Today is December 06. St. Nicolas Day!
On the 5th children are supposed to leave shoes outside their doors. At night St. Nicolas comes and leaves gifts for good children.
Now see what he has left for me.
And why is this super-cutie on my food blog?
Heh heh he! I did not understand that he is made of chocolate before seeing this:
Too cute to eat! Isn't he?
Welcome, reader, and thanks for stopping by! I have recently started my vegan journey and resumed writing about my food experiences after a real long lapse! The shift in my lifestyle and attitude will surely be reflected in my blog. I am glad that my pleasure won't cause pain to another sentient being, a non-human person. I regret that I did not understand speciesism earlier. Better late than never! By the way, I usually don't follow a recipe!
Monday, December 6, 2010
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Our Grand Breakfast
What more could I ask for?
Here my day starts with fish.
We usually have salmon , prawn and the other one, I am yet to ask them its name, as you see below:
Then we have different varieties of Salami:
And we have wonderfull breads:
Here also, I lack knowledge required to introduce each one to you but I will learn soon.
Then we have fruits:
And cheese:
mmmm.... yummy!
There are endless varieties of flavoured youghurt. Strawberry is my favourite.
And then fruit juices, milk and cornflakes.
One can choose from scrambled- or boiled eggs. Last but not the least, there are sausages, too. A great start for the day! What say?
Here my day starts with fish.
We usually have salmon , prawn and the other one, I am yet to ask them its name, as you see below:
Then we have different varieties of Salami:
And we have wonderfull breads:
Here also, I lack knowledge required to introduce each one to you but I will learn soon.
Then we have fruits:
And cheese:
mmmm.... yummy!
There are endless varieties of flavoured youghurt. Strawberry is my favourite.
And then fruit juices, milk and cornflakes.
One can choose from scrambled- or boiled eggs. Last but not the least, there are sausages, too. A great start for the day! What say?
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Kartoffeln mit Speck!
Finally I had it! And I loved it!
---- Kartoffeln mit Speck und Knoblauchsauce
Karttofel means 'potato'. Germans, like us, love potato and have many mouthwatering but simple recipes with it as the main ingredient. See, they have built a whole potato cottage and a cute little potato-darling is inviting you in.
Inside there were many other options but I went for Kartoffel mit Speck because I always wanted to taste it. Most of my friends love it. But doesn't it look exactly like our beloved 'alur dom'? (Alu= potato; 'alur dom' is a very popular Bengali dish. )
---- Kartoffeln mit Speck und Knoblauchsauce
Karttofel means 'potato'. Germans, like us, love potato and have many mouthwatering but simple recipes with it as the main ingredient. See, they have built a whole potato cottage and a cute little potato-darling is inviting you in.
Inside there were many other options but I went for Kartoffel mit Speck because I always wanted to taste it. Most of my friends love it. But doesn't it look exactly like our beloved 'alur dom'? (Alu= potato; 'alur dom' is a very popular Bengali dish. )
Friday, November 26, 2010
The Star-Lotus Eaters
Not just in the poem of Tennyson or in the short story of Maugham, there are lotus eaters among us also.
---- A Lady Selling Shapla Flowers at Lake Market, Rasbehari Avenue, Kolkata
This flower is called 'shaluk' or 'shapla' in Bengali. It is not lotus but some tiny sister of lotus, as you can see the similarity. This adorns the ponds of Bengal in villages and can mainly found in two colours: white and pinkish red. Shapla is the national flower of Bangladesh.
I must admit I do not lnow how they cook it. I have not yet got the opportunity to taste it either.
---- A Lady Selling Shapla Flowers at Lake Market, Rasbehari Avenue, Kolkata
This flower is called 'shaluk' or 'shapla' in Bengali. It is not lotus but some tiny sister of lotus, as you can see the similarity. This adorns the ponds of Bengal in villages and can mainly found in two colours: white and pinkish red. Shapla is the national flower of Bangladesh.
I must admit I do not lnow how they cook it. I have not yet got the opportunity to taste it either.
