Thursday, March 23, 2006

Coriander-methi vadi

Kothimbir vadi is a snack from Maharashtra, made with coriander leaves, and methi na muthia is a snack from Gujarat, made with methi or fenugreek leaves. Both are basically made more or less the same way, and the ingredients are similar too.

I had half a bunch of coriander leaves and a bit of methi leaves - not enough to make either dish using just one or the other. But together, they made enough vadi as starters for four people. Three of them, who had never eaten these savoury, intensely flavoured vadi before, would have happily eaten twice as much after the first tasting, only there wasnt enough - it was that good!

The recipe I followed was pretty much
Nupur's, except for minor changes (like using methi leaves!). By the way, the list of ingredients might look dauntingly long but the actual making is simple as simple can be. Really.

Recipe for:
Coriander-methi vadi




Ingredients:

1 cup coriander leaves, chopped fine
1 cup methi leaves, chopped fine
1 cup chickpea/gram flour
2 tbsp. rice flour
1/4 cup wheat flour + millet flour (if you have it)
4 green chillies, minced fine
1 tsp ginger-garlic paste
1 tsp sesame seeds
1 tsp poppy seeds
1 tsp turmeric powder
pinch of asafoetida
1 tsp garam masala
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp sugar
Juice of 1/2 lime
salt to taste
Oil for shallow-frying


Clockwise from top right: Poppy seeds, sesame seeds, ginger, green chillies, wholewheat flour, rice flour, millet flour, gram flour. Oh, and half a lime.

Method:

1. In a large bowl, mix together all the ingredients except the oil.

2. Use just enough water to make a thick batter, stirring well to break up any lumps.



3. Grease a flat plate or a vessel with a wide flat bottom and pour the batter in to a depth of about half an inch. If required, divide the batter into two portions.



4. Steam for about 30 minutes in a pressure cooker (without the weight) or in a steamer.



5. Let the steamed batter cool, then cut into squares.

6. In a wide shallow pan, heat 4-5 tbsp oil. Shallow-fry the vadi in batches, turning them over carefully until they get golden brown spots.

7. Serve hot with any chutney. They are also yummy cold. Lovely for picnics.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Shammi,
Looks like a wonderful recipe ..and the methi-coriander combo sounds tempting..:-) May b I cud add peas to add more crunch ...(actualy have loads of it in the freezer ;))
I had a question though....do the steamed squares use up a lot of oil while frying them...?

Anonymous said...

Priya - gotta be honest, it does use more oil than I'd like... but it's still better than deep-frying. :)

Am sure you could add peas or anything else (grated carrots/parsnip/potatoes?) - havent tried it myself but do let me know if you do, and how it goes! :)

Anonymous said...

HELLO,
This is Banusree....i am 21 yrs ol and i am currently in chennai...i am a regular reader of your blogs..In fact,i have learnt a lot reading your blogs,Thank u...Can u tell me how to prepare rotis in a microwave coz i have jus got one....

Rajesh said...

Hi,
please contact me ..I want you to contribute in my website a Editor in taste of Kannada section...

Raj

Niyati said...

I am from bombay and have had this vadi at so many farsan shops and i was always curious on what might be its recipe. Now i got it!! and thanks to you :) im definately trying this recipe very soon, cuz i know this is an awesome dish!!

niki