Friday 29 October 2010

Green Chutney

Green chutney goes with idlis, dosas, vadas even as a side with rice. Always tastes good when made fresh.
Ingredients:
A fist full grated coconut
1 hot green chilli
fistful cilantro leaves
salt to taste
1 pod garlic (optional)
few drops of lime (optional)
few leaves of mint (optional)

Grind very well, the above with very little water. Add a little water to losen the consistency if required. As a varient cant also give a tadka of mustard and curry leaves. The optional items can be tried as varients. Fresh green chutney is ready.

Paripu Vada

Paripu vada just like the quintessential bhajji of the north India is very popular in south India. A popular snack for tea time.
Ingredients:
1 cup chana dal soaked  for 2 hours and then drained
1/2 tsp sweet cumin or saunf
salt to taste
chopped half of an onion
chopped few sprigs of corriander
chopped curry leaves
 finely chopped ginger
3 green chillies
3 dry red chillies
Refined vegetable oil for frying
Coarsely grind the chana dal with some salt and the red and green chillies. Use the pulse option on the grinder. The dough will not be runny but not tough either. Mix the dough with the other chopped items and hing. Make small balls .Using your palms, flatten balls to make vadas with a hole/depression at the centre. Fry till golden brown on both sides. Take out with slotted spoons and keep on paper napkins to absorb excess oil. Serve hot with chutney or ketchup. Tastes good even without accompaniment. Enjoy!

Sadhya Sambar

Sadhya sambar also called varatharucha sambar is made in Kerala for feasts on special occassions like weddings or festivals. It is time consuming as it requires  quite a bit of preperation. But the result is worth the effort. This sambar is a hit with all my friends, Malayalis or not.
Ingredients:
To dry roast and then grind:
1 tbsp (heaped) corriander seeds
1 tbsp urad dal
1 tbsp chana dal
20 dry red chillies (but not the karshmiri kind)
1 1/2 cups grated coconut
2 green chillies
Remaining ingredients:
1/4 to 3/4 cup toor dal
2 large tomatoes
1 small fist of tamarind washed and soaked in water
1 fistful of red shallots roughly chopped.
2 pods garlic
1 tsp red chilli powder
salt per taste
cilantro leaves for garnish (optional)
2 cup of vegetables or your choice-ladys fingers, pumpkin, ash gourd, drum sticks, egg plant, green banana etc are the standard choices. Choose the ones you enjoy.
Tadka:
1 tsp mustard seeds
1 tsp turmeric powder
1 pinch hing
1 pinch fenugreek powder
Curry leaves 1-2 strings
Oil for tadka (any refined veg oil is a good choice. You can try ghee for a special flavour or try 100% pure coconut oil for an authentic Kerala flavour)

Dry roast the ingredients  mentioned and grind to a fine powder. Take care to not burn the ingredients. The coconut should be roasted till its completely dry and brownish and the dals crunchy. If you dont have fenugreek powder, you can add 5-6 fenugreek seeds for dry roasting with other ingredients. Cook the dal with geen chillies and garlic and salt. Heat a pressure cooker and then splutter mustard seeds in it. Then add turmeric powder, hing , curry leaves. Once heated, add chopped shallots. Stir till slightly tender. Add the veggies and 1 tsp red chilli powder and coarsely chopped tomatoes. Stir to coat all veggies well. Heat and stir for about 1 min or so. Add the dal mix well, keep the flame on high. Add the freshly ground dry roasted powder.I Mix well. If you enjoy more sourness, add the juice of soaked tamarind. Add the fenugreek powder (if not in the dry roast ingredients). Check for seasoning.Then close the lid for 1 whistle on high flame. Switch off and after pressure cooker cools, its ready to be enjoyed with fresh steamed rice or idlis. Garnish with chopped cilantro

A varient on this is that you can make it simpler and faster and tasty nevertheless if you dry roast only coconut and dry red chilli (same quantity as above). Combine it with ready made sambar powder available in market while adding to veggies and dal in the cooker.

Another variation is as below:

1.Dal boil in double quantity of water
2.Fry masala;
Heat oil, dry red chillis-6, 3 tbsp coco-grated, small cup of chana dal, 1tsp of coriander seeds,1/2 tsp meethi seeds-saute and grind
Fry shallots , add tomatoes, then add above paste, 1 tsp red chilli pwdr and little turmeric, salt , water
3.Open cook the veggies till soft
Mix the items in above 3 steps in a pan and cook to combine.
Finally add a tadka of mustard, curry leaves with pinch of hing

Saturday 23 October 2010

Parippu payasam

1 cup parripu (yellow split moong dal)
1 block Jaggery
1 tbsp cashew nuts broken
1 tbsp ghee
Elaichi for flavour
Coconut milk of half a coconut
A pinch of salt to balance the taste

Cook the moong dal in some water. You can even pressure cook it. after its cooked, semi-mash it. The mixture should be a soup consistency. Melt jaggery with some water in a heavy pan. Add melted jaggery. Simmer it for 3 minutes or so.  Then add coconut milk and cook for some more for about 2 min or so. Keep stirring (without letting it boil -to prevent curdling). Meanwhile fry the cashews in ghee. Add the cashews with ghee and a pinch of salt into the mix. Flavour with powdered elaichi. Mix well and serve hot.

Chakkara Pongal

A sweet made of rice, moong dal and jaggery.
Ingredients:
1 glass raw rice
1/4 glass yellow split moong dal
1/4 glass ghee
1 tablespoon cashews
1 glass melted jaggery
5-6 pods Elaichi for flavour

Get a pan boiling with water (about 1 glass) , then add the rice and moong. Keep stirring (to prevent burning) till rice and moong are fully cooked and water evaporated . Then add the melted jaggery. Let it cook for 5 min. Meanwhile fry cashew with part of the ghee. Add the fried cashew and remaining ghee. Mix. Stop cooking. Add powdered elaichi last and mix well. Serve hot. Makes a great dessert. Enjoy
Tip: Its easier to powder elachi when mixed with sugar.