White Kadala Curry/ Chickpeas Curry - Kerala Style




This is a delicious curry, it brings fond memories of my friend Mariam who use to bring this curry with puttu for lunch. 

Ingredients 

1.1/2 Cups Chickpeas / Kabuli Chana - boiled
1 Teaspoon Ginger Garlic paste
1 Medium  Onion - finely c
hopped
1 Medium Tomato - finely chopped
1 Green Chillies - finely chopped
3 Tablespoons Oil
A Sprig Curry leaves
1/2 Teaspoon Mustard seeds
2 Teaspoons Meat Masala powder
1 Teaspoon Red Chilly powder
1 Teaspoon Coriander powder
1/4 Teaspoon Turmeric powder

2 Tablespoon Coriander leaves -  chopped
Salt to taste

Method


Soak chickpeas in water  overnight or -  minimum 5 hours in warm water.
Drain the soaked water, wash, add water ( a cup over the chickpeas), cook the chickpeas in a pressure cooker with 1/4 teaspoon salt .


In a pan, heat oil, add mustard seeds when they crackle add the curry leaves.  Add sliced onion and sauté till it becomes translucent.  Add  the turmeric powder, green chillies, ginger-garlic paste , tomatoes and sauté till oil separates.  Add all the powders , salt to taste and  1/4 cup water,  fry for 2 minutes.  Add chickpeas saute for a minute then add the  water  in  which the chickpeas were cooked to make a thick gravy. 


Close and cook for 15 minutes on slow flame till oil separates Garnish with coriander  and serve hot.   

This dish is traditionally served with Appam, Idiappam  or Puttu.  We enjoyed it with chappati. 


I am sending this to My Legume Love Affair  host of the month Kalyani - Sizzling Tastebuds

Labels: Chickpeas, Kerala, Vegetables, Lentils

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FLYING SAUCER - TOASTER SANDWICH / JAFFLE


I call this sandwich a Flying saucer because it looks like a disc-shaped flying craft. You give this to a child with this name, he or she will happily enjoy it. This how I use to give this to my daughter when she a little girl and very often she would say Ma make for me flying saucer.   If you have leftover potato sabzi then this is even quicker, I  make  this sandwich with whenever there is leftover potato sabzi. These are also know as jaffle in Australia.

Ingredients

6 Slices White bread
1 Cup Potato Sabzi
100 Grams Butter
Tomato Ketchup to serve

Method

Spread butter on all the sides of bread, spread the potato sabzi on one slice.


Cover with second slice, place it in the toaster place, put over medium flame, turning occasionally on both side until done ( see pic).


 Serve with ketchup.



Labels : Potato, Sandwiches, Vegetarian, Kids delight, Jaffle , Australia

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CHICKEN AND CHEESE BOX PATTIES


These were made for our family gathering and were loved by all.  They vanished in a jiffy.

Ingredients
1 Cup Chicken - boiled and shredded
1/3 Teaspoon Black Pepper powder
3 Green Chilies - finely chopped
1/3 Cup Packed Coriander leaves - finely chopped
1 Spring Onion - finely chopped

For the Sauce
2 Tablespoons Butter
3 Tablespoons All PurposeFlour
1 Cup Milk
1/2 Teaspoon Salt
1/2 Teaspoon Pepper
1/2 Teaspoon Mustard paste
1/3 Cup Cheddar Cheese
1/3 Cup Sweet Corn - boiled and lightly crushed or chopped

Samosa Patti or Spring Roll strips

To seal the Patties


3 Tablespoon All Purpose Flour
A pinch of Salt
Water as required to make a thick paste

Method
To make the filling
In a sauce pan melt the butter add the flour and stir it for 2 minutes, then add the milk, continue to whisk till well blended and smooth, cook till the sauce it thick. Take off flame add the chicken, coriander leaves, green chilies, spring onion, cheese and sweet corn, mix well. Make small equal size ball and keep aside

To make the Box Patties
Take one strip vertical and place another one horizontal (ie it should be a cross see pic), apply a drop of paste in  the center then place the other strip.


