Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Potato Kurma

The other day, before the weekly shopping round, I only had a few potatoes, onions and tomatoes which could respectably call themselves vegetables. I wanted to make kurma and hence potato-kurma was a no brainer. I got this recipe from the same blog that featured the tasty kadala curry in the previous post.
Potato Kurma
The potato kurma was easy to make. I once again reduced the amount of coconut. The green chillis I used turned out to be way too spicy but otherwise the kurma was yummy. The last bit of seasoning with the onions and the cilantro was a great touch! It made the kurma visually appealing besides adding a nice oniony crunch. And oh, I also added a couple of whole boiled eggs sauteed in a bit of salt and pepper. Made a plus shaped slit on top of the eggs reaching half way before adding them in.

Kadala curry

Puttu and kadala curry is a famous breakfast combo in Kerala. While I have never had these two items together, I have made kadala curry a couple of times. I found an awesome recipe here.
Kadala Curry
I just made a couple of changes to the recipe. I reduced the amount of coconut to about 1/3rd of a cup. Correspondingly I reduced the amount of peppercorns to about 3/4th of a teaspoon though in retrospect I think maybe 1/2 teaspoon would have been enough even. Everything else was exactly the same as given in the recipe.

In case you are wondering like I did, 1 cup of dried kale channa translates to about 3 cups of cooked kale channa. The original recipe calls f or 3 cups of cooked kale channa.

The recipe made a lip-smacking combo with aapam and dosa.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Easy chicken biryani

This recipe makes tasty chicken biryani. As an added bonus, it is quite easy to make. I was quite thrilled when I put the lid on the pan for the last bit of cooking and realized that I had not spent much time over the stove. The secret to that was using oil liberally (still not as liberal as the recipe suggested). Now I realize why restaurants have such a free hand with oil and ghee!

I followed the recipe exactly as is except for these alterations:
1. Added 1 slit green chilli to the seasoning items.
2. Cut down the recipe to use 2 cups of basmati rice rather than 3 cups and scaled the rest of the ingredients accordingly.
3. I cooked basmati rice till it started boiling in the electric rice cooker.I also added a bay leaf to the basmati rice along with the water and salt before cooking.
4. Since Indian gas-stoves do not have the "very low" temperature setting, I heated a tawa on high, then reduced the heat to the lowest setting and placed the dutch oven containing the layered chicken and the rice on top of the tawa for the last stage of cooking.
5. After turning off the stove, I left the dutch oven covered for 10 more minutes before opening the lid and mixing the chicken and rice together.

This recipe is dedicated to my sis who recently wrote about her rather interesting experience making chicken biryani :-).

Monday, March 21, 2011

Jackfruit seed(palakottai) Stir Fry

Now that summer is almost upon us, all summer fruits are beginning to show their faces. Watermelon, nongu (palmyra fruit), jackfruit ... Yumm! I am loving it!

The other day the husband bought ripe jackfruit pieces. They were yummy. We downed several and thus had quite a significant pile of jackfruit seeds leftover. I have eaten jackfruit seeds in my childhood - typically, they go into sambhar or kuzhambu. Though I would eat them (jackfruit seeds are very nutritious), I wasn't particularly fond of them and thus wanted to try a new recipe this time.

Tada! Jackfruit seed stir fry! The following recipe is adapted from here The first time I made it as is Now, after two more attempts, I have found the following recipe is the easiest way to make the stir fry without compromising on taste.

Palakottai (Jackfruit seed) Stir Fry
Palakottai fry

Ingredients (enough for two):
30 or so jackfruit seeds (the silky outer cover should be removed and the seeds washed)
1/2 tsp turmeric powder
1/2 tsp chilli powder
1.5 tsp sambhar powder
Salt to taste
Water

For seasoning:
1.5 tsp oil
1/2 tsp mustard seeds
1/2 tsp urad dal seeds
1 sprig curry leaves
A pinch of asafoetida

Method:
1. Chop each of the jackfruit seeds into two. This is kinda hard when the seeds are dry. However, you can soak the whole seeds+ for about 30 minutes before chopping. This softens the seeds a little. If any of the white covers come off during chopping, great, discard them. Else, don't worry, we will deal with them soon.
2. In a pan, thrown in the chopped seeds, the turmeric powder, chilli powder and 1/2 tsp salt. Add water to cover.
3. Bring the water to a boil, cover pan with a lid and cook on medium till the seeds are done (about 15-20 minutes). They should be soft but not mushy and still should have a crunch left in them.
4. Discard all the white covers which may have separated from the seeds. Then comes the tedious part: for all the seed-halves that still have the white cover on them, peel the white cover and discard. It does not matter if the brown cover is still on the seeds.
5. In a frying pan, add in the oil. Toss in urad-dal and when it changes color slightly, add in the mustard seeds. As soon as it pops, add in the hing and curry leaves.
6. Toss in the jackfruit-seed halves.
7. Sprinkle sambhar powder.
8. Add salt to taste (remember you already used some while cooking the seeds).
9. Toss till all the seeds are coated with sambhar powder and the raw smell of sambhar powder is gone.

