Showing posts with label poppy seeds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poppy seeds. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2011

Vada-kari (lentil fritters in tomato-coconut gravy)

Serendipity isn't something that manifests itself often in my life, so the rare occasions that it does, it's very exciting. On the day after I made the baked cabbage-onion masala vadas, I saw a recipe for vada-kari (literal meaning "curry made from vadas") on Srivalli's blog. There I was, with day-old vadas to hand, and there it was, a recipe to use them - like I said, exciting!

I think this particular curry must originaly have come about as a way of using up stale, hard vadas that would not otherwise be edible to most people - the fact that I like to nibble on them is by the way. I'm not most people. Nor are, I suspect, most people me. (It works both ways, as you can see. Hehe.)

Anyway, I changed very little from the original recipe, except perhaps the quantities. Oh, and I omitted the fried gram because I didn't have any, and reduced the quantity of coconut. It was one heck of a tasty curry, and the plump vadas, juicy from soaking up the liquid from the gravy, were delicious. I had them over rice with a simple cabbage-peas dry curry. Yum-my. Thank you, Srivalli's mother, for providing the recipe for vada-kari.

Man, do I love ever my fellow-food bloggers and their wide variety of homespun recipes! Long live the Internet, I say.

Recipe for: Vada-kari (lentil fritters in tomato-coconut gravy)
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Ingredients:

About 8 day-old paruppu vadas (baked or fried)
1 medium tomato, chopped
1 medium onion, chopped fine
1 tsp ginger-garlic, grated
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3 tsp oil
Salt to taste
Coriander leaves for garnish

For the ground masala:
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1/2 tsp fennel/saunf
1 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp poppy seeds
1/4 tsp cumin seeds
1/2" piece cinnamon stick
2 cloves
3-5 fresh green chillies
5 cashewnuts
5-6 coconut pieces, each about 2cm long (or 2 tbsp grated coconut)

Method:

1. Heat one tsp of oil and fry all the ingredients for the ground masala till aromatic.
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Add the coconut pieces/grated coconut and stir-fry for another two minutes, then remove to a plate and set aside to cool.
2. Heat the other tsp of oil and fry the tomatoes till they are mushy. Set aside to cool.
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3. Once they are all cool, grind the fried ingredients and the tomatoes to a smooth paste using a little warm water if necessary. Reserve.
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4. Now heat the remaining oil and add the ginger-garlic paste, stirring for 30 seconds or so.
5. Then add the onions and fry till they become soft and turn pale brown.
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6. Next, add the ground masala paste and stir it in,
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adding a cupful of water.
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You can add a little more water at this stage, depending on how many vadas you have.
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5. Bring to a gentle boil over medium heat and simmer the gravy for 5 minutes or so, till it comes together and starts to thicken.
6. Drop the vadas into the gravy now and simmer the curry for 2-3 minutes, spooning the gravy over the vadas occasionally, if necessary.
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Garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot with idlis or dosas, or over rice if you like. Add a dry vegetable curry for a complete meal.
Note: If the curry sits for a while, the vadas will absorb the moisture and make the curry very thick.

RECIPE: VADA-KARI (LENTIL FRITTERS IN TOMATO-COCONUT GRAVY)

Ingredients:
About 8 day-old paruppu vadas (baked or fried)
1 medium tomato, chopped
1 medium onion, chopped fine
1 tsp ginger-garlic paste
3 tsp oil
Salt to taste
Coriander leaves for garnish

For the ground masala:
1/2 tsp fennel/saunf
1 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp poppy seeds
1/4 tsp cumin seeds
1/2" piece cinnamon stick
2 cloves
3-5 fresh green chillies
5 cashewnuts
5-6 coconut pieces, each about 2cm long (or 2 tbsp grated coconut)

Method:
1. Heat one tsp of oil and fry all the ingredients for the ground masala till aromatic. Add the coconut pieces/grated coconut and stir-fry for another two minutes, then remove to a plate and set aside to cool.
2. Heat the other tsp of oil and fry the tomatoes till they are mushy. Set aside to cool.
3. Once they are all cool, grind the fried ingredients and the tomatoes to a smooth paste using a little warm water if necessary. Reserve.
4. Now heat the remaining oil and add the ginger-garlic paste, stirring for 30 seconds or so.
5. Then add the onions and fry till they become soft and turn pale brown.
6. Next, add the ground masala paste and stir it in, adding a cupful of water. You can add a little more water at this stage, depending on how many vadas you have.
5. Bring to a gentle boil over medium heat and simmer the gravy for 5 minutes or so, till it comes together and starts to thicken.
6. Drop the vadas into the gravy now and simmer the curry for 2-3 minutes, spooning the gravy over the vadas occasionally, if necessary.
Garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot with idlis or dosas, or over rice if you like. Add a dry vegetable curry for a complete meal.
Note: If the curry sits for a while, the vadas will absorb the moisture and make the curry very thick.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Poached egg curry

I’m no photographer, so even the most beautiful looking food becomes a little less beautiful seen through my camera lens – oh all right, a LOT less beautiful. So when it comes to food that isn’t straightforward, fuss-free food porn fodder, I really don’t stand a chance at making it look pretty. All I can promise is that it will taste great – like this poached egg curry I made. Original recipe here

I was in a rush and didn’t have the time to let the gravy boil down to the sort of thicker consistency I wanted, so I quickly whisked a beaten egg into the gravy to thicken it. Well, that worked fine, but what I hadn’t foreseen was that the beaten egg would make the gravy look like… well, let’s just say not particularly aesthetic.