Place the ball of filling in the center


Then fold (see pic)


Trim the strip if it's extra and apply paste on the fold on the side 


Continue with the folding and applying the paste on each fold


Here is a perfect box... make all the patties and keep aside


Deep fry them in hot oil on medium flame till nice and golden. Remove on an absorbent paper.


Serve them with any chutney or ketchup. 

Actually the dips are not necessary for these as they are crispy , cheesy and melt in the mouth. 

Sending these to Tea Time Treats ~ A Monthly Tea Party challenge Hosted by Karen and Jane



My Notes :

You can fry these in advance and keep them in the oven on warm mode... serve when required.  This is what I did.

If you do  not get strips , then cut the spring roll sheets into strips.  The trimmings you can fry and keep them to garnish your soups or salads.

Labels : Snacks, Chicken, Cheese, Kids delight, Tea Time Treats
Tea Time Treats

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Dal Makhani


This a Punjabi Cuisine dal, which is really yummy, creamy and delicious you will love it.

Ingredients 


3/4 Cup Sabut Urad
1/4 Cup Rajma / Red Kidney Beans
1 Big Onion  - finely  chopped
2 Tomatoes - finely  chopped 
2 Green Chillies  -finely  chopped
2 Inch Piece Ginger - finely  chopped  
6 Cloves Garlic - finely  chopped
1 Big Bay leaf
2 Black Cardamons
2 Cinnamon Sticks
3 Cloves
2.1/2 Tablespoons Coriander powder
1 Teaspoon Heaped Red Chilli powder
1 Teaspoon Garam Masala
Salt To Taste
4 Tablespoons Butter
3 Tablespoons Ghee
100 ML Fresh Cream
1/3 Cup Milk

Method
Soak black urad dal and rajma overnight.  Next day wash it fresh water.





Boil with half inch ginger, cardamoms, cloves and  water till level of it .  Close the cooker and take a whistle on  high  flame then reduce the flame and keep it for 10 - 15 minutes or till the rajma and urad dal are soft.


Heat butter, ghee in a  pan, add cumin seeds, bay leaf, cinnamon,  green chillies, ginger, garlic and  onions.  Fry till the onions are light golden.  Then  add chopped tomatoes, coriander powder, Chilli powder.   Fry till the  tomatoes are soft and mushy .  Then add the dal and rajma , without  water and mash while mixing so that dal and rajma are mixed with masala well.  Add  water and let it cook on low flame for 10 minutes or till oil surfaces.  If the dal is thick add water to adjust the consistency bring it to a rolling boil.  Then add garam masala, fresh cream, milk give it a quick stir .  Take off flame garnish it coriander leaves and fresh cream,  serve hot with Jeera Rice  or Steamed Rice.


Labels : Lentils, Punjab, Vegetables
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Tilache Ladoo



A Makar Sankranti special and popular Maharashtrian recipe Tilache Ladoo also known as Tilgul.    For this you have to use the chikki jaggery.  For jaggery in Marathi we say Gul and sesame seeds Til.  These are crisp and delicious, you will not be able to stop eating at one, that's for sure.......  so here I say  "Til gul ghya ani god god bola ".

Ingredients
250 Grams Jaggery  - Chikki Jaggery
250 Grams  Sesame Seeds (Til)
1 Tablespoon Desi Ghee
4 Tablespoons  Groundnuts - roasted , skinned and 
crushed
8 - 10 Cashew nuts - chopped
15  Raisins
1/2 Cup  Dry Coconut - 
 grated and roasted 
1 Teaspoon  Cardamom powder

Method



Take a bowl, add til (sesame seeds), crushed groundnut, chopped cashews, raisins & grated coconut. Mix all the ingredients, keep aside.