The Puja Gourmet! ;P
What would have happened to atheists like me if Prasad were not there in Pujas?
How could I possibly take part in the festivities if the feast were not there? Thankfully it is quite an important part (actually the only important part for me)in our pujas. Why so? You can easily understand just throwing a glance at what my mom's goddess has on her plate eveyday:
So, just for my mom's daily tiny Puja, we have here,
Narkoler narhu
Tiler narhu
Khoier moa
Kadma
Batasa
Chal-kola
Khejur
Guava
Banana
Usually my mom also gets sweets, in addition, and all seasonal fruits. So, you can imagine what happens in the large-scale pujas like Durgapuja organised by the local clubs or Saraswati pujas in schools. Oh! Sitting all classmaltes together on a row with banana leaves in front of us and khichuri, begun bhaja, bandhkopir tarkari, mishti doi, rasogolla appearing on it one after thee other --- makes me so nostalgic (read:drooling). Saraswati puja happens usually end January. The weather is wonder full with winter leaving and spring approaching. The fragrance of Shiuli flower (also of the food ;P)is in the air.
Durga puja Prasad was forbidden for us because father was atheist at home. (Actually all sorts of Prasad were forbidden but Goddess Saraswati, the Puja and all related fun used to take place in school, so naturally beyond the reach of the home ministry.)Usualy young members of the local Puja-commitee or club used to distribute Prasad-packets door-to-door. Had they ever come across father unfortunately, either the Prasad had been rudely refused with the door slammed on the poo boy's face or it had to go directly to the bin but to stomach when, rarely though, we managed to open the door. The Puja khichuri, with a big piece of potato in it, and the ladrha (the special mixed vegetable curry)always has a very special taste for me.
The Pooja feast is always strictly vegetarian for us. Even onoin and garlic cannot be added to any dish since those are non-veg.:) And no masoor daal which is also non-vegetarian.
How could I possibly take part in the festivities if the feast were not there? Thankfully it is quite an important part (actually the only important part for me)in our pujas. Why so? You can easily understand just throwing a glance at what my mom's goddess has on her plate eveyday:
So, just for my mom's daily tiny Puja, we have here,
Narkoler narhu
Tiler narhu
Khoier moa
Kadma
Batasa
Chal-kola
Khejur
Guava
Banana
Usually my mom also gets sweets, in addition, and all seasonal fruits. So, you can imagine what happens in the large-scale pujas like Durgapuja organised by the local clubs or Saraswati pujas in schools. Oh! Sitting all classmaltes together on a row with banana leaves in front of us and khichuri, begun bhaja, bandhkopir tarkari, mishti doi, rasogolla appearing on it one after thee other --- makes me so nostalgic (read:drooling). Saraswati puja happens usually end January. The weather is wonder full with winter leaving and spring approaching. The fragrance of Shiuli flower (also of the food ;P)is in the air.
Durga puja Prasad was forbidden for us because father was atheist at home. (Actually all sorts of Prasad were forbidden but Goddess Saraswati, the Puja and all related fun used to take place in school, so naturally beyond the reach of the home ministry.)Usualy young members of the local Puja-commitee or club used to distribute Prasad-packets door-to-door. Had they ever come across father unfortunately, either the Prasad had been rudely refused with the door slammed on the poo boy's face or it had to go directly to the bin but to stomach when, rarely though, we managed to open the door. The Puja khichuri, with a big piece of potato in it, and the ladrha (the special mixed vegetable curry)always has a very special taste for me.
The Pooja feast is always strictly vegetarian for us. Even onoin and garlic cannot be added to any dish since those are non-veg.:) And no masoor daal which is also non-vegetarian.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Building Kebap Connection
---- The Very Popular Döner: One of the Celebrities Among Snacks
Even before I have realised, I became a frequent visitor to Germany's possibly the most popular turkish food chain. One possible reason is that it reminds me of shawarma I used to have from Kerala food joints on Bangalore streets.
Usually I have a small portion like a Döner-viertel (quarter) or a halb (half) there but today I had a dinner.
