It’s bitter cold and raining in Melbourne but we have been warmed by a meal
of our favourite ‘vaangyachey kaap’. I sit down to write the recipe. This is a
dish from Maharashtra . Vangi means eggplant
and kaap is slice. What do I call it in
English? Egg plant chops? No, sounds too porky. Eggplant chips? No, these aren’t deep fried.
Eggplant fritters? No, they aren’t really battered like fritters.
Eggplant slice? Yes!!
‘Slice’ is such a mouth watering word. Perhaps not when it
is a mundane slice of bread one handles in the morning rush. But it certainly
is mouth watering when you remember slicing a loaf of the still warm, moist and
slightly sour, soft bread from John’s bakery and generously spreading it with
Amul butter or white butter. Dunking this slice into a glass of thick hot sweet
boiled chai gives you a brekkie fit for a king. (Aside- have you ever wondered why tea tastes
different when sipped out of a glass, a stainless steel tumbler, a porcelain
mug, a bone china cup or a kullad?). This brings to mind another childhood
memory. In one of his books, James Herriot the famous vet/writer has recounted
his hard struggle one bitter cold night to help a birthing cow. The grumpy
farmer is of no help, but afterwards the farmer’s wife makes up for all the
trouble by plying Herriot with thick slices of homemade bread slathered in home
churned butter and topped with golden home harvested honey. I remember reading
the book, as was my wont, into the wee hours of the morning when hunger pangs
struck and I had no better choice than to vicariously share Herriot’s gut
warming pleasure.
Another childhood memory clamouring for a slice this word
space is that of waiting impatiently one summer for the two volumes of fairy tales
Mother had ordered from Readers’ Digest and finally when they arrived in the
mail, reading each one in one sitting ! Somewhere in there was this story of an
ogre devouring slices of watermelon. “Slurp! Slurp”, they would go. This was my
first realisation, years before commencing literary studies and learning about
onomatopoeia, that the sound of some words echoed their sense!
Eggplant Slice or Vaangyachey Kaap
1 cup besan (gram flour) – ¾ cup
¼ cup rice flour
2 tablespoons bread crumbs
(optional- you could also use semolina)
1 tsp red chilli powder (or more)
¼ tsp turmeric powder
1 tsp coriander powder
1 tsp cumin powder
1 tsp garam masala powder
A pinch of ajwain powder (or dried
oregano)
A pinch of hing
Salt to taste
Oil for shallow frying.
Method
Keep
the slices of eggplant immersed in water. In a shallow bowl or a deep plate mix
the flours, bread crumbs, spices and salt.
This mixture has to be kept dry. Drain
the eggplant slices on kitchen paper and dredge each slice in the dry spiced
flour mixture. Press the slice firmly into the mixture on each side to ensure
the flour coats both the sides of the slice. Heat a pan and pour a little oil. Place
a dredged slice on the pan.
Repeat this with each slice until the surface of
the pan is filled. Shallow fry the slices on one side. You may want to press
the slices with a flat spatula to let out the moisture so that the slices take
up less oil to cook. Flip the slices over and pour a little more oil. Make sure
each slice gets its fair share of oil to turn a uniform golden brown. Remove on
kitchen paper and repeat with the remaining slices.
eggplant is one of my favorites !!!I would love to try this recipe sometime :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you! :) Do let me know how it turned out!
ReplyDeleteI came searching for this recipe and find I did! I had read this part on the Indian Food Freak page on facebook. Couldn't try it then. But today is a cold german summer evening and I suddenly got this craving to have podi(that is what they call this in coastal kannada region). Thanks a ton for the recipe. Can't wait to get started!
ReplyDeleteVinay, I hope this recipe gave you a much deserved slice of warmth! Do tell me how the podi turned out! :)
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