Heat a kadai, add jaggery and ghee let it melt completely.   Keep stirring the mixture till the jaggery  melts completely.  Will start to  change colour, ( to check whether it's ready take a bowl of water, add  a drop of jaggery, if it forms a ball ) remove it from the flame.  Add elaichi powder and mix well.  Add the til mixture and mix well. Apply some ghee  to your hand and immediatley start making ladoos.  Serve these to your family and friends......  
"Til gul ghya ani god god bola "



Labels : Festival Sweets, Ladoo, Sesame seeds, Jaggery, Maharashtra

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Yeasted Jowar Naan #BreadBakers




Making this month's bread with ancient grains was really tough, since  the choice here is limited. What I could think of making is bread from Jowar / Sorghum. Again when I was surfing, came across recipes of sorghum bread using xanthan gum which is not available here. Searched for subsitutes found that Guar Gum could be used which is available here but could not find it in the market.  

Decided to try an yeasted  sorghum naan, which turned out good, but can be eaten when fresh just out of the oven, since this has no gluten it tends to crumble and dry out. It had an excellent taste but has to eaten with a gravy dish. Used boiled potato to try and bring some binding / gluten which did help in making this easy to form the naans.

I made this for our Sunday Lunch with Dal Sultani , we just enjoyed this combo. We loved this healthy bread, which I, again say can be eaten when fresh only, since one remained, checked in the evening it turned dry and crumbled. Bake the naan as per your need. If the dough is extra,  refrigerate it and use it when required.

I wish to thank Robin, for this great theme and hosting this event, in this challenge learned a lot about ancient grains.

Ingredients

2 Cups Jowar / Sorghum flour - Freshly ground
1/2 Cup Oats flour
1 Medium size potato- scrubbed n cut into half
2 Teaspoons Yeast
1 Teaspoon Sugar
1 Teaspoon Salt
1 Cup Warm Water
1/2 Cup Water + 1/4 teaspoon salt to boil the potato
1 Tablespoon Black Sesame Seeds

Method

Boil the potato in the pressure cooker for 3 whistles.  Cool,  skin and grate the potato and mix it with the water that it was boiled in.  Keep aside.

Seive the flours. Add the yeast sugar and salt. Mix well,  add the potato starch and  water, a little at a time, knead to a soft dough.  Grease a bowl keep aside it to double in size.

When the dough doubles, punch the dough. Divide the dough into four parts. Place a greased parchment sheet on a baking tray make teardrop shaped naan (1/2 inch thick). Lightly moisten the naan with wet hands, then sprinkle black sesame seeds.




Keep it covered for 15 to 20 minutes to rise again.  Then bake for 15 to 20 minutes at 200 degrees. 

The bottom side when baked..




Take this hot naan dip each piece into bowl of Dal Sultani..... Enjoy .



Labels : Jowar, Naan, Bread Bakers, Breads

This month's BreadBakers' theme is Ancient Grains, hosted by Robin at A Shaggy Dough Story. Ancient grains are generally accepted to mean grains that have remained largely unchanged/un-hybridized over the last several hundred years, which means NO MODERN WHEAT. Here's what our creative bakers came up with.
#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. You can see all our of lovely bread by following our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated after each event on the #BreadBakers home page.
We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient. If you are a food blogger and would like to join us, just send Stacy an email with your blog URL to foodlustpeoplelove@gmail.com.
BreadBakers

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Rose Cookies with Eggs


Rose cookies is prepared in my house for Christmas . These are called by different names like Achu Murukku, Achappam in the South of India. These are deep fried cookies which are easy to make, yet delicious. To make these you require a mold, which is heated in oil and then dipped into the batter , there various shapes and sizes of mold in every household. I have made a flower mold. 