Just have a look:
This looked like chicken and vegetable stew to me but my companion cried, "Looks exactly like Saambar!" No comments!
And these were complementary with this:
Quite a lot for one tiny stomach like mine! Right?
Labels:
Chicken,
Europa,
German dishes,
Non-veg,
turkish food
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
On Königstraße, Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof
I never thought I would find something like this on Königstraße.
This looks so so so spicy.
No I have not yet tasted it. It looks too spicy even for the feast for my eyes.
It is cheese-pepper salat with onion rings. really eye catching with yellow and red peppers.
And look at this.
Doesn't this look like paneer curry. It is sheep milk cheese. Paneer is cottage cheese. Only after tasting it I can tell you, if it is paneer from sheep milk or not. It's a Corsican dish cooked in olive oil, with garlic and some selected herbs. Looks yummy and good for vegetarians!
And this is Peperoni from southern France:
There were innumerable examples like these on Königstraße posing as an unbearable contrast to people begging,though not for mere food, I am sure, and not really comparable to my poor motherland. But still, affluence and wealth at one hand and people asking for money on the other, did create a very disturbing cohabitation for me.
Poverty exists eveywhere, though not always equally acute.
----- A Foodstore on Königstraße
This looks so so so spicy.
No I have not yet tasted it. It looks too spicy even for the feast for my eyes.
It is cheese-pepper salat with onion rings. really eye catching with yellow and red peppers.
And look at this.
Doesn't this look like paneer curry. It is sheep milk cheese. Paneer is cottage cheese. Only after tasting it I can tell you, if it is paneer from sheep milk or not. It's a Corsican dish cooked in olive oil, with garlic and some selected herbs. Looks yummy and good for vegetarians!
And this is Peperoni from southern France:
There were innumerable examples like these on Königstraße posing as an unbearable contrast to people begging,though not for mere food, I am sure, and not really comparable to my poor motherland. But still, affluence and wealth at one hand and people asking for money on the other, did create a very disturbing cohabitation for me.
Poverty exists eveywhere, though not always equally acute.
----- A Foodstore on Königstraße
Friday, November 12, 2010
Maultaschensuppe -- Swabian Pockets!
Gaisburger Marsch
Bandnudeln in Schinken-Sahnesauce! That was my first dinner in Germany. And I fell in love with German food. Love at first taste? Yeahhh!
Mostly I eat Gaisburger Marsch at dinner.
This is a soup with potato and softcooked beef and these noodles. This is really light and gives me energy and refreshes me at the end of the day.
And yesterday at lunch I had Lachsfilet mit Kartoffeln: salmon fish fillet with potato.
Mostly I eat Gaisburger Marsch at dinner.
This is a soup with potato and softcooked beef and these noodles. This is really light and gives me energy and refreshes me at the end of the day.
And yesterday at lunch I had Lachsfilet mit Kartoffeln: salmon fish fillet with potato.
Labels:
beef,
Deutsche Küche,
German dishes,
Non-veg,
soup
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Putencurry mit Reis
As far as food is concerned, I am having a blast here.
At breakfast I usually have fish. Incredible! Also I can have boiled- and/or scrambled egg, salami, sausages. There is a wonderful variety of breads always. And cheese, of course!
At lunch we have innumerable variety at much cheaper rate. I can have salads, beef, duck, fish etc. There are desserts, different types of rice.
This is Putencurry mit Reis, one of my favourites among dinner-dishes.
It is turkey. The taste is subtle, not spicy at all. I felt it was cooked with butter.
After a long time my taste buds are having solace.
c
At breakfast I usually have fish. Incredible! Also I can have boiled- and/or scrambled egg, salami, sausages. There is a wonderful variety of breads always. And cheese, of course!
At lunch we have innumerable variety at much cheaper rate. I can have salads, beef, duck, fish etc. There are desserts, different types of rice.
This is Putencurry mit Reis, one of my favourites among dinner-dishes.
It is turkey. The taste is subtle, not spicy at all. I felt it was cooked with butter.
