- Clean the beans with fresh water, and slice them.
- In a saute pan add oil, once it sarts to shimmer.
- Add the mustard seeds and allow time for it break and realease the flavor.
- Add the red chilli which is recommeneded to be broken up.
- Add the urud dal and let cook until the dal turns a golden brown.
- Add chilli powder.
- Add the beans and let cook.
- Add salt and coconut to the beans and turn to a low heat, mix thoroughly and cover and cook for another 4 minutes.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Beans poriyal
Posted by
Sujith
at
11:24 PM
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Labels: Beans, dish, indian, main course, poriyal
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Fish curry kerala style
Coconut grated 1/2 cup
Chilli powder 3Tsp
1. Cut the fish
2. In a pan add julliene onion and ginger and saute.
3. Add coriander powder and chilli powder
4. Once sauted add oil and saute again.
5. Transfer this mixture to blender with 3floz of water.
7. Add water according to concistency
8. Tfransfer back to pan bring to a simmer
9. Add the fish and let cook covered with the kodam puli.
10. Finish with curry leaves
Posted by
Sujith
at
11:23 PM
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Labels: fish curry, fresh fish, kerala
Monday, August 25, 2008
Rasgulla
Friday, August 22, 2008
Walk in the woods
I am out for a long walk in the woods. It's the call of the appalachian trail which stretches from maine to georgia, but not that i am going to treak the whole stretch but it is just one state that i and my elder brother are planning on completing. This is just to inform that i won't be posting for 2days and will be back with more.
Posted by
Sujith
at
10:01 PM
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Thursday, August 21, 2008
Potato Cakes
Ingrediens for the potato cakes
Potato cakes garnished with tamato wedges and mint spring
This is a recipe that my wife handed over to me, she is a expert in cooking with various ingredients and also a great cook herself. This idea came to her with a lot of trail and error that has worked wonders at home that my daughter who is just about to be 2 years this september demands at the top of her voice that she be pampered with potato cakes.
INGREDIENTS:
Flour 1 Cup
Black pepper 1 Tbsp
Jeera (cumin) 1 Tsp
Mint leaves 1/2 CUP
Spinach 1/2 CUP
Potato 1 ea
Curry leaves 4ea
Coriender leaves 1/2 bunch
Salt 1/2 Tsp
Ghee (Clarfied butter) 1Cup
Method:
1. First boil the potato and remove the skin
2. Add flour, black pepper, Jeera.
3. Cut the mint leaf, spinach, curry leaves, coriender leaf into tiny bits and add together with the salt and add to the mixture, and mix thoroughly.
4. In a nonstick pan add 2 tbsp of ghee and gently drop the mixture of potato which needs to be flattened into the form of a cake.
5. Cook for 3minutes on each side till it attains a even golden brown colour
6. Add ghee accordingly as you make new batches.
It is advisable to add vegetables like carrots, cabbage (chop) into the mixture, as the kids are going to enjoy it as there is mint, jeera and this is a great source of protein and carbohydrates.
Posted by
Sujith
at
10:42 PM
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Labels: indian, potato cakes, snack, south Indian
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Mango Pulisheri
Indian cuisine has a varied sense of taste, smell, and mouth feel. It is absolutely mouth water when you have a little bit of sweetness, tangyness, spiceness all in one dish coming at you from every sides from the taste perspective.
Mangoes are in ambundance through out south India and across various states. The aroma of a ripe mango or for that instance even a mango grove can be distinguished when you land in any vegetable maket in India. The flavor profile of a mango be it ripe or unripe has been enhanced in the cooking methods of people from different states in India. Here is a dish that would have your craving for more.
Ingredients:
Mango 2ea
Salt tt
Chilli powder 2tsp
Sugar 2tsp
Yoghurt 1.5 cups
Green chilli 2ea (cut into halfs)
Method:
1. Select medium ripe mango and cut them into bite size pieces.
2. In a pot cook the bite size pieces of mango with salt, chilli powder, green chilli & sugar with 1.5 cups of water.
3. Cook until the pieces seem to break apart.
4. Whip the yoghurt in a blender.
5. If the mangos are cooked turn off and let cool.
6. It is the right temperature to add the yoghut to the mango when it is hot enough to the touch.
7. Mix thoroughly.
For the tempering:
Mustard 1/2tsp
Curry leaves 7leaves ea
Dry red chilli 4ea (break up)
Oil 2tsp
To temper in a hot pan add oil, once it starts to shimmer, add the mustard and let it crack then add the curry leaves and the red chillis broken up and then add the mango mixture to it and mix everything together.
