked with a little
salt)1 cup macaroni (or any short pasta) cooked al dente as per package instructions
3 large onions, sliced into thin rings and fried in oil until crisp and brown
For the sauce
2-3 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped
2 teaspoons white vinegar
5-6 large cloves garlic (or more), crushed
1 heaped teaspoon roasted and ground cumin
1 teaspoon roasted and ground coriander
(optional)
2 cups tomato paste (I used crushed tomatoes
with seeds and blitzed them, so the colour wasn’t that great!)
Water to cook/dilute
5-6 dry red chilies (or more), seeds
removed, roasted and ground into a powder
1 teaspoon black pepper
1-2 teaspoons sugar to taste (optional)
Salt to taste
Salt to taste
Chopped coriander or flat leaf parsley to
garnish
Method
Sauté the chopped onions in the olive oil
and add the vinegar to keep the onions crunchy. Add the garlic and sauté more. Add
tomato paste or pureed tomatoes and some water to adjust to a flowing consistency
and allowing for some reduction. Add the cumin powder, coriander powder
(optional), prepared chili powder, pepper, salt and sugar (optional). Adjust
the taste to your liking. The sauce should be really spicy and served hot.
Combine the cooked rice, lentils, chickpeas and macaroni in a large pot or in individual portions. Cover with the hot sauce and sprinkle generously with the crunchy fried onions and chopped coriander.
Serve as a snack, a main meal or even as breakfast as the Egyptians do!
Combine the cooked rice, lentils, chickpeas and macaroni in a large pot or in individual portions. Cover with the hot sauce and sprinkle generously with the crunchy fried onions and chopped coriander.
Serve as a snack, a main meal or even as breakfast as the Egyptians do!
.
Monday, 21 May 2012
Not a patch on pumpkin!
Pumpkin Bakar Bhaaji (Curried Pumpkin)
Pumpkins evoke so many good memories- of the magic coach that took Cinderella to the ball; of yummy sweet pumpkin pooris with poppy seeds my mother made to take on picnics and long family trips or the yummy pumpkin kheer she made; of listening wide eyed to my mother telling us about how she learnt to swim in a large well with a dried and hollow from inside whole pumpkin tied to her back like a float; of the memories of jealously guarding the pumpkin seeds drying in the sun on lazy summer afternoons and shooing away peckish birds; of my awe as a child when I learnt all about the beautiful music they produced when turned into taanpuras and sitars; of the heart-warming stories about the humble pumpkin feeding some starving farmer’s family or helped a poor grandma escape from a tiger on her way back from her daughter’s after feasting on ghee and roti; of the exciting introduction through books and comics to the very American Halloween pumpkin and the pumpkin pies at Thanksgiving Dinners… and how can I forget our cat Ginger who loved to eat cooked pumpkin skins…
The pumpkin affective range is exponential…a pumpkin at once evokes a sense of the earthy and full richness and ripeness of autumnal bounty and the sense of mystery and magic. A pumpkin is comforting and homely as a soup and a pie, but can send a chill up your spine as a spooky jack o lantern grinning evilly at you!
So many memories and thoughts associated with this glorious gourd!
And why not! This is one of the most versatile plants ever known to us. Almost all parts of the creepers – flowers, fruit, skin, seeds and even leaves are edible and also serve well as fodder. Pumpkins lend themselves to sweet and savoury dishes and although they have a distinct flavour and textures, merge very well with any spice and cuisines, be it Asian, Indian, Moroccan, Italian…, And they can be cooked in many ways- boiled, steamed, fried, roasted, grilled, baked!
Its long shelf life means a good whole pumpkin can be stored for a long time and still be alive and thriving! As for nutritional values, pumpkins are low fat, low sodium, high in anti-oxidants, a good source of Vitamin A, C and E as well as carotenes and rich in minerals like copper, calcium, potassium.
Now what more can one ask of a plant that is happy to grow even if a seed is scattered carelessly in the yard! As the saying goes, if you want to prove you are a good gardener, you need to plant only one pumpkin seed!
So it was with a great relief that I noted the wide variety of pumpkins available inAustralia unlike a lot of other much-loved vegetables from the realms of Indian cuisine. And pumpkin is a regular feature in our home and goes into our pastas, pizzas, sambar, tagines, brown rice, vegetable roasts, soups, raita, kheer, halwa, pooris, pies, dumplings and yes, the lovely curries or bhaajis!
