Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2007

Kiwi Gee's Recipes From Down Under - Peanut-corn vadas

Deficient in iron? Love peanuts? Love sweetcorn? If you answer "yes" to any or all of these questions, then this recipe from Kiwi Gee is for you. She says: "Got this recipe from some cookbook in my previous life when I actually had time to pore over such things. Just as well that I remember how to make it, coz I have no idea where that cookbook is now…".

Well, that's the advantage of having a blog - now this recipe need never be forgotten! These are the tastiest vadas I've ever had and it was difficult to stop at just one or two. Good thing the kids were home with one of their friends who's adventurous (food-wise) for his age, with a typical teenager's appetite! Iron-rich though these vadas are, thanks to the peanuts, they are not for the extreme diet-conscious. But once in a while, especially if it's a rainy cold day, they're awesome. Especially when had hot.

Recipe for:
KiwiGee's Peanut corn vadas




Ingredients:

Raw peanuts – 200 gms (about a cup)
Corn kernels (fresh or tinned or frozen) – 200 gms
Fresh green chillies – 2-4, depending on chilli tolerance
Corn flour – 2 to 4 tbsp
Rice flour - 1/3 cup (my addition)
Onion – 1 large, chopped
Coriander leaves – a handful
Curry leaves – a handful
Fennel seeds – 1 tsp
Cumin seeds – 1 tsp
Salt – as per taste
Oil to fry

Method:

1. Soak peanuts in water for half an hour. If corn is frozen, make sure it is thawed completely.



2. Then grind corn and peanuts coarsely along with the green chillies.



3. In the last run of the grinding, add the saunf (fennel) and jeera (cumin) seeds, onion, coriander and curry leaves, as well as the salt.



4. Grind the mixture using no or very little water. It has to be roughly the consistency that can be patted into a flat, round shape that won’t come apart when you fry it – this is a bit of a hit-and-miss, but practice makes perfect.

5. To the ground mixture, add the corn flour and rice flour and mix well (add more flour if necessary, and adjust seasoning). If you have added too much water to your mixture while grinding, then you may need to add some extra flour to thicken the mixture – don’t worry, you can’t go wrong with the flour.



6. Take a small ball of the mixture (size of a plum) and flatten it on an oiled surface (your palm or a plate or whatever) to make a flat round disc of max 1 cm depth.

7. Meanwhile, heat the oil. When the oil is at the right temperature, drop the discs in slowly one by one. Fry till then are a dark golden brown, then drain - and then the best bit – eat hot. Note that because of the peanuts, the vada will be much darker than the normal vada.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

"Burnt" corn salad

I wish I could say that I started to make something totally different with the sweetcorn, made a complete hash of the job and yet heroically and singlehandedly saved the situation, rescuing the corn and making it the star of an impromptu recipe.

I wish.

No such heroism here, there no accolades for Supercook for saving the world from a culinary disaster. There was no disaster, and nothing to save. *sigh*

No, this salad is just one of Tarla Dalal's health recipes which stuck in my head for being so darned simple. ("Simple" - my mantra, my raison d'etre, my motto, my everything). Roast the corn over an open flame till it gets some black spots (that's the burnt part), mix it with some raw chopped vegetables and pour over a simple dressing. Eat immediately at room temperature or eat cold. Either way, it's nice. Not spectacular, but nice. Today being the third hot day of the entire summer, I decided to go with a simple salad for dinner as it was just me, Pete being stuck with the accountants at work.

So here it is. An unheroic simple recipe from an even more unheroic cooker (tee hee). At least it's colourful!

Recipe for:
"Burnt" corn salad




Ingredients:

1 corn cob
1 tomato, chopped (I used about 10 baby plum tomatoes)
1/2 white onion, sliced very thin
1/2 green bell pepper, chopped

For the dressing:
2 tbsp olive oil
1 tbsp lemon juice (or to taste)
pinch salt
pinch red chilli powder (I used ancho chilli powder)

Method:

1. Roast the corn over an open flame until it gets black specks all over.



2. Cool for a moment or two, then pare the corn niblets off the cob with a sharp knife.



3. Put the corn in a bowl along with the chopped tomato, bell pepper and onion.



4. Whisk the ingredients for the dressing very well.



Pour over the corn mix and stir it in.



5. Serve chilled or at room temperature.