After a long time my taste buds are having solace.
c
Labels:
Deutsche Küche,
German dishes,
Non-veg,
Putencurry,
Turkey with rice
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Rajasthan on My Plate
Wow! Lot of new things on my plate. Lot of fun for my taste buds.
Gatthe ki sabji
baajri ki khichdi
daal baati churma
makke ki roti
kaadi
muttar paneer
aloo bhujia
And many other dishes which I cannot name.
After a long time I had samosa and lassi, too.
Mostly vegetarian.
Still quite a lot for a short trip. Don´t you agree?
I will try to üplöad pictures next time.
Gatthe ki sabji
baajri ki khichdi
daal baati churma
makke ki roti
kaadi
muttar paneer
aloo bhujia
And many other dishes which I cannot name.
After a long time I had samosa and lassi, too.
Mostly vegetarian.
Still quite a lot for a short trip. Don´t you agree?
I will try to üplöad pictures next time.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Patol-alur Tarkari
This is a traditional, popular, common, daily, homely Bengali vegetable curry. The description may sound too long with too many adjectives but this is really simple and quick to cook. Patol is pointed gourd. Alu means potato. So, this is a curry of pointed gourd and potato.
Ingredients:
Pointed gourd – 250 gm
Potato – one medium
Cumin seeds – one fourth of a tea spoon
Coriander seeds (optional)
Green chilly
Bay leaf -- one
Ginger powder – a pinch
Turmeric powder – half a teaspoon
Cumin powder – one tea spoon
Mustard oil (or sun flower oil)
How to do it:
Peel and cut ponted gourds as in the picture above
Heat mustard oil in a pan until the smell goes and the colour changes.
Add bay leaf torn into two pieces, cumin seeds, chopped green chilly.
Add potato immediately. Sauté a little till it turns light brown.
Add pointed gourd. Add salt. Stir well to mix. Let it sauté until the fragrant smell of fried pointed gourd starts coming.
Add turmeric, cumin powder, ginger powder. Mix well by stirring. Stir and cook for about ten minutes. Add water. Cover and let it cook till the vegetables are softened.
Serve with steamed rice.
Ingredients:
Pointed gourd – 250 gm
Potato – one medium
Cumin seeds – one fourth of a tea spoon
Coriander seeds (optional)
Green chilly
Bay leaf -- one
Ginger powder – a pinch
Turmeric powder – half a teaspoon
Cumin powder – one tea spoon
Mustard oil (or sun flower oil)
How to do it:
Peel and cut ponted gourds as in the picture above
Heat mustard oil in a pan until the smell goes and the colour changes.
Add bay leaf torn into two pieces, cumin seeds, chopped green chilly.
Add potato immediately. Sauté a little till it turns light brown.
Add pointed gourd. Add salt. Stir well to mix. Let it sauté until the fragrant smell of fried pointed gourd starts coming.
Add turmeric, cumin powder, ginger powder. Mix well by stirring. Stir and cook for about ten minutes. Add water. Cover and let it cook till the vegetables are softened.
Serve with steamed rice.
Ladies Finger Curry
Ingredients:
Panch phorhon (methi, sonf, radhuni, mustard seeds, nigella seeds together: very typical of Bengal)
Or nigella seeds – one fourth of a tea spoon (if panch phoron is not available)
Green chilly
Ginger powder – a pinch
Ladies finger 250gm – cut in cubes
Mustard oil
Salt
Sugar - a pinch
How to make it:
Heat the oil until the smell goes and the colour changes.
Add pach forhan to the oil. Add ladies finger. Add salt.
Sauté. Add turmeric powder, ginger powder. Stir and cook for five minute. Add very little water. Cover. Cook on low heat until the vegetable is softened.
Kolar bora
Kola means banana. I would like to translate this as ‘banana sweet pakora.’
Ingredients:
Five big bananas
Half a coconut (medium sized) – finely grated
Sugar (according to your taste)
Cardamom 5/6 crushed/ powder, even better
Cinnamon powder – 2 pinches
Sunflower oil (Virgin coconut oil can also be used.)
