Gajar Paneer Halwa
As a child whose additional language was
English (yes, did you know this is a new ‘inclusive’ term for English as a
Second/Foreign language?) my understanding of the word ‘diet’ was limited to a ‘weight loss diet’.
In the 70s, it had become a buzzword for grown-ups
around me, almost like a fad. Family and
folks used it with such natural ease that I didn’t even think it was an English
word. Everyone seemed to have an opinion, an anecdote and gratis advice to mete
out about 'diets'.
And everyone had someone in the family who
had seriously asked the question, “Should I eat this diet stuff before or
after a meal?”
I must have been about 8 or 10 years old,
long gone past the 'cute and chubby', 'pullable-cheek' stage and endowed out of the 'puppy fat' category, when this “d” word became a dreaded reality for me personally. What
had hitherto been unconditional praise for my precociousness, started to come
with a proviso bordering on a warning – albeit to my mother, 'but you should
get her to diet, you know…'
Over the years, I fought with my
foodophilia and succumbed to many diets – the GM Diet, the Atkins Diet, and the
Cabbage Soup Diet – you name it and I was game for it. But
alas! These adventures invariably started with ditties and ended in dirges.
If you didn’t take it so seriously, 'Diet' digs
were doubly doomful. When I self-righteously
refused a sweet while on one of these grueling regimes, I was told- go ahead, have it… it’s a boiled sweet… You’re
on veggies and fruit? Try this carrot cake …. how about some apple pie…
My calling as a food blogger has seen me ingeniously
tiptoeing around recipes with 'sugar/sweetener' options and 'fry/bake' discretions, attempting brilliant coups to overthrow the white supremacy of the
butter-sugar-flour clan. But I won’t be honest if I don’t admit that many times
these dishes are but shadows of the real McCoys.
But not this one.
Here’s a “diet” gajar paneer halwa, which
cheats in every possible way, but manages to beat the fray!
Gajar Paneer Halwa
Ingredients
2 cups lightly scraped and grated carrots
10-12 cashew nuts, halved
1 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp ghee (optional)
1 cup skimmed milk
½ tsp green cardamom powder (only if you
don’t have a cardamom hater at home)
2 cups grated paneer
4-5 tbsp coconut sugar
Sweetener as required to bring the halwa to
your desired level of sweetness
Method
Heat 1 tbsp olive oil in a thick-bottomed
pan, and add the cashew nuts and fry them slightly and remove from the pan. Now
add the grated carrots and sauté for a few minutes. Add milk and cook on medium
heat for about 10-15 minutes or until the milk evaporates and the carrots are
cooked. Stir from time to time.
Stir in the grated paneer and coconut sugar
and cook for two to three minutes or till the sugar melts and mixes well,
stirring continuously. The coconut sugar, made from the sap of the coconut palm
does not taste like coconut at all. It is not only a low glycemic index
sweetening option, but also gives a caramel flavour to the halwa and deepens
the colour. Coconut sugar also has nutrients such as magnesium, potassium, zinc, iron, B vitamins,
and amino acids.
Add some sweetener like Splenda or Agave
syrup, if required.
Add the green cardamom powder and the
tablespoon of ghee (if using). Continue to cook for a minute more.
Garnish with halved cashew nuts. Serve warm.
Forget the clichéd ice cream.
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