Gutti Vankaya (stuffed baby eggplant)
The day I make eggplant halwa or kheer, you
can give up on me as a basket case and my family can have me committed.
Until then, I shall keep on reminiscing
about black-soil-grown baingans from the banks of River Krishna, revelling in
my discoveries of good quality eggplants in and around Melbourne and
enthusiastically cooking eggplant of every shape and size, from different parts
of the world and of course, from different regions of India.
This time it’s Gutti Vankaya, a very popular
Andhra recipe of tangy little eggplants. (Gutti is
'cluster' or 'bunch' and 'vankaya is eggplant).
However, unlike the gutti vankayas served with pulsu or pappu and hot unpolished rice and the glorious Guntur ghee, they have incarnated as cocktail snacks.
Well why not!
However, unlike the gutti vankayas served with pulsu or pappu and hot unpolished rice and the glorious Guntur ghee, they have incarnated as cocktail snacks.
Well why not!
A friend's father-in-law was ardently
drinking tumbler after tumbler of rasam during her very typically chaste
TamBram wedding. As the bride’s bestie, I hung around her all the time and
couldn’t help but notice the rather alarming rate at which the distinguished
gentleman’s batman was replenishing his steel tumbler. I remember feeling sorry for
the Uncle ji that he had missed eating all those delicacies what with the upset
tummy. But Uncle ji seemed to be in very good spirits! Well, after all – his
son was getting married to such a lovely girl, I had thought.
Several decades later when we caught up and
were sharing sorrows and salving wounds that certain types of intemperance had
inflicted, the tumblers of rasam made sudden sense! My friend was amazed that I
remembered, and I was astonished at the ingenuity of the bloody “rasam mary”!
Well, I shouldn’t have, I suppose. An uncle
of mine was habituated to enjoying his drink on the sly in a house full of
elderly Gandhians. He used to pour his scotch into a brass chalice known as a
“phulpatra” in Marathi. My grandmother,
whose cataract covered hawk eyes missed nothing, had once nonplussed him by
peering into his cup and remarking on the muddy quality of the municipal tap
water. For days after that, she had pestered him to complain to the council and
buy a water filter.
With due respect to staunch Brahmins
and grand old Gandhians, and undue credit to sly saturnalians, I present the
gutti vankaya cocktail snack…
Ingredients
15- 20 baby eggplants
2 onions roughly chopped
2 tbsp chopped garlic
2-3 red chillies (or more)
1 tbsp coriander seeds
½ tsp cumin seeds
½ tsp methi seeds
3 tbsps desiccated coconut
1 tsp thick tamarind paste
1 tbsp jaggery
½ tsp turmeric pwd
A pinch of hing
8-10 curry leaves
½ tsp mustard seeds
Salt to taste
2-3 tbsps oil
Method
Heat 1 tbsp oil in a pan and add the methi
seeds, coriander seeds and cumin seeds and red chillies one after the other.
Then add the onions and garlic and fry till translucent. Add the hing and
haldi. The spices will also get roasted in this time. Remove from heat and
allow to cool.
Transfer this mixture into a grinder and
add the jaggery, tamarind paste, salt and a little water. Grind this into a
coarse paste and keep aside.
Wash and slit the eggplants from the base
to the calyx but not all the way through, leaving them attached at the stems. Keep the stems.
Stuff the eggplants with the paste. Save
the remaining paste.
Heat 2-3 tbsp oil in a flat langadi/ thick
bottomed wide and shallow sauce pan. Add mustard seeds and let them splutter
then add curry leaves. Remove the pan from the heat for a few minutes while you
arrange the stuffed eggplants in the langadi. Add the remaining paste on the
top of the eggplants. This paste, when cooked may not be presented along with
the eggplants if you are going to serve them as a snack, but it surely helps
keep the eggplants moist and also prevents them burning.
Place a steel plate/thali on the langadi or
saucepan and pour half a cup of water in the plate. This is like a “water bath”
treatment, popularly known as “panyache zhakan” in Marathi. Cook on low heat
for 7-8 minutes.
Panyachey zhakan - aka water lid |
Carefully remove lid (without letting the
water splash into the saucepan!). Turn the eggplants once to ensure even
cooking. Replace the lid, this time
without water for a few more minutes. Check for doneness and switch off the
heat.
To serve, lift the little eggplant
carefully onto a serving tray.
Serve with Rasam Mary or Saar Sour. ☺
Epilogue
And what do you do with the remaining
masala. Well, as kids we used to love to mop up the spicy masala dregs
from pots and pans with hot rice and would almost fight over who would bag
those rights and if we had our way, we would have eaten out of the pans, but
for Aai’s dictum that we could eat or drink out of designated crockery and
couldn’t fight over food- for these were signs of “daridrya” or destitution.
Today, I mopped up the masala with rice and
when there were no takers, tucked into the mixture myself. It wasn’t half as
enjoyable as the spoils of those squabbles, though!