Ingredients
Pumpkins evoke so many good memories- of the magic coach that took Cinderella to the ball; of yummy sweet pumpkin pooris with poppy seeds my mother made to take on picnics and long family trips or the yummy pumpkin kheer she made; of listening wide eyed to my mother telling us about how she learnt to swim in a large well with a dried and hollow from inside whole pumpkin tied to her back like a float; of the memories of jealously guarding the pumpkin seeds drying in the sun on lazy summer afternoons and shooing away peckish birds; of my awe as a child when I learnt all about the beautiful music they produced when turned into taanpuras and sitars; of the heart-warming stories about the humble pumpkin feeding some starving farmer’s family or helped a poor grandma escape from a tiger on her way back from her daughter’s after feasting on ghee and roti; of the exciting introduction through books and comics to the very American Halloween pumpkin and the pumpkin pies at Thanksgiving Dinners… and how can I forget our cat Ginger who loved to eat cooked pumpkin skins…
Now what more can one ask of a plant that is happy to grow even if a seed is scattered carelessly in the yard! As the saying goes, if you want to prove you are a good gardener, you need to plant only one pumpkin seed!
So it was with a great relief that I noted the wide variety of pumpkins available in
This bhaaji is a typically Marathi version of a sweet and sour pumpkin curry, popularly called the Bakar Bhaji in the Vidarbha region of Maharashtra …
Ingredients
½ kg pumpkin (any variety- but I like Jarrahdale and Butternut better) cleaned, washed, cut into 1 ½ inch long and ½ inch wide pieces. You can keep the skins on as it helps to retain the shape of the pieces)
2 tablespoons oil
1 teaspoon methi seeds
½ teaspoon mustard seeds
½ teaspoon cumin seeds
1 teaspoon white poppy seeds (khus khus)
1 teaspoon chironji (if you get good ones- I haven’t used them in the bhaaji featured in the photo here)
¼ teaspoon hing
½ teaspoon turmeric
7-8 curry leaves
3-4 dry red chillies (or more)
1 teaspoon goda masala (if you can get it- if not, use 1 ½ tsp of garam masala)
½ teaspoon garam masala
1 teaspoon coriander powder
1 tablespoon gur or brown sugar (depends on the sweetness of the pumpkin)
1 teaspoon thick tamarind concentrate
2 tablespoons grated coconut or desiccated coconut
Salt to taste
Chopped coriander to garnish
Heat oil in a heavy bottomed pan or kadhai. Add the methi seeds first and as they begin to turn golden throw in the mustard and cumin seeds. Once these begin to splutter, add poppy seeds, (chironji, if you can get them- the chironjis we get here become rancid very quickly!) curry leaves, dry red chillies, hing and turmeric. Quickly add the pumpkin pieces and sauté them. Add half a cup of water to the pumpkin and lower the heat. Alternately, place a plate half filled with water as a cover on top of the pan. Pumpkin pieces cook very fast, so keep a keen watch on the cooking.
When almost cooked, add the masala, coriander powder, gur, tamarind, coconut and salt to taste.
Remove from heat when not fully cooked. The heat of the cooked pumpkin will continue to cook it till fully done. Remember, you have to handle the pieces carefully, so as not to mash them into one gooey mess! Garnish with coriander and serve hot with roti or dal and rice or kadhi and rice or just by itself!
Saturday, 19 May 2012
They go down faster than you can say, "Fold, pinch, crimp, repeat"!
Veg Momos with Tomato Chutney
The whole family loved these when we had them for the first
time in a most unlikely place – in a shopping mall in Pune! We first mistook
them for the classic Marathi sweet dumplings called Modak, which is a specialty
of the Marathi folk from Pune! Even the name ‘Momo’ we thought was some cutie
pie version of Modak! Since then, we have had momos in many places, even in Nepal . We also discovered that momos, a favourite food in Nepal, Bhutan and Tibet, were very close first cousins of the Chinese steamed buns...
I have
been so intrigued by the way in which the momos are crimped, that after my
first, rather “clumsy in presentation but great in taste effort”, I decided to
nail it today!