Flour, to make the mixture tight. (according to the requirement)
How to make it:
Mash the bananas into a fine pulp.
Add coconut, cardamom and cinnamon powder, sugar. Mix very well.
Add flour and mix it by continuously stirring to prevent the flour from forming lumps.
Now heat the oil in a frying pan.
Take the mixture in a teaspoon and dip into the oil.
Fry by turning it from one side to another until it is golden brown.
Enjoy your snacks.
Ingredients:
Five big bananas
Half a coconut (medium sized) – finely grated
Sugar (according to your taste)
Cardamom 5/6 crushed/ powder, even better
Cinnamon powder – 2 pinches
Sunflower oil (Virgin coconut oil can also be used.)
Flour, to make the mixture tight. (according to the requirement)
How to make it:
Mash the bananas into a fine pulp.
Add coconut, cardamom and cinnamon powder, sugar. Mix very well.
Add flour and mix it by continuously stirring to prevent the flour from forming lumps.
Now heat the oil in a frying pan.
Take the mixture in a teaspoon and dip into the oil.
Fry by turning it from one side to another until it is golden brown.
Enjoy your snacks.
Labels:
Bengali Food,
Mom's Recipe,
Quick Recipes,
Sweets,
Vegan
I cooked this just for myself. So, the quantity was small.
Ingredients:
I picked up two small bunches of spinach from the supermarket.
In addition I used:
Green peas – two tea spoon
One small potato cut into small pieces
Cumin seeds – half a teaspoon
Ginger powder – a pinch
Cumin powder – half a teaspoo
Turmeric powder – half a teaspoon
Chopped green chilly – one, small
Olive oil – two tea spoon
Salt
How to do it:
1. Sort out the soft spinach leaves from the bunch, clean and shred them. Keep them to one side.
2. Heat up the oil a little.
3. Add Potato and sauté a little.
4. Add cumin seeds and chopped green chilly to it.
5. Now add ginger powder.
6. Add spinach leaves.
7. Add turmeric powder and cumin powder. Stir to mix well.
8. Add peas.
9. Add salt.
10. Cover and let it cook.
Usually you don’t need to add water since the water come out of the ingredients itself will be enough to cook them. Anyways, if you feel that is not enough, add a little and let it cook till the potato is soft enough.
11. Serve with rice or roti.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
The Good Old ‘Homely’ Bengali Murgir Mangsher Jhol and the By-gone Sunday Afternoons
Sunday afternoon! Lunch time! Say..., two o’ clock! Ya, ya! You are right! It was a bit late for lunch. From Monday to Saturday we used to have some dal-tarkari-machh-bhat (lentil soup – vegetable curry- fish-rice) at ten o’ clock in the morning, drag the bi-cycle down along the stairs and rush to school. Sunday was the day for chicken curry or mutton. Murgir mangsher jhol cannot have an exact translation. It means a type of chicken curry. Murgi = chicken, mangsho = meat, jhol = gravy, soup.
Though hard-core non-vegetarian, Bengalis love fish more than anything else. So, meat is much less frequent in a Bengali kitchen. Sometimes I feel that the trend is changing since some lazybones among us are reluctant to take the pain of sorting out the fish bones from the flesh. Oh, look at me!
I have made a fish-talk such a big part of my introduction to chicken curry, murgir mangsher jhol! Such a fishy Bengali I am!
Back to murgir mangsher jhol, we used to buy chicken from local firms, and not broilers. I used to accompany my father to the shops where he used to choose a rooster usually and the shop keeper used to kill it in front of us. I used to be on the verge of crying every time but later, as soon as the fragrance of the curry tickled my nose, I used to forget the sadness of the poor hen’s self-sacrifice for us. The shop-keeper used to clean it and then hand it over to us, without cutting it into pieces which my mom used do. The drumsticks, “murgir thang”, were the most desired and prestigious pieces. One of the two used to be reserved for my father. The left one my little sister and I used to have in turn. I never saw my mom having a drumstick.
