Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Sambar recipe - Fresh Masala

This is the recipe where the masala is ground fresh - not using Sambar Powder

Sambar taste comes from three aspects

  1. The vegetables you use - following are good combinations
    • Okra and shallots (or Red Onions or Peeled Pearl Onions)
    • Drumsticks
    • Shallots (or Red Onions)
    • Daikon or Red Radish (with or without Onions)
    • Baby or small cut potates (with or without onions)
    • Capsicum and onions
  2. Gastronomic elements
    1. Fresh Curry Leaves
    2. Fresh Cilantro leaves
    3. Hing (Asafoetida)
  3. Masala you grind OR Sambar powder

Adding thickeners like Rice flour paste or corn flour etc will spoil the taste of your sambar
Use of Tamrind paste may not give the same taste as fresh Tamrind

Ingredients:

Tamrind ball - Small Lime size
Toor Dal - half a US cup - Dry
Turmeric Powder
Cooking Oil
Mustard Seeds

Masala Ingredients:
  • Red Chillies (mild) 2-3 --> Adjust this per your taste
  • Methi seeds (1/4 tsp)
  • Kasuri Methi dry leaves - 1 tsp - Optional
  • Chana Dal - 1 Table Spoon
  • Fresh Coriander Seeds - 1 Table Spoon
  • Hing - 1 pinch
  • Fresh coconut - 2 table spoons


Cooking Steps:

  1. Cook the Toor Dal in a pressure cooker with a Pinch of turmeric powder
    1. You can substitute with Masoor Dal (same quantity) which can be cooked very quickly in an open vessel
  2. In a microwaveable cup add about half a cup water and heat it for 1-1.5 minutes (very hot)
  3. Drop the Tamrind into the hot water and let it soak for a few minutes (3-5)
  4. Take a large sauce pan - pour the tamrind water into the pan - leave the Tamrind in the cup
  5. Now add cold water to the cup and with your fingers squeeze the tamrind so more juice gets extracted. Pour the juice into the pan. Repeat this once more till all the Tarmind juice is extracted.
  6.  From the above vegetable combination pick what you want and cut into big pieces (about 1 inch long) --> Need about 1- 1.5 cup vegetables
  7. Add the vegetables to the Tamrind juice in the pan and place it on your stove. Add a pinch of Hing and 2 pinches turmeric powder and salt (start with about 1/2 tsp), few curry leaves
    • Watch the pan so the juice doesn’t dry up - add some cold water as needed
    • The job is done when the vegetables are cooked in the juice. You can test with a fork or spoon by pressing on the vegetable pieces to check if it is cooked
    • Turn off the heat when vegetables are cooked.
  8. While the Tamrind juice with the vegetables is cooking you can start in parallel on your masala
  9. To a small pan heat 1-2 tsp of oil - add the Masala ingredients (Except the Coconut) in order and slowly fry them
    • You are done when your methi seeds and Chana Dal turn brown --> if they turn black you have gone too far
  10. Let the masala ingredients cool down; add all the ingredients to a small mixer jar, add the fresh coconut, add about 1/8 cup water and grind them. Grind them coarse to medium fine. Don’t grind to a very fine paste.
  11. When the vegetables in tamrind juice are cooked, add the ground masala AND add the cooked toor/masoor dal to the pan. Add water to the pan to get a thick soup consistency. Start heating the pan till you see little bit of froth on the top - typically 3-4 minutes. Switch off the heat.
  12. In a small pan heat 1 tsp oil and add 1 tsp black mustard seeds - fry till they start spluttering.
  13. Add the mustard seeds with the oil to the sambar.
  14. Add a few fresh curry leaves and 1 tsp freshly chopped Cilantro leaves to the sambar.
  15. Check the salt and add if needed. Ensure you mix it evenly.
  16. Enjoy your Sambar with Dosa, rice, Idli, Vada or whatever else you want to enjoy with.

Variations:
  • Adding half a teaspoon Urad dal also while frying the masala
  • Adding half a teaspoon fresh coriander seeds (RAW) while grinding the masala (in addition to what you fried)
  • Frying the vegetables slightly before adding to Tamrind Juice to cook
  • You can use Kashmiri Chili in place of regular chillies for a deep Red Color and mildness
  • Using Kasuri Methi dry leaves add a great flavor to the masala
  • For people with acid problems you can substitute Tamrind with 2 medium sized tomatoes.