Food porn to the eyes it wasn't, sisters (and the odd occasional brother)… but it was food porn for the palate, that’s fer sure. I probably wouldn’t serve this curry to guests as such, but it’ll do just fine for family and good friends! (That’s because they’ll have to love you to want to try this - ok, slight exaggeration):o) seriously, though, it’s good comfort food.

Recipe for:
Poached egg curry

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Ingredients:

4 eggs
2 onion, chopped
2 tomatoes, chopped
1/4 cup light coconut milk
1/4 tsp turmeric powder
1/2 tsp garam masala
1/2 chilli powder
3/4 tsp black peppercorns
1 tsp coriander seeds
1/2 tsp white poppy seeds (khus-khus)
1 tsp fennel seeds (saunf)
1 tsp mustard seeds
1/2 tsp urad dal
A few curry leaves
1 tbsp chopped coriander
2 tsp oil
1 cup water (or as required)
Salt to taste

Method:

1. Grind the coriander seeds, poppy seeds (khus-khus), fennel and black pepper to a fine powder.

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Mix with 1 cup water and set aside.

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2. Heat the oil in a pan, add mustard seeds and urad dal, cover and let the mustard splutter. Then add the curry leaves and chopped onions. Fry till the onion becomes soft and light brown.

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3. Now add the chopped tomatoes and fry till it becomes soft.

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4. Add chilli powder, garam masala and turmeric powder and fry for 30 seconds, stirring.

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5. Mix the coconut milk with the ground-masala water from Step 1.

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Add salt to taste and mix well.

6. Pour this in the pan,

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let it come to a boil,

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then break the eggs gently, one by one, into the gravy.

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7. Do not stir the gravy after this, but let it come to a gentle simmer and keep it on medium heat for 5-6 minutes, or till the eggs are cooked.

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8. Garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot with plain rice or pulao.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Sesame-seed and jaggery poli (sweet stuffed chapatis, in other words)

I used to think that poli was a South Indian recipe, until I found out that Maharashtrians make it for Makar Sankranti (harvest festival) - which necessitated a change in my world view somewhat, because people from the four Southern Indian States consider Maharashtra and Mumbai-ites to be North Indians... whereas people from the North India consider Maharashtrians to be more South Indian than north.

It doesnt help that Marathi as a language and its script are so much closer to Hindi and its script and not in the least like Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada or Telugu. All very confusing.

But to get back to the delights of poli... I might have mentioned this before, but I like coconut in very, very few sweet dishes. Poli isnt one of them dishes. So when I came across a recipe for poli that seemed different from the norm because of the stuffing ingredients - it contained sesame seeds but very little gram/chickpea flour and not any chana dal at all (cooked chana dal stuffing is what I've had thus far) - I was pleased. I love the taste of sesame in savoury and sweet dishes, so that was another plus.

I have to say that the poli made this way didnt stay soft for long. The traditional ones I've had, with mashed cooked gram dal & jaggery filling, are meltingly soft and delicious, especially with a dollop of ghee on top. The sesame-seed poli I made were delicious too, but - have I said this before? - not soft. Still, that didnt stop me scarfing them down, so I guess it's worth putting up the recipe.

If anybody wants to know how to make them soft... they'll have to look elsewhere for the answer. And if anybody does find the answer, would they be kind enough to pass on the info to me too, pleeeeeeeeeeeeease?

Recipe for:
Sesame seed and jaggery poli (slightly adapted from Cuisine Cuisine)




Ingredients:

For the stuffing:

1 cup jaggery, powdered
1 htbsp gram/chickpea flour
1 tsp cooking oil
1 tbsp poppy seeds
2 tbsp white sesame seeds
1/4 tsp cardamom seeds, powdered

For the poli:

2 cups plain flour
1 cup wholewheat flour
1 tbsp warmed oil
1/4 tsp salt
Warm water as required for making the dough

Plain flour for dusting
Ghee for shallow-frying

Method:

1. Make a soft but not sticky dough with the poli ingredients. Let it rest covered for about 30 minutes.

2. Heat 1 tsp oil in a little pan and roast the gram flour, stirring constantly, until the raw smell is gone (about a minute). Be careful not to burn the flour. Set aside to cool.

3. Roast the poppy seeds and sesame seeds on dry heat over medium flame till they start to turn golden. Grind these in a spice of coffee mill, together with the cardamom powder, into a fine powder. Mix with the roasted gram flour and reserve.

4. Put the powdered jaggery in a bowl, sprinkle a tsp of water, and melt in the microwave for a 45 seconds. Take it out and give it a stir. If it needs to melt a bit more - ie, if there are any dry bits - put it back in the microwave for 20 seconds. Dont overcook it by microwaving it for too long.

5. Quickly mix the sesame-poppy seed powder with the jaggery, making sure it's thoroughly mixed. Set aside to cool.

To make the poli:

6. Knead the dough well, then make small balls (slightly smaller than a golf ball).

7. Roll out two balls into palm-sized circles.

8. Sprinkle some of the filling all over one dough circle (break up any lumps with your fingers), then cover it with the other circle.

9. Dust the top with flour and gently roll out the dough circle into a slightly larger circle, so that the filling is sandwiched.

10. Then roll it out some more into a thin round.

11. Heat a tava or frying pan (keep it on medium heat) and transfer the poli to it. Cook for a few seconds on one side, turn it over and smear that side with ghee. Flip it over once again and smear the other side with ghee as well. Shallow fry until the poli begins to get golden brown spots on both sides. Serve warm.

Note: The jaggery will melt in the heat and might ooze out - in that case keep an eye on it so that it doesnt burn. A little extra direct heat gives a caramelly flavour that is very nice, but burnt jaggery is quite awful to smell and taste.