So, like all of us do these days when we need to learn,
know, find out, research anything ranging from weather to wealth creation
advice, addresses to antecedents of anyone we want to ‘Google’, rates of things to recipes, I succumbed to the
easy way and looked it up on the Internet. Lo! Behold! Youtube had it all
nicely lined up with so many videos of how to crimp different types of momos! Well, a few misshapen momos later which were
willingly walloped by eager family members as sacrificial offerings, I was able
to make these beauties!
Lovely taste! And another two things crossed out of my list of things to make and taste…
½ cup plain flour
1 tbsp oil
Water to knead
Salt to taste
Knead the ingredients into a smooth and stiff dough and keep
covered for half an hour.
1 tbsp
oil
1 small
onion
½ tsp
garlic paste
½ tsp ginger
paste
1 small
carrot, finely chopped
7-8
green beans, finely chopped
2-3
button mushrooms, finely chopped
1½ cup finely
chopped cabbage
1 green
(spring) onion finely sliced
A large
pinch Chinese five spice powder (includes timur!)
A pinch
of black pepper
A large
pinch chili powder
1 tbsp
light soy sauce
1 tsp
white vinegar
Salt to
taste
In a
pan, heat oil and add onions and sauté. After half a minute, add the garlic and
ginger pastes and cook a little. Then add all the finely chopped vegetables.
Cook for a few minutes on high heat, working the mixture all the time to keep
it dry. Add all the spices, sauces, vinegar and salt. Adjust the taste. Cool the filling.
Divide
the dough into equal portions and roll into small thin discs. Take care to keep
the edges thinner than the centre. Place a spoonful of the filling in the
centre of each disc and bring the sides together in the centre holding them to
make a half circle. Pinch a small piece of the dough on the side closest to you
and crimp it into the other side. Continue this action of pinching which will
give you the pleat and the crimping which will join the two sides until you
reach the end. Make sure that both sides are firmly crimped together. Place the
ready momos in an oiled bamboo steamer or flat colander inside a large pot of
boiling water, just able the boiling water. Steam for 12-15 minutes until the
momos are cooked to your liking. Remove on a platter and serve with the tomato
chutney or any oriental dipping sauce.
For the Chutney
1 tbsp oil
½ onion finely chopped
1 tsp garlic and ginger paste
1 tsp five spice powder (star anise, cloves, cinnamon, timur
or Szechwan
pepper, fennel)
½ tsp cumin powder
1 tsp red chili powder
2 tbsp toasted and powdered sesame seeds
1 tbsp light soy sauce
1 cup canned diced tomatoes
1 tsp gur (jaggery) or brown sugar
Salt to taste
In a sauce pan, heat oil and add the onions followed by the
garlic and ginger pastes. In a minute, add all the spices and then immediately
add the powdered sesame seeds. Add the sauce and stir a little. Now add the
tomatoes and gur or brown sugar and let the mixture cook for 10-12 minutes,
until reduced. The mixture will look glossy and let out the oil. Add salt to
taste and cool.
Monday, 14 May 2012
No weighty measures, anything goes adai!
An Adai to die for!
I don’t bake much and then again bake mostly savoury stuff
that doesn’t need ingredients weighed precisely down to the last gram, at a
specific temperature and of a specific brand… too much of a hassle. An
intuitive cook, I have had my share of failures, but have also learnt to morph
dishes – so a batch of failed croquettes can be transformed into a savoury
muffins with the addition of an egg or two, only to be hungrily devoured by
all! A cabbage soup made enthusiastically for the GM diet and deserted on day
one as everyone thinks it’s like ditch water, actually tastes good as a
minestrone soup… and to finish the pot full of soup I mentally prepare to make
it into savoury pancakes, pasta sauce, risottos… a little cheese will do the
trick!
No excruciating over- how much of what is soaked for how
long and ground in which way and fermented for how long at what temperature and
where and in which season and served with what and for which meal…..Whhhoooaaa!
A really wholesome dish that can be a whacky snack or whole
meal in itself! Okay okay…I will come to how I made them todai!