I do not usually buy the whole chicken or even those drumsticks any more. We have been educated long back that the breast is the healthiest part of a chicken. Sundays have become much busier. Murgir mangsher jhol is my quick dinner nowadays.
And this is how I did it last Tuesday.
Ingredients:
Chicken – 300 gm
Potato – if available, use 3 / 4 baby potatoes,
Onion – 100 gm
Green chille – 1 (can add more, according to your taste)
Shredded ginger – a pinch
Ginger powder
Tomato – one medium
Green chilly – one big
Marinade the meat in salt, turmeric podwer, ginger powder.
How long?
As long as you take to do the followings:
1) Peel the potatoes
2) Chop a green chilly
3) Chop onion
4) Shred a very small piece of ginger
5) Grate tomato
6) Pour oil into the pan.
7) Fry the potatoes.
8) When they turn golden, add chopped green chilly, chopped onion.
Now get back to your chicken.
9) When the onion turns golden, add the chicken.
10) Stir well. Let it fry. Stir from time to time. Keep the flame medium.(kasao)
11) Add the tomato. Stir to mix it well. (kasao)
12) Add water.
13) Let it cook till the chicken is completely cooked
14) Serve with roti and rice.
Alu borhir tarkari
Ingredients:
One small potato
4/5 borhi
(More if they are small)
One small red onion – finely chopped
One small tomato -- finely chopped
Turmeric powder -- half a tea-spoon
Ginger powder – a pinch
Cumin seeds
Cumin powder -- half a tea-spoon
A small red chilly
Oil
Salt
Sugar – a pinch (optional)
Saute borhi and keep at one side.
Heat oil in a pan.
Add a pinch of cumin seeds to the oil.
Tear a small red chilly into pieces and add that, too.
Add some chopped onion.
Add potato, as the onion turns golden.
Add turmeris poder, ginger powder, cumin powder
Stir everything to mix them well and let the potato get fried a little.
Add salt. Stir a little. Cover with a lid. Let it cook for a few minutes.
Add chopped tomato. Stir and mix it very well.
Add water.
Add borhi.
Bring it to boil.
See if the potato is totally cooked and softened. Boil until the potato is completely done.
(If you add sugar, add it only after the potato is cooked, into the boiling gravy. Let it get mixed well. Done. By the way, I did not add sugar.)
Serve with steamed rice.
One small potato
4/5 borhi
(More if they are small)
One small red onion – finely chopped
One small tomato -- finely chopped
Turmeric powder -- half a tea-spoon
Ginger powder – a pinch
Cumin seeds
Cumin powder -- half a tea-spoon
A small red chilly
Oil
Salt
Sugar – a pinch (optional)
Saute borhi and keep at one side.
Heat oil in a pan.
Add a pinch of cumin seeds to the oil.
Tear a small red chilly into pieces and add that, too.
Add some chopped onion.
Add potato, as the onion turns golden.
Add turmeris poder, ginger powder, cumin powder
Stir everything to mix them well and let the potato get fried a little.
Add salt. Stir a little. Cover with a lid. Let it cook for a few minutes.
Add chopped tomato. Stir and mix it very well.
Add water.
Add borhi.
Bring it to boil.
See if the potato is totally cooked and softened. Boil until the potato is completely done.
(If you add sugar, add it only after the potato is cooked, into the boiling gravy. Let it get mixed well. Done. By the way, I did not add sugar.)
Serve with steamed rice.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Chicken Rice
As I did not have much work, I felt that the day was not so fruitful. Actually, I got bored. So, in order to make myself happy, I decided to prepare myself this tasty gift. But I was tired. So, naturally this recipe is simple, easy and quick to cook.
Ingredients:
(Two servings)
4 chicken drumsticks
400 gm rice (you can use lesser quantity depending on your eating habit)
One medium sized potato – cut as shown in the final product
Onion 100 gm
Green chilli – chopped
Turmeric
Pepper – 1 teaspoon
Ginger powder – half a teaspoon
Cumin powder – half a teaspoon
Garlic – four/five cloves, crushed
Tomato – one small
Salt
Sugar – half a teaspoon (optional)
Cumin seeds – a pinch
Ghee (you are free to use olive- /ground nut- / sun flower oil. Please don’t use mustard- or coconut oil! Bongs and Mallus! Please excuse me!)