Saturday, June 7, 2014

We made Surati Dal - recipe care of Veg recipes of India and it came out so well that we have made it more than 5-6 times.

http://www.vegrecipesofindia.com/gujarati-surati-dal/

Yesterday we tried the Panhmel Dal ot Pancharatna Dal from the same website and it came out awesome.

http://www.vegrecipesofindia.com/panchmel-dal-panchratna-dal-rajasthani-dal/






Saturday, February 15, 2014

Dal Makhini (with NO Makhan-Butter or cream) using slow cooker or crockpot

A slow cooker or crockpot is your friend when making authentic and nutritious food

Here is a recipe for Dal Makhinii - total about 15 minutes of work

Ingredients:

Whole Urad Dal - 2 cups dry

One large onion chopped
2 tomatoes cut into cubes
Chopped cilantro 1 table spoon


Turmeric powder 1/4 teaspoon
Red chilly powder 1/4 teaspoon
Gram masala 1/2 teaspoon
Amchur powder 1/2 teaspoon
Cooking oil 3-5 teaspoon
Salt per taste

Garlic pearls 2-(optional)
Ginger piece - about half inch (optional)

Cooking the whole Urad

We use the slow cooker overnight to cook the Urals Dal. We have an Aroma rice and slow cooker. You can also use a traditional crockpot.

For two cups Urals dal and 7-8 hours cooking we add 5 cups water. Also add half a teaspoon salt. Based on your model make adjustments and increase or decrease the water. We tend to add more water to avoid burning. see picture below for how it looks in the morning after it is cooked. If you think the water is too much, save the excess cooked water separately.


Finishing the Dal Makhini

Grind the ginger garlic ( note ginger garlic is optional)

Heat a pan and add 2 teaspoons oil and add the ginger garlic paste. After light frying of the paste in a minute add the chopped onions. Add 2 teaspoons of oil to the onion and fry till tender and translucent. Add the tomatoes, turmeric, red chilly and gram masala and 2 teaspoon oil. Fry till the onion tomatoes and the spices have become mushy.

Turn off the heat and add the Amchur and cilantro and mix for a minute.

Pour over the cooked Urad dal and mix well, adjust any salt required. Simmer for 3-4 minutes. Add any excess cooked water or regular water to adjust consistency. Dal Makhini is ready to be served with your choice of roti/paratha/rice.

Tips:

We found that our rice cooker has a High mode. With this mode the Urals dal cooks in 2-3 hours. So if you are in a rush use this mode.

With some experimentation of pre-soaking and using a pressure cooker it should be possible to cook the Urals dal. However the slow cooker will not make your Urad dal completely pasty

Do not add Rajma to slow cooker with Urals dal as there are a couple of website showing release of toxins at low heat. If you want Rajma in your Dal Makhini cook traditionally at high heat in a pressure cooker and add.

The urad dal creates a sticky texture when cooked and tastes creamy. You don't need butter or cream to make it taste good. If you want to be fancy after the dish is ready you can melt small quantity butter (1-2) teaspoon and add to the Dal before serving.





Friday, February 14, 2014

One of my hobbies is to try out new recipes from various sources. In a world of YouTube cooking videos to Cooking blogs from all over the world, cooks books have become obsolete.

I want to capture from time to time my experiments with cooking with due credit to the authors.

Today we made Home made Pav Bhaji masala. The store bought versions are good and very typical, this recipe came out extremely well. It can also be used for various subjis to add flavor.

This is the second time we made this masala at home. If you have all the ingredients the preparation time is about 5 minutes and will last you a month. Hope you enjoy it as well.

http://kitchenserenity.blogspot.com/2013/05/home-made-pav-bhaji-masala-powder.html

Namaste

I am starting this blog to capture my thoughts on philosophy as I hear or read from various sources.

From the 'Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna'

As Swami Ramakrishna says that you can put down the number 1 and follow with many zeros. But if you remove the number 1 then the zeros fall apart. One has to realize God first. Everything else comes later. Without the God realization everything else is a waste.