2 cups rice soaked for 3-4 hours (overnight is better, but
not a must)
A fistful each of chana dal, moong dal, masoor dal, tuvar
dal, urad dal (you can use any legumes or pulses) soaked for 3-4 hours
1-2 tbsp grated coconut
1 small onion
2-3 large garlic cloves
½ inch piece of ginger
1-2 (or more) dry red chillies
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp coriander seeds (slightly roasted)
A pinch of hing
A pinch of ground black pepper
4-5 curry leaves
Salt to taste
Water for grinding
Oil for cooking Adais
Grind all the ingredients together with water to make a dosa
like batter and add salt to taste. Pour and cook the adais like dosas on a non-stick griddle with a little oil. Serve with anything-
even ketchup!
I served it with coconut, roasted chana, raw onion (for the
first time!) chutney and a coriander, mint and coconut chutney.
Thursday, 10 May 2012
Coriander, Conscience and Couscous ...
Couscous Coriander Cuts
It took inspiration from the very traditional Kothimbir Vadi
which means Coriander Cakes, but all this confusion has been caused and
compounded by the couscous. Why couscous? Well, I had this bunch of coriander
that was losing its will to live. And I was trying to take a philosophical
approach to its impending demise. Moreover, lessons learnt as an entrepreneur
in a labour starved economy urged me to cut my losses and let it go, not worth
spending half an hour of my time, cost of ingredients and the price to pay for
calories, outgoings like gas, water, prime real estate occupancy rate in
downtown Melbourne… too impelling a non-business case!
But then I remembered the lessons learnt from my mother and
grandmother, who developed and spread the awareness of ‘waste not, want not’ in
their local communities and in the family in Pre and Post-World War II
tough times. I remembered my mother telling me about how her mother used to grow
coriander and store it in a clay pot lined with wet gunny sacking. She used to
dry the excess coriander harvest for use in the summer months when it was
scarce, an exercise that involved careful picking, drying in the sun, remembering
to put it away for the night and take it out to spread for another day.
Protecting it from fungus, rot, pests, storage logistics, all this effort only to make the best use of
resources for her family! She educated the local women about home economics,
nutrition and taught them to be self-reliant. Back to the coriander, my mother also diligently sorted
and picked coriander and stored it in separated bundles, the leaves with the
tender stems on the one side and the flavoursome tougher stems on another to be
used in chutneys or curry pastes.
These ladies had been so ahead of their times and were so
ingeinus and resourceful! And how 'cool' of them to promote such awareness in
the days of yore…that even the tough stems are the most nutritious and tastiest
part of this wonderful herb is a fact now endorsed by umpteen cook books,
blogs, internet recipes, videos and TV cookery shows! The humble coriander has
been romanticised!
Conscience poked self admonishment! We have such a mixed
attitude towards things that selflessly add flavour to our lives! What was
scarce once is now available in plenty, but we still moan about the
expense. It pains to pay $2 or more for small bunch, when you could have
higgle- haggled with the vegetable vendor to throw it in as a freebie after
buying all the vegetables for the day, back in the days of my childhood. But we
are too finicky and don’t like dried coriander and coriander pastes, only fresh
will do. And I am ready, if somewhat
grudgingly, to pay a bit more for a bunch of coriander grown in Queensland (with soil
still on the roots) than to buy the local produce. And to think of it, this
unassuming, incidental herb not only gets the grind for its flavour, but also sits atop
a plated dish as its crowning glory.
Ingredients
½ cup couscous
1 cup besan (gram flour)
1 (or more) teaspoons green chilly paste or green chilli
powder
½ teaspoon cumin powder
½ teaspoon coriander powder
¼ teaspoon hing
¼ teaspoon turmeric
½ teaspoon Eno Fruit Salt (baking soda will do)
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Salt to taste
For the topping
1 teaspoon khuskhus (white poppy seeds)
1 teaspoon white sesame seeds
In a heatproof bowl, pour ¾ cup boiling water over the
couscous, cover and set aside for 10 minutes. Fluff it with a fork to separate
the couscous and add the rest of the ingredients except the oil. Mix thoroughly
and add a bit of water to make a pliable dough.
Wednesday, 9 May 2012
Bean there - done poriyal...