Cashew nut, cardamom, bay leaves – optional
If you like it a little too spicy, you can add red chilly powder too.
1) Marinade the chicken with salt, turmeric powder, ginger powder, chilly powder (if you at all use it)
2) Pour half a table spoon ghee in to the pressure cooker
3) Add potatoes
4) As soon as the potatoes start turning golden, add bay leaves and cumin seeds. Wait for a few seconds.
5) Now add chopped onions, garlic and green chilly.
6) As the onion turns golden, add the drumsticks.
7) Cook the drumsticks for some time; stir from time to time and make sure that the flame is not very high/ big otherwise it will burn the onion and other micro elements.
8) While the chicken getting cooked, wash it (But if you think you should soak it for, say half an hour, depending on the rice, then do that earlier.)
9) After the chicken is half cooked and chopped tomato. Stir a little and let the tomato get cooked.
10) Add rice. Now, since rice cooks much faster than chicken you need to know the rice well and understand when to add the rice to ensure the both get cooked together and the rice does not get overcooked. The rice I used needed four whistles to cook.
11) Add water.
12) I turned off the gas burner after four whistles.
13) Let the thing stand for a few minutes and then only open the pressure cooker.
14) Now it is ready to serve. Enjoy your meal.
Chicken with Onion and Pepper: My Own Way
This is one of my quick recipes. I come home in the evening via the supermarket where I pick up something that I can cook without much home and have dinner as soon as possible.
Here is the recipe:--
Ingredients:
Chicken 200gm – cut into very small pieces (I used chicken thigh)
Potato – one small
Onion – 100 grm – finely chopped
Ginger powder half a tea spoon
Garlic – 4/5 cloves crushed
Black pepper powder – two tea spoon (you can add more or less according to your taste.)
Tomato – one very small
Salt
Coconut oil -- one table spoon (you can you sun flower oil, too.)
Marinade the chicken in turmeric, salt, pepper, ginger powder. (I let it stand for half-an-hour.)
Cut the potato into cubes.
Put some of the coconut oil in the pan.
Add the potato cubes and let them fry.
In the meantime chop onion and crush garlic.
As soon as the potato turns golden, add onion and garlic. Stir a little.
When the onion starts turning golden, add the chicken.
Add the rest of the oil.
Cook the chicken by covering it and stirring occasionally.
Chop the tomato into thin slices.
Add the tomato when the chicken is almost done and stir well.
Cover the pan and let it cook till the chicken is softened.
(If you see, it is on the verge of burning, add a little water and cook. I cooked it without adding water. Or if you are a person who cannot eat rice without some gravy, add water.)
Serve with roti or rice.
Bon Appetite!
A Piece of Kerala on My Plate
I visited Kerala to attend a house warming ceremony. The house was located in a remote village. Most of the family members did not speak English. So, they could not talk to me much but they communicated their love for me through food. This is something, I, as an Indian, am very proud of: the hospitality of village people. Atithi (guest) is deva/Narayana (god). For me, as an atithi, it was a very nice food experience worth sharing.
I arrived in the morning. The first thing they made me do was to have this sumptuous breakfast.
I had acchappam, unniappam, idiyappam, and kadala curry, everything cooked in the fragrant coconut oil.
God! Can anybody eat so much?!
‘Unni’ means ‘tiny/small’ in Malayalam, and ‘appam’ rice cake. This sweet round rice cake is made of rice flour, jaggery, plantain, coconut, cardamom and ghee and a very popular snack in Kerala.
It looks similar to aebleskiver of Denmark.
Idiyappam is called string hoppers in English. Nice name. Isn’t it?
It is made of rice flour , salt and water. Idiappams soaked in the gravy of kadala curry or coconut chicken are an experience for the taste buds.