Serve hot with rice, sambhar and/or rasam.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Chicken liver pepper fry

My husband is a liver-lover. I don't care much for it though.I had to be forced to eat it during childhood - liver was considered to be very nutritious and thus was one of the foods I had to eat compulsorily.

This recipe from Solai's kitchen made such delicious liver fry that I voluntarily ate a few spoonfuls. My husband polished off the entire dish. Try it out!
Chicken liver pepper fry
 I made the dish with chicken liver and halved the ingredients as eye-balling told me that I probably had closer to 100g of liver rather than 200g.



Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Potato Masala

Puri-masala is a very popular breakfast item in Tamilnadu. This dish usually makes an appearance when special guests come home or when the family wants a "treat".

I though, have always been at a loss when figuring out why this dish is so special. I mean, puri is bland, masala is bland - why would that make a good combination?

But, strike out the puri and instead add in dosa and coconut chutney. Then, we are so back in business! Masala dosa and coconut chutney is one of those made-for-each-other, to-die-for combos. It is possible to eat quite a lot of dosas with masala and coconut chutney in attendance.

Potato Masala
Potato masala is a very easy dish to make. It probably takes only about 20-25 minutes from start to finish, prep-work and cooking time included. Make sure you set the potatoes to boil before your start prepping the rest of the ingredients. This recipe is from Mom's blog and is very easy to follow and make.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Wheat (Godumai) Dosai

I love all things wheat. Wheat dosai is the latest in the long list of wheat-based dishes that I like. My husband absolutely detests wheat dosai - but hey, I am the cook :-P!

The following recipe is mostly from here with minor variations:
Godumai Dosai
Godumai dosai cooking on the tawa

Ingredients (makes 3 dosais)
Whole wheat flour - 1/2 cup
Rice flour - 2 tbsp
Green chilli - 1, chopped
Onion - 1, chopped (optional)
Curry leaves - 5, torn into small pieces
Jeera - 1 tsp
Water - 1 cup (adjust per requirement)
Salt to taste
Oil

Method:
1. Fry the jeera, chillis, curry leaves and onion together in a little oil till the onion turns golden. Cool the mixture completely.
2. In a separate bowl, mix the wheat flour, rice flour and salt.
3. Add water little by little to the wheat flour mixture while stirring so that no lumps are formed. The consistency should be slightly thinner than dosa batter.
4. Add in the cooled mixture from step 1 to the batter.
5. Let the batter rest for 15-30 minutes.
6. Heat a cast-iron griddle on medium and wipe the surface with a cloth dipped in oil.
7. Make the wheat dosai the same way that you would make rava dosa or adai (i.e. pour the batter from outside to inside in concentric circles and fill in the gaps).
8. Serve hot with sambhar or chutney or podi or all three!

Notes
1. You can add the ingredients in step 1 without frying too.
2. Wheat dosai takes longer to cook than regular dosai. Also, it tastes better when the dosai is browned a little rather when it is "just done".


Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Kovakkai (Tindora) Fry

I was never a kovakkai fan. In fact that was one of the vegetables on my "I will be excused from eating this vegetable" list (the other was pavakkai or bitter gourd. I was not allowed to have more than two veggies on that list).

To my surprise I started eating this vegetable in the US and in fact, even started liking it. It's true, your taste buds evolve as you grow. And oh, I have now taken pavakkai off my will not eat list too!

I tried this kovakkai fry recipe from Solai's kitchen and am happy to report that the end result is yummy, just like all the comments on that blog said it would be.
Kovakkai Poriyal
 I did not make any changes to the recipe. I made 1/2 kg of kovakkai though and hence doubled everything other than the water used to cook the kovakkai.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Tomato Salad

Tomatoes were on sale at the local grocery store and I wound up with quite a lot of them. The next step was to make a colorful tomato salad.
Tomato Salad

Ingredients (makes enough for 2-3):
Tomatoes - 4 large
Green capsicum - 1
Onion - 1 medium
Sea salt to taste

Dressing:
Extra Virgin Olive Oil - 1 tbsp
Garlic - 3 cloves, grated
Black pepper - 1/2 tsp, freshly ground
Fresh lemon juice - 1 tsp

Mix all the dressing ingredients together and keep aside.

Method:
1. De-seed the tomatoes and chop into fairly big pieces. Place the cut pieces on a colander and sprinkle with sea salt. Keep aside for 15 minutes and discard any drained juice.
2. Chop the capsicum into medium-small pieces. Chop the onions into medium-small pieces as well and make sure the onion layers are separate.
3. Toss the chopped veggies together.
4. Add the dressing and toss again. Adjust salt and pepper as per taste.
5. Serve after letting the salad rest for at least 15 minutes.