According to wiki these Rose cookies  are typical Anglo Indian cookie, why they are called so, I do not know. What I remember from my childhood days that my mother use to make these for Christmas. When I started working, have seen my non - christian friends from the South of India also make 
eggless rose cookies for Diwali.   Making these are time consuming but worth the effort.  It gives me great happiness when all are done to perfection.  My friends and relatives just wait for these cookies of mine.


Sending these to Mena's Cooking Club, this month theme is Cookies.

Ingredients

2 Cups All Purpose Flour 
3/4 Cup Rice Flour 
2 Eggs
1/2 Cup Granulated
 Sugar 
1 Cup Thick Coconut Milk - I used homemade
A pinch of Salt
1 Tablespoon  Black Sesame Seeds - optional
Water or Milk as required to make batter
Oil for Deep frying

Method

Sieve the rice and all purpose flour together thrice.


Beat the eggs  in a bowl,  add the flour,  sugar, salt, seeds and keep mixing using the coconut milk little at a time to make a smooth batter ( lump free).  Add  more water and make a thick and smooth batter ( lump free),  keep aside to rest for 15 minutes.  Just before making the cookies add more water to  make  a batter like for pancakes.   

To make the Rose Cookies

Take a wok or kadai pour enough oil  for deep frying,  place on heat and now place the mold into the oil.  Keep it immersed in oil till the  mold is very hot, remove from the oil and lightly dip 3/4th way only into the batter ( the batter should thick enough to coat the mold) -  then  dip it back into the oil - wait for a minute and start shaking the mold, the Cookie will leave the mold - fry the cookie on both sides till golden  remove and place on a absorbent paper to drain  excess oil.   Again place the mold in oil till hot then into the batter, continue making the cookies with the remaining batter in the same sequence.

Let  these cookies cooled completely , place in air tight containers. These remain good for  month, since we make them for Christmas , half go distribution and  remaining we have for tea.  These make a good snack and are crisp. 


Labels : Rose Cookies, Festival Sweets, Mena Cooking Club


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Dal Sultani - Mughlai Cuisine


This yummy dal is a Mughlai cuisine of Uttar Pradesh. Its rich and creamy .  Goes well with both rice/pulao or chapattis.

Ingredients

1 Cup Moong Dal - washed and soaked for an hour
2 Cups Water
1 Tablespoon Red Chilly Powder
1 Teaspoon Salt 


For the Gravy


200 Grams Yogurt
200 ML Milk
100 ML Fresh Cream
6 Cloves  - coarsely ground
6 Small Cardamoms  - coarsely ground
1/2 Teaspoon Saffron Strands - mix in a Tablespoon water

For Tempering:


1/2 Cup  Butter or Ghee - I used  half of each
1 Teaspoon Cumin Seeds
8 Cloves Garlic  - chopped
For garnishing coriander leaves  - finely chopped
A Piece of Coal for dungar



Method

Soak lentil for half an hour, add in it water, salt, chily powder and boil the dal till its cooked. 

In a bowl mix,  yogurt,  milk and  malai,  beat  well , add the cardamon and cloves powder mix well.  

When lentils  is cooked, add in creamy mixture, stir the dal well, cook on slow flame for 10 minutes  stirring it so that it does not burn at  the bottom.  Switch off flame,  add the saffron water give it quick stir.

Prepare the tempering

Heat ghee and butter in a pan add the cumin, chopped garlic when the garlic starts to brown take off flame and pour on dal . Cover with a lid. Lastly place the lighted coal in piece of foil or a small bowl pour ghee over it and keep it over the dal covered for 5 minutes. Open garnish with coriander leaves. Serve hot. We had this thick, rich, creamy and yummy dal with Yeasted Jowar Naan. 




My Notes:


This dal is not spicy so do add more chilly powder, this will ruin the taste and color of the dal.

Do skip giving dungar to the dal, as this enhances the flavor.

You can use split pigeons peas / tur dal too instead of moong dal


Labels : Dal, Moong dal, Lentils, Mughlai Cuisine, Uttar Pradesh

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