Healthier Tilgul - Quinoa Sesame Granola
In response to a question on a greeting on
FB featuring bajra bhakri on the occasion of Bhogi, I rack my brains as to why
raw onion was served with the bhakri even on an “auspicious” day. Going into
the “Aai mode”, thinking what she would say and what she would do, I hazard a
couple of guesses - kanda-bhakar go well
together... or it's part of the cornucopia of the season... or the fact that
this is more of a social, harvest festival than religious. Then, the
reader-pleaser that I am, I propose the ultimate resort – will ask my mother!
Aai is my safest bet. I still like to hold
a very childlike belief that she knows everything. If she doesn't, she'll
honestly admit it, but that is not the end of the matter. She perseveres, makes
a mental note to ask someone or reads up about it. But will she then stop?
No, not until she has loud-thought and
exhausted all possibilities - and her listeners. I didn't dare to interrupt her
as a child, but over the years, have learnt to distract her into finishing.
Of late and worrisomely, and as my girls
will agree wholeheartedly, I may be displaying signs of this trait…
Back to Aai, a scientific questioning mind
contributed to her love of elucidating to us kids the significance of every
ritual and rite woven into the warp and weft of our lives. Not just from the Indian culture, but from the
world over. From her I learnt to deduce that it was no big deal if Cleopatra
bathed in donkey’s milk, the Mesopotamian Ziggurats couldn't have been built
with anything other than clay bricks in the alluvial land between the two
rivers, or that most Chinese or oriental music melodies were pentatonic perhaps
because they were easier to be played on the bamboo flute…
It goes without saying that my curiosity
why kites are flown in India during Sankranti, met with a rational account of
how the change in the temperatures caused by the slanting rays of the sun
caused strong and dry winds suitable for kite flying to blow, and how this
tradition originated in farmers flying kites to assess the weather in
preparation of their next lot of crops.
Oh yes, Makar
Sankranti did lend itself very well to her generous exposition.
There was an element
of thanksgiving for the bounteous harvest in preparing offerings with the
produce such as cluster beans, sugarcane, carrots, green garbanzo (hari boot)
and jujubes (ber). The plenty and prosperity also brought about peace, and in
their bonhomie people urged each other to be cordial at all times.
‘Til gul ghya,
god god bola!’
In a brief sojourn from their tough
routines, women folk socialised and celebrated their good fortune (literal
meaning of the word ‘saubhagya’), gifting ‘haldi and kumkum’, bangles, little combs
and trinkets, paan, supari, symbols of their privileged marital status. This was called 'vaan'. In
their largesse, they would give out little clay pots called ‘sugadi’ containing
fruit, vegetables and chunks of peeled sugarcane, sesame seeds and jaggery. Care
packages of khichadi grains, tea or sugar and cakes of soap were the more
utilitarian options.
With the womenfolk having such fun, can the
kids be left behind? Not only did they tag along to all haldi-kunku functions collecting
the ‘loot’, but they also had their own blasts. The ‘bor-nahan’, quite
literally a jujube-shower for kids under the age of five, celebrated the
mother’s indulgence in her child in this time of rest, relaxation and richness.
Whatever pangs a mum may have had about neglecting her kids during the hectic
sowing season, were assuaged by dolling them up in trinkets made of sugar and
til candy and showering them with a confetti of goodies like jujubes (ber),
puffed rice, tilgul. Other kids at the
bash playfully plundered the confetti amidst laughter and fun.
Long before
studying history at school, I gleaned from Aai that culture emerges with
leisure…
And of course,
Aai’s explanation as to why these foods, came uncanvassed. Since the festival
is celebrated in winter, foods that lend energy and essential fats to keep the
body warm and nourished are used. Freshly harvested til and gur happened to be
some such foods. A torrid bajra roti with snowdrops of white butter, a
heartwarming soft khichadi, a medley of spicy seasonal vegetables, and a very
earthy and hearty gul poli glistening with oodles of ghee made for a
well-deserved and well-earned meal to sate the hard-working farmer and his family.
This year’s
Sankranti was almost stolen by a Grinch. My firstborn, my partner in culinary
crimes has been away and the lastborn is trying to be vegan and has always been
least enthusiastic about sweets. The husband is on a diet, while my doctor has put
me on notice to monitor my vital signs closely.
Sankranti treats,
though healthy, are heat inducing and Melbourne is experiencing its worst heatwave in over a century…how and when and why should I make tilgul?
The Sankranti cornucopia
in my heart, the conch shell resonating my primordial rhythm across the seven
seas, heeds neither topsy-turvy seasons, nor situational hurdles… a vegan and
healthier ‘tilgul’, more in sync with my current cadence suggests - almost by
itself.
Quinoa flakes and
amaranth pops are cooling. Pepita and flax prove to be soothing seeds. The peanut/
sesame /coconut triumvirate is charmed by the low GI sweetness of the coconut
sugar…
There you go,
don’t say I didn't warn you about inheriting that trait…
Healthier Tilgul - Quinoa Sesame Granola
Ingredients
½ cup quinoa flakes (these are available as a breakfast cereal)
¾ cup sesame seeds
¾ cup shredded coconut (reserve some to
sprinkle on the tray)
2 cups coconut sugar (you can use fresh
dates or figs to give sweetness and bind the ingredients)
½ cup peanuts
½ cup amaranth seeds
½ cup roasted gram
¼ cup Pepita seeds
2 tbsp flax seeds
1 tbsp poppy seeds
½ tsp ground nutmeg
Seeds of 3-4 green cardamoms and 1 black
cardamom, crushed
Method
Layer a tray with baking parchment and
sprinkle the reserved shredded coconut on it. Set aside.
Soak the amaranth seeds for a few minutes,
drain thoroughly and then pop them in a hot heavy bottomed pan, stirring
continuously until most seeds have popped. Don't worry if all don’t pop. Remove
on a plate. In the same pan, lightly roast sesame seeds and set aside. Next
lightly roast the peanuts, flax seeds, poppy seeds and the shredded coconut one
by one.
Mix the seeds and nuts and reserve half a
cup to be retained whole to add to the texture. Blitz the seed nut mixture for
a quick few seconds, so you get a coarse meal.
Heat the same pan and add the coconut sugar
and about ¼ cup water. Mix thoroughly and let the mixture bubble and froth on
low heat. Don't stir the mixture, unless it is burning. Test the syrup
consistency on a plate. It should stand its own ground without running, but
shouldn't be too stiff– you have to get it sticky enough to bind the mixture
together. Mind your fingers, as the sugar syrup can be deceptively hot. Add the
pulsed nut and seed mixture, the reserved whole mixture, nutmeg and black and
green cardamom powder. Mix thoroughly into a sticky ball.
Pop the sticky ball of the mixture on the
baking parchment and pat it flat with a spatula. If you want to flatten it
uniformly, place another sheet of parchment on top of this flattened mixture
and pat it into a shape. Then carefully roll it into a uniformly thick mixture
with a rolling pin and pat everything into place.
Allow this to cool slightly and score the
sheet into diamonds or squares or bars. Separate the shapes when completely
cooled and store in an airtight container a cool and dry place.
This healthy tilgul can be a munchy between
meals, a breakfast supplement, something to crumble over your muesli, or that
piece to pop when you want something sweet after a meal.
This recipe looks amazing and I LOVE the name you've chosen for it.
ReplyDeleteThank you! :)
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