This time I had it with kadala curry which is curry of chick peas. Grated coconut is another main ingredient.
As the English name suggests, a rose cookie or Achchappam resembles a flower. The first morpheme “achch-” in the Malayalam name comes from ‘achu’, a flower shaped iron mould which gives the cookie both its unique name and shape. Achchappams are usually made of very fine rice powder, coconut milk, sugar, gingerly, sesame seeds, and eggs(white only), schallotte juice (option). It is deep fried in coconut oil. It is sweet and very crunchy. It is my personal favourite and more than anywhere else, it tastes better when made by a mom at home in Kerala.
When I left next day, my friend’s mom packed a small heap of achchappam for me.
I am going to make achchapam and idiyappam at home very soon, since my friend has shared the recipes with me. So, more posts on them in near future.
Labels:
Achchappam,
Idiyappam,
Kadala Curry,
Kerala Food,
Unniappam,
Veg Recipes,
Vegan
Paat Shaak
If Mom accompanies me, even a day-out turns into a quite nice food experience. Mom is the person who pampered my taste buds the most and actually spoiled them. Now it is not so easy to satisfy them. On the other hand, it contributed a lot to build my food culture.
This time Mom packed chholar dal (chick pea dal), paat shaak (jute leaves), kankrol bhaja (fried yet-to-find-the-english) and rice for lunch, and luchi & alubhaja for snacks.
I am sure you know ‘Jute’ but did you know that you could make curry of tender jute leaves? Jute is ‘Paat’ in Bengali and tender jute leaves that is edible is called ‘paat shak’.
---- Paat Shaak: the green one in the caserole
Ingredients:
Mustard oil
Kalaunji (kalo jire),
Green chille (chopped)
Ginger paste
Paat shaak i.e. tender jute leaves(shredded)
Turmeric powder
Salt
A little water
How to do it:
Heat mustard oil in a kadai till the color looks lighter and the smell goes.
Add a pinch of Kalauji (kalo jire), and chopped green chille
Add a little ginger paste
Add shak (shredded). Stir a little.
Add turmeric powder
Stir a little so that it get mixed well with the shak
Add salt
Stir.
Let it cook. Do not add water now. Let it get fried a little. And stir so as to fry it uniformly.
Add a little water.
Cover with a lid. Let it cook.
Turn off the oven when the leaved are softened i.e. completely cooked and the water it dried. It is a dry preparation Gravy should not be there.
And chholar dal and kankrol bhaja?
And luchi and alu bhaja?
I will tell you later. Bye bye!
This time Mom packed chholar dal (chick pea dal), paat shaak (jute leaves), kankrol bhaja (fried yet-to-find-the-english) and rice for lunch, and luchi & alubhaja for snacks.
I am sure you know ‘Jute’ but did you know that you could make curry of tender jute leaves? Jute is ‘Paat’ in Bengali and tender jute leaves that is edible is called ‘paat shak’.
---- Paat Shaak: the green one in the caserole
Ingredients:
Mustard oil
Kalaunji (kalo jire),
Green chille (chopped)
Ginger paste
Paat shaak i.e. tender jute leaves(shredded)
Turmeric powder
Salt
A little water
How to do it:
Heat mustard oil in a kadai till the color looks lighter and the smell goes.
Add a pinch of Kalauji (kalo jire), and chopped green chille
Add a little ginger paste
Add shak (shredded). Stir a little.
Add turmeric powder
Stir a little so that it get mixed well with the shak
Add salt
Stir.
Let it cook. Do not add water now. Let it get fried a little. And stir so as to fry it uniformly.
Add a little water.
Cover with a lid. Let it cook.
Turn off the oven when the leaved are softened i.e. completely cooked and the water it dried. It is a dry preparation Gravy should not be there.
And chholar dal and kankrol bhaja?
And luchi and alu bhaja?
I will tell you later. Bye bye!
Labels:
Bengali Food,
leafy vegetables,
lentils,
Mom's Recipe,
Shaaks,
Veg Recipes,
Vegan
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