Notes
1. You could refrigerate the salad before serving.
2. You could add a peeled and chopped cucumber to the salad as a variation.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Basic bhindi (okra/vendakkai/ladies finger) fry

Ladies finger is my most favorite vegetable. It is probably the only vegetable I can eat no matter how well or how badly it is cooked (I hate it when it is drenched in oil. When that happens, I grumble, squeeze out the oil and still eat it). I think ladies finger tastes best when it is tender and is cooked with minimal oil and mild spices just till the raw smell disappears.

Here is a basic ladies finger recipe which tastes good even when the ladies fingers aren't all that tender. It makes a great combo with rasam-rice though it tastes good with rotis and dal too.

Ladies finger fry

Ingredients (makes enough for 2-3):
Ladies finger (okra) - 1/2 kg (washed, dried and sliced into 1/8" thick rounds)
Onion - 1 big, finely chopped
Tomato - 1 big, finely chopped
Red chilli powder - 1 tsp
Dhania powder - 2 heaped tsp
Turmeric powder - 1/2 tsp
Salt to taste


To Season:
Mustard Seeds - 1/2 tsp
Broken urad dal - 1/2 tsp
Red chillis - 2, broken
Asafoetida - a pinch
Curry leaves - a sprig
Oil

Method:
1. Coat the bottom of a wide, non-stick pan with about 1 tsp oil and place on medium heat.
2. Add the seasoning items: mustard seeds, urad dal and red chillis. When mustard begins to splutter, add asafoetida and curry leaves in quick succession.
3. Add onions and salt and fry till golden.
4. Add tomatoes and fry till it is more or less mashed.
5. Add the chilli, coriander and turmeric powders and fry for 30 seconds.
6. Add the okra a little at a time, stirring carefully after each addition so that the okra is mixed well with the onion-tomato mixture (use a light hand or you will mash the okra).
7. Spread okra over the bottom of the pan, lower the heat, cover with a lid and let cook for 6-8 minutes without disturbing
8. Uncover, stir okra, cover again and cook for 4-5 minutes.
9. Uncover, check for done-ness. If done, cook without the lid for 2-3 minutes. Else re-cover and cook in 2 minute additions
10. Check for salt and serve hot with rice or rotis.

Koottu Rasam

I am a big rasam lover. Rasam is the first "dish" I learnt to make. Which isn't a very big feat considering how easy rasam is to make usually. Nevermind that I only learnt later that it is possible to screw up making rasam too (some people really can't cook - such is life).

Anyhoo, the most time consuming part of making rasam is boiling the tur dal to put in it. It is only a small quantity of dal which goes into rasam but still I feel that it is a must for the rasam-y taste I like.

Thus, I was thrilled when I came upon this rasam recipe on my cousin's blog which included tur dal but did not require separate boiling of the same.

Brief digression (and plug) - that blog has authentic recipes from the Kumbakonam area of Tamilnadu. My cousin's mom is a great cook and my lucky cousin has inherited those genes. Furthermore, he has been patiently and painstakingly putting down the recipes (from paper and through the telephone) onto a blog. Check those out!

I made some minor changes to the original koottu rasam recipe. Here is my version.

Koottu Rasam
Steaming koottu rasam

Ingredients (enough rasam for 4-5):


To roast and grind:
Tur Dal, 2 tsp
Red chilies, 2
Whole black pepper, 1 tsp
Cumin, 1 tsp
Garlic, 2 cloves, peeled

Roast all of the above without oil and grind into a coarse powder.

Base:
Water, 4 cups
Tamarind, gooseberry sized ball
Turmeric powder, 1/2 tsp
Tomato, 1 medium, crushed into a pulp using hands
Salt to taste

Extract the tamarind and then mix with the rest of the base ingredients

To season
Mustard seeds, 1/2 tsp
Urad dal, 1/2 tsp
Green chilli, 1 small, split vertically
A pinch of asafoetida
Curry leaves, 1 sprig
Oil, 1 tsp
Fresh coriander leaves, 1 tbsp, chopped

Method:
1. Add the coarsely ground powder to the base and mix well.
2. Heat a sauce-pan on medium, add the mixture from step 1 and bring to a boil.
3. In a separate seasoning pan, add oil, urad dal, green chilli and mustard seeds. When mustard seeds begin to crackle, add asafoetida and curry leaves in quick succession and add the entire contents of the seasoning pan to the boiling mixture from step 2.
4. Turn off heat, check for salt, garnish with coriander leaves.

Serve hot with rice.

Notes
1. Coriander leaves give a lovely aroma to rasam. Try not to skip them unless you have to!


Raw Banana Stir fry

 This recipe is adapted from cookdtv. Ingredients 1 raw banana or 2 small bananas 2 tbsp sesame oil 1/2 tsp mustard 6 cloves crushed garlic ...