Showing posts with label Basmati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Basmati. Show all posts

Monday, March 3, 2008

Gujarati Kadhi

Hey Folks! I'm back after a short hiatus. February was supposed to be our home moving month, with the actual move planned for the end of the last week. However we had some rather unexpected warm and sunny weather on the weekend of 23-24 February. Given the 100 plus inches snow that we have plowed our way through since the start of this year, the ray of sunshine seemed promising, and indeed too good to pass up. At the very last minute we decided to take advantage of this good fortune that nature had sent us and move a week before planned. There was some unfinished maintenance at our new home, yet we decided to chance it :)

Moving is tough work and while I am still unpacking the boxes (does that ever end??), I made sure the kitchen was set up and functioning on 'Day One'. Now where have I hear that phrase lately?? LoL, but seriously - I needed the inspiration and the creativity to survive the sheer tediousness of the move, the packing, and the unpacking. And what better way to unwind at the end of a long day than to bring together cereals, lentils, vegetables, and spices and watch them transform into beautifully creative meals - with mouth-watering appeal....

While I am sure that many a blog here will find its way linked to 'the move', I think enough said about it for the present. Onto a dish that turns up in many an Indian home on cold winter evenings. It is heartwarming, delicious, nutritious, and wholesome - it is Gujarati Kadhi. Golden and creamy, yet amazingly light on the stomach, this Kadhi is best served with fresh steamed Basmati rice, and a dollop of ghee!!


Ingredients:
1/3 cup chickpea flour
1 cup yogurt
2 cups water, warm
1 tbsp sunflower/canola oil
1/2 tsp mustard seeds
1/2 tsp cumin
1/4 tsp fenugreek seeds
8 black peppercorns
4 cloves
2 dried red chillies
6-8 curry leaves
1/2 tsp turmeric
Salt, to taste

For tempering:
1 tbsp ghee
1/2 tsp coarsely grated red chilli powder

Method:

  1. Pour the oil into a deep, heavy bottomed pan. When hot, reduce the heat to medium.
  2. Add the cumin, mustard seeds, fenugreek seeds, peppercorns, cloves, and red chillies to the oil.
  3. When the mustard seeds begin to pop, and a fragrance emerges from the pan, add the warm water into the spices. Take care when doing this as the oil can sputter when water is added.
  4. Now mix the chickpea flour, turmeric, salt, and the yogurt. Blend well so that the mixture is free of any lumps.
  5. Gently pour this mix into the the water and spice mixture.
  6. Cook the Kadhi on a medium heat stirring constantly. You will notice the mixture thicken and acquire a deeper yellow colour.
  7. The Kadhi is ready when you can no longer taste the rawness of the chickpea flour. set aside.
  8. Prepare tempering by heating the ghee in a small shallow pan. When warm, add the red chilli powder. Pour over the Kadhi.
The Kadhi is now ready. Serve immediately with steamed rice.

All text and photographs in this blog, unless otherwise noted, are Copyright of © Annarasa 2007. All Rights Reserved. Kindly do not reproduce without permission.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Rasedaar Aloo-Gobhi (Fragrant Potato-Cauliflower Curry)


Aloo-Gobhi sabzi (Potato-Cauliflower Vegetable) happens to be one of my favourite vegetable combinations. There are so very many ways in which this vegetable combination is cooked and dished out. Yet it is only in winter that one gets the opportunity of enjoying it in this fragrant curry form. Primarily because this recipe uses loads of Dalchini or Cinnamon. Cinnamon which is an essential spice in Indian cooking, is regarded by Ayurveda as a warming spice. It is, in general, used in combination with other spices that complement its flavour and often in its bark form. Also it is used to flavour savoury vegetables and meats from the main course rather than sweets and desserts! Cauliflower curry with cinnamon is a perfect example of this. I find it to be a comfort food - tasty, warming, and utterly delicious once served on a bed of Basmati rice.

Ingredients:
1 medium-size cauliflower
4 small red potatoes
2 medium onions
1 tin tomato puree
1 tsp tamarind extract
8 Curry leaves
4 tbsp dried unsweetened coconut
1" cinnamon stick
4 black peppercorns
2-4 dried red chillies
1 1/2 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp mustard seeds
1 tbsp oil
1 tsp ghee
Salt to taste

Method:

  1. Wash, clean, and divide the cauliflower into florets. Quarter the potatoes, and slice the onions.
  2. In a saucepan, roast the cinnamon, peppercorns, red chillies, and cumin. Set aside to cool.
  3. Pour the oil in the pan, heat, then add the onions and dried coconut and fry till brownish in colour.
  4. Meanwhile, dry grind the cooled spices to a powder. To this powder, add the fried onions and coconut. Grind further till well blended.
  5. Heat the ghee in the saucepan. Add the mustard seeds and curry leaves.
  6. Once the mustard seeds begin to pop add the freshly prepared spice paste and fry till the ghee begins to separate.
  7. Now add the potatoes, cauliflower florets, salt, and just enough water to make up a curry. Cook till the vegetable is tender. Add the tomato puree and tamarind extract and cook for another 5 minutes.
  8. Serve hot with Basmati rice.

I am sending this Winter Warmer in to Sunita's Think Spice.... think Cinnamon .

All text and photographs in this blog, unless otherwise noted, are Copyright of © Annarasa 2007. All Rights Reserved. Kindly do not reproduce without permission.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

That Feeling of Coming Home! JFI Toor Dal


You can eat any cuisine in the world, you can travel the globe, you can eat out for days on end - but there is nothing quite like the feeling of coming back home!! Of course, coming home means different things to different people. But in my parents home - it had one simple meaning: "Ghar ka Khana" or simple food cooked at home.

I remember as a child we would go for our annual trek in the Himalayas, or on summer vacations across the country only to return home to the deliciously heart-warming dal-chawal. Now you can guess that dal on the occasion meant the humble arhar dal or toor dal, served hot with basmati chawal, and methi-aloo bhaji. Over the years this has become my most abiding memory of coming home. Now when ever we travel, the first meal on our return echos that memory.

In fact, this meal is a great favourite in my family. I tend to make toor dal thick and creamy, and top it with a great dollop "ghee ka tarka". Here's my recipe.

Ingredients:
2 cups toor dal
1 medium onion
1" piece ginger
3-4 cloves garlic
1 level tsp turmeric`
1/4 tsp asafetida (hing)
1 tsp cumin seeds
3-4 dried red chillies
Salt to taste
1 tbsp ghee (clarified butter)

Method:

  1. Soak the toor dal in water for 2-4 hours.
  2. Pressure cook the dal with the ginger, tumeric, 1/2 tsp cumin seeds, a pinch of salt. Once cooked, continue to boil the dal until it thickens and becomes heavy. Adjust the salt to taste.
  3. For the tarka, heat the ghee in a small pan. Finely chop the onion and garlic. Add to the heated ghee and fry until onions become brownish. Then add the remaining cumin seeds, red chillies, and asafetida.
  4. Remove the ready dal into a serving bowl. Season with tarka. Serve with fresh hot Basmati rice which has been seasoned with salty butter and a pickle to tickle your tastebuds!!!!

All text and photographs in this blog, unless otherwise noted, are Copyright of © Annarasa 2007. All Rights Reserved. Kindly do not reproduce without permission.