The chances of coming across a good South Indian thali in a good South Indian (Udipi grade chilly) restaurant are higher than finding a good Indo-Chinese meal. There is something so very satisfying about an ‘unlimited thali’ that one sets one’s heart on it- now, as if one is going to eat unlimited amounts of food, but one still falls prey to this reverse psychology trick played on us suspecting but perversely willing patrons.
The deciding factor for the thali vs idly/dosa/wada gang
contest is the poriyal and the poori or
‘chapati’ (never have chapatis with a thali- not VFM) One asks the waiter, who is either very obsequious
or very indifferent “what’s the
poriyal?” If it’s beans poriyal or
beetroot poriyal – and if he says ‘poori garam hai’ go ahead and order those
humongous thalis!
When the thalis arrive and everyone is settled down with
sufficient number of pooris and after a head count of all the katoris in your own thali and peering into each others
thalis (and also into those on the neighbouring tables- just in case one
suspect some vendetta on the part of the waiters) to make sure no one is
missing any goodies, the first thing one digs one’s folded ‘poori- shovel’ into
is the poriyal followed by the kootu… the rasam can wait to cool a bit or it
will scald the roof of your mouth.
Crunch on some poppadums before turning your attention to
that snobbishly aloof little dish of some coloured rice, which surprisingly
turns out to be the Caspian caviar (ayyayo!) of the thali. This dish is
suitable for trading across the table, provided you barter something equitable
and interesting like the sweet dish. Vegetables floating in the sambar get
picked up next, especially if there is a small log of drumstick floating around.
The little katori of tomato, onion, yoghurt raita is so unnecessary that one
hardly looks at it. The pickle, unless it is the still- smarting- with- the -rai
-and –methi- dressing (down) kind of fresh pickle, is not worth its salt.
The North Indian curry thrown in for a good measure and in a
move to placate all palates tends to surprise you. It either knocks you over by
good quality and authenticity or make you gag on the curry leaves in a pompous
sounding royal or shahi something paneer or rajma or chana masala.
One has to keep an eye on the poori man as he doesn’t
particularly want to let you make your ‘man ki murad poori’. Satisfied that
everyone is not cheated out of the unlimited pooris, you can turn to the kootu
and relish the various textures of the dal, sprout, vegetable, coconut and the
mild spices. This is the white collar dish of the thali.
The green chillies in the food hit you on the tip of your
tongue, the red chillies in the middle and the pepper corns at the back of your
throat, so be careful, keep the individually set katori of yoghurt with a ring
of froth around it handy (why is it so sweet?)
Time to hail the waiter for rice and boy! is he very
generous with rice, spading it onto your thali with the energy of a steam locomotive
driver. What a cheapo! But rice is cheap. Don’t let this rice waiter go away
before he finds and escorts the ghee man to your table so you can extract your
pound of flesh- the drizzle of ghee onto the rice. The trick to extract the
maximum out of the ghee-man is to fix him with a daring stare so he gets
mesmerised and doesn’t say ‘say when’. After all, you need all the ghee to
salve your burnt mouth and prepare for more eventualities, if any. Finish up
your rasam-rice and sambar-rice, don’t bother about thair sadam as the thair is
too sweet.
Talking of sweet- you will be lucky if the ‘sweet dish’
isn’t too sweet and luckier still if there are two varieties. Kesari- doesn’t
have to be so-pro BJP, you know, or
payasam – don’t quite understand the need to have a dot -dot (sooji) line- line
(vermicelli) and ball- ball (sago) cocktail of floatsam. Maybe I should have
spoken about the fruit salad first- why the vanilla plus cardamom plus fruit
flavour triveni sangam? Well, thank your
stars this isn’t payasam with fruit and finish your plate and attack the sunf
and misri (is it too much to ask for paan?)
Oh, my ramblings… forgot about the poriyal. So… a poriyal is
a vegetable dish, lightly cooked and tempered with mustard seeds, urad dal,
hing, red or green chillies and seasoned with lots and lots of coconut. My most
favourite poriyal is the beans poriyal, made with string beans or green beans –
in that order of preference.