It is time to serve. It is going to be a great dish which would be great with rice, or roti.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Dry Fish Curry
Fish is abundant in India. It is a staple diet of the people of Keral which is a state to the southern part of India. This is a state that is rich in greenery and has a high litracy rate. Here fish is preserved in different ways, by salt curing, sun dried are a few of the techniques used by its inhabitants to preserve their catch.
Kerala fish curry is truly exceptional with taste and the method of preperation. The recipe and the method that i am going to show here is not time consuming and also has a levage to alternations to the process.
Ingredients:
Dry fish 1#
Coconut 1/2 ea
Kodam puli (gamboge) 4ea
Greend chilli cut 5ea
Turmeric 1tsp
Coriender powder 3tsp
Chilli powder 3tsp
Potato (dice or matchstick pieces) 1ea
Coconut Oil or veg oil 5tsp
Salt tt
Method:
1. Wash the dry fish and keep aside
2. Boil the kodam puli in 1/2 cup water to extact the juices for about 5 mintues.
3. In a pan add the dry fish, coconut,coriender powder, chillipowder, green chilli and tumeric and the kodampuli with the juices, potato and salt (if it is salted fish please avoid salt)with the oil.
4. Close with a lid and let cook on low heat for about 15 minutes.
You must be wondering, why do i have to put everything together and cook, but trust me on this it is a experience that you are going to enjoy.
There can be a few variations done to the process. If you are unsure of what kodam puli is, it can be substituted with un-ripe mango. Another variation can be adding plantain jardiniere (finger cut) that can be added instead of the potato or also along with the potato in equal proportion.
Posted by
Sujith
at
10:13 PM
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Labels: dish, fish curry, indian, kerala, kodam puli, puli
Monday, August 18, 2008
A sweet treat, called, Pooran poli or Holige& Obbattu in Kannada
I must admit my wife is a expert in making holige. I can tell this proudly as, i have seen her mother, aunts and relative, asking for tips on making holige. It is a dessert that is savored by every state in India. Towards the north of India it is known as Pooran poli and towards the south Holige or Obbattu.
The Ingredients are:
Channa dal 1 cup
Jaggery 1 cup
Cardamom 1 tsp
Maida 1.5 cups
Coconut grated 1/2 ea
Turmeric pinch
Oil 1 tsp
Salt a pinch
Method:
1. Maida flour, salt and turmeric needs to be mixed with water to make a dough
2. Add oil to the dough and knead well.
3. Let rest for 1 hour, cover with a parchment paper.
4. Cook the channa dal and cardamom with 1/2 cup water (just about 3/4th doneness)
5. Mash the Jaggery.
6. In a bowl put the jaggery and melt it 3/4th.
7. Add the channa dal to the jaggery mixture.
8. Add the grated coconut mix it thoroughly and let bind.
9. Blend the mixture in a blender.
10. Prepare small balls of the dough that has been resting. (flatten it with your hands)
11. Place the mixture of jaggery, coconut, dal (double the amount as that of the dough), in the centre of the flattened dough.
12. Wrap the dough over this mixture and flatten it.
13. On low heat place the flattened dough on a non-stick pan.
14. Cook on each side until you see even golden color.
This is going to be a treat for you and for your family.
Posted by
Sujith
at
9:29 PM
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Labels: holige, obbattu, pooran poli, sweet
Sunday, August 17, 2008
A feast with snowcrab.
This is the final product once cooked
A recipe which is easy and worth the treat for your taste buds.
Posted by
Sujith
at
8:41 PM
0
comments
Labels: Cooking, Crab, crabmeat, doubleboiler, grilling
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Vada snack
Posted by
Sujith
at
9:06 PM
1 comments
Labels: dish, indian, indian dishes, southinidan, vada