Ingredients
¼ kilo string beans or green beans, stringed washed and chopped finely and cooked al dente covered in a microwave with a tablespoon of water for not more than 5 minutes
2-3 tbsp fresh coconut, grated fine
1 tbs split white urad dal
½ teaspoon mustard seeds
A large pinch of hing
¼ turmeric
6-7 curry leaves
2-3 dry red chillies (or more)
1 tbsp oil (coconut oil, if you like)
Salt to taste
Heat the oil in a kadhai and add the urad dal. Even before the dal turns golden, add the mustard seeds, so that by the time the seeds crackle, the dal is perfectly golden brown in colour. Add the chillies and fry them for a few seconds. Then add the curry leaves, hing and turmeric. Add the cooked beans and mix well and stir fry it till the water is absorbed. Add salt and coconut, check the taste and turn off the heat.
Serve with hot sambar and rice or with poori or chapati.
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
Of rice and (chow) mein
Good Ole Indo-Chinese- Veg Fried Rice
(Beware of the parentheses (speed) humps)
In our post marriage years in the 80s and the 90s, the Middle East continued to support our sweet delusion with the Indian run restaurants like China Garden, Aladin's, Sinbad Restaurant, Shangri La and Grill House serving even better Chinese than their counter parts in India! But alas! Subsequent visits to other oriental destinations and down under broke our illusion (and hearts) that what we ate fondly as Chinese was qualified as Indo-Chinese, and that real Chinese-Chinese food was quite different…
Episode after disappointing episode of queasy, uneasy (oh- did I mention that I am vegetarian?) picking at Chinese-Chinese food and the inability of most Indian restaurants down under to dish up good Indo-Chinese that even remotely meets our nostalgic longing, leave me with the realisation that the best place downunder to get Indo-Chinese food is HOME!
And snob value notwithstanding, I can’t eat with chop sticks and like to use a tiny pinch of MSG at times!
2-3 cups finely chopped veges (carrot, beans, peas, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, mushrooms, corn, red/yellow/green bell peppers, snow peas)
1 cup chopped spring onions for garnish
1 tsp garlic paste
1 tsp ginger paste
1 tsp red chilly paste (or more)
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp green chilly sauce
1 tsp tomato sauce (optional)
1 tbsp white vinegar
1 tsp cumin powder (optional)
A pinch of Ajinomoto (MSG-optional)
½ tsp black/white pepper powder (or more)
3-4 tbsp oil (you can add some sesame oil, too)
Salt to taste
Method
Heat a wok and pour the oil in it. When the oil is really hot, add the onions, garlic and ginger and sauté on very high flame for a minute. Add the ajinomoto (MSG) and vinegar to retain the crispness of the vegetables and add all the vegetables as per their cooking time. Add the sauces and chili paste and cumin and pepper powder while constantly working the vegetables. Add salt and rice and mix well. Adjust the taste. Work all the time on very high flame so that the vegetables retain their crispness and the rice gets a smoky flavour. Add a tablespoon of sesame oil (optional) for an additional note of flavour.
(Beware of the parentheses (speed) humps)
Getting introduced to ‘Chinese’ was an important landmark in
my life! As kids, we were very scared and wary of Chinese food. A famous Chinese restaurant had a mysterious looking sump at the rear and we would peep into it on our way to and from the annual school drill display practices in a nearby stadium. The mystery grew each year as the sump became dirtier and murkier and our fears became more terrifying. We scandalously
perpetuated the gory myths (?) that they
served cockroaches, snakes, frogs and other unmentionables, as if the sump sheltered the Loch Ness monster under its green living scum…
So happy were we with our
twice a year idly-dosa outings to Taj Mahal, the udipi restaurant and the occasional
indulgence in the then new fangled Punjabi chholey bhatureys, that it took us a
while to muster up enough courage to taste ‘Chinese’. My father was the first one to fall for Chinese and his attempts to describe the exotic cuisine to my mom (who incidentally is the greatest cook in the world according to me and many others) and her almost blindfolded attempts to
recreate the dish (noodles) just from his description produced results that did
little to inspire confidence in us. We did factor in that Baba was particularly bad at describing things and colours (he would typically describe a pair of brown trousers as 'my red pant').
But then, this much dreaded dragon entered our lives most innocuously one day at dinner in a Punjabi restaurant, when my father
ordered fried rice. We had assumed it was some sort of a pulao. One bite and we
were converted for life to (but realised years later that it needed a qualifier-Indo)
Chinese!!
Much later in life, reading about the phenomenon of Indo-Chinese in foodie mags, on line and on restaurant menus added to our knowledge of how the Chinese migrants in India , mostly in Kolkota tweaked their cuisine to satisfy the Indian palate and made it so popular!
But throughout those glorious teen years and the eventful year of courtship with a bigger foodie, Chinese continued to be my fav food. We wouldn't miss the soups to save appetite or cash, at least would have 'one by two' or 'two by three' - oh, those delicious bowls of sweetcorn, wonton, manchow, hot and sour, clear vegetable soups! and how we used to love to dabble a bit in this sauce and that, lift lids of curious little pots and sniff containers to see what mysteries they held (these beauties helped as montage fillers between courses).
And ooohhh, with the soup came the spring rolls... the ones made with real thin crepes stuffed, rolled and deep fried... the crispness on the outside tapering down layer by layer to mushy softness by the time we reached the innermost layer and then your teeth would hit the crunchy vegetables... this gradual softening of the pastry allowed you to bite into the spring roll with your incisors and not be left awkwardly to hurriedly push bits of the stuffing hanging from the precipices of your teeth back into your mouth as happens invariably with the extra crisp pastry of the spring rolls of today! and how we used to eye the end of the roll pieces- waiting to sneak one into our plates when others weren't looking.. why did it only have four end pieces? The chili-garlic and sweet and sour plum dipping sauce in those dainty little dishes would also be licked clean (literally - and of course, when the waiters weren't looking)!
Main courses were the 'at once crisp and gooey chopsueys', the hakka noodles (even if they seemed like rubber bands tossed with vegetables, they were tasty!) and chowmein, the vegetable manchuria and gobi manchuria(GOPI MANJURIA on the menu of a restuarant in Kerala!) BTW-is it manchuria or manchurian ? (who is to contest the printed word on those greasy menus!) and the sweet and sour vegetables we hungrily wolfed while attempting mental math calculating the bill and adding 10% of the amount for the tip....
In our post marriage years in the 80s and the 90s, the Middle East continued to support our sweet delusion with the Indian run restaurants like China Garden, Aladin's, Sinbad Restaurant, Shangri La and Grill House serving even better Chinese than their counter parts in India! But alas! Subsequent visits to other oriental destinations and down under broke our illusion (and hearts) that what we ate fondly as Chinese was qualified as Indo-Chinese, and that real Chinese-Chinese food was quite different…
Episode after disappointing episode of queasy, uneasy (oh- did I mention that I am vegetarian?) picking at Chinese-Chinese food and the inability of most Indian restaurants down under to dish up good Indo-Chinese that even remotely meets our nostalgic longing, leave me with the realisation that the best place downunder to get Indo-Chinese food is HOME!
And snob value notwithstanding, I can’t eat with chop sticks and like to use a tiny pinch of MSG at times!
Veg Fried Rice
Ingredients
4 cups cooled cooked rice- cooked with less water and grains
separated (sona masoori is a good medium grain rice to use, but I often use
basmati)
1 medium onion, chopped2-3 cups finely chopped veges (carrot, beans, peas, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, mushrooms, corn, red/yellow/green bell peppers, snow peas)
1 cup chopped spring onions for garnish
1 tsp garlic paste
1 tsp ginger paste
1 tsp red chilly paste (or more)
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp green chilly sauce
1 tsp tomato sauce (optional)
1 tbsp white vinegar
1 tsp cumin powder (optional)
A pinch of Ajinomoto (MSG-optional)
½ tsp black/white pepper powder (or more)
3-4 tbsp oil (you can add some sesame oil, too)
Salt to taste
Heat a wok and pour the oil in it. When the oil is really hot, add the onions, garlic and ginger and sauté on very high flame for a minute. Add the ajinomoto (MSG) and vinegar to retain the crispness of the vegetables and add all the vegetables as per their cooking time. Add the sauces and chili paste and cumin and pepper powder while constantly working the vegetables. Add salt and rice and mix well. Adjust the taste. Work all the time on very high flame so that the vegetables retain their crispness and the rice gets a smoky flavour. Add a tablespoon of sesame oil (optional) for an additional note of flavour.
Serve hot garnished with finely chopped spring onion.