Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Pesarattu Dosais/ Green Grams crepes




Pesarattu

This week in Blog Hop Wednesday, I was teamed up with Vidya of Curry Leaves. What struck me the most about Vidya’s blog is the fantastic photography of her food -  While I enjoyed browsing her healthy and vegetarian foods, I was almost instantly drawn towards this dosai because I have made them in the past and it has not gone over well with my son – You know how the one person who does NOT like something sometimes determines what is made in the house and what’s not? Well it has always been the case in my home until recently when I decided not to pander to the taste of the one person who does not like it but the taste of the 4 other who do J

Tough luck Sonny!  - but his tastes have been changing (for the better) because he now loves upma which he used to love for the first 5 yrs of his life then started detesting – I am happy to say we are the love upma stage again- yay – And I am hoping that he will love this dosai he once denounced.



Pearattu2

I used a few additional ingredients that I thought would make this even more delicious like coconut
Ingredients
Whole and halves green gram (green mung) 2 cups
Green and red chilies per taste
1 inch thick piece of ginger
Curry leaves
¼ cup of coconut

Preparation
Soak over night and grind
Saute batter with mustard seeds & asafetida, using 1 tsp of sesame oil
In a nonstick pan spread thin 1 ladle of batter
Roast on the one side and flip over after a minute or two remove from flame and serve with chutney of your choice
We had it with coconut Chutney
Recipe below

Ingredients
1 cup of grated coconut
3-4 green chilies
¼ inch piece of ginger
½ cup of roasted grams

Preparation
Grind all the above ingredients
Salt
Sauté with mustard seeds, urad dal, curry leaves and  a pinch asafetida in 1 tsp of ghee
Yen-jai
BHWednesdays
Blog Hop Wednesday is a brain child of Radhika of Tickling Palates 
Sending this to Shilpa's Life is Green Event 

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The 7 Question Tags

Thank you Krithi of Krithi's Kitchen and Sobha Shyam of Good Food for tagging me in this 7 question link about my blog.  No bias here, but it was really tough to pick certain categories, esp the one that I most proud of since I actually put my heart and creativity in trying many new recipes. Most of you know that I like to think outside the box and love the fuse wonderful ingredients in ways that also make for a cross cultural fusion cuisine.
Nevertheless, I have picked a few (more than 1 in certain categories, please don't mind)

1)The Most Beautiful Post
For this I was torn - there are several that could fit this category, but I ended up picking
The Fresh Fruit Tart and my Strawberry Curd Pancake



Fresh Fruit tart1




Strawberrry Curd Pancake

Category 2: The most "popular" post
If I judge the popularity of my posts based on the number of comments it received, then I would have to pick The Rose Malai and my Baklava Posts



RoseMalai



Baklava3
Category #3 - None I hope

Category # 4 Most helpful Post
I picked these
Mayan heirloom Squash
How to layer a Lazagna
Zucchini blossom Bhajis 
Stuffed & Baked Patty Pans



Picnik collage

Category #5 Suprisingly Successful Posts
I chose my Strawberry Payasam &  Spicy peanut balls posts




Collage3

Category #6 The Post that did not get the attention it deserved - I think many of my earlier posts can fit this category quite well :) I realize now what I did not know then -that to get more comments on one's page, one must make the effort to go and comment on others blogs :)
But here are the posts I would say deserved more attention were two extremely healthy recipes!


Category # 7 The One I am most proud of ...
This one’s a doozy since I like to think outside the box and try to be as creative with my recipes as possible




Banukah

Kaju Almond Vadais/Falafels


collage 6




Colagge 5




Collage 4

Some of these collages are purely because I have recently learnt to make them and could not resist

Here are some fellow bloggers I'd like to tag for showcasing their recipes

Jabeen

Adios Amigas

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Beets Dosai, Awards and Tag

I have blogged dosais with beets - when i actually used the beets to grind the batter for the Idlis - this time I did it differently - the color was a lot more intense and it tasted even better!! This is a spinoff dish from the beetroot cutlets that I blogged last - I saved the juice water from steaming the beets and added it to my dosai batter and the result are the pink deliciouses! This picture was for my black and white Wednesday trial attempts :) For regular dosa recipe, look here.



Beets Dosai

This was a trial run for the B&W wednesday event :)



beets Dosai

This was the actual picture!



beets dosai




beets dosai

I also had some cutlets leftover from the previous day and decided to make this an all beet meal -trust me when I say it was gone in seconds!



beets dosai




beets dosai

I am honored to say that I have been awarded by by Kaveri of Palakkad Chamayal and Sumee of Sumee's Culinary Bites
And I accept these with the greatest honor and appreciation. Thanks ladies, you rock! 



I have also been tagged by Sobha Shyam of Good Food to answer 7 questions about my blog - I will post this as my next post since this requires some homework and I am a procrastinator when it comes to homework :P

Friday, August 26, 2011

Beets & Quinoa Flakes Cutlets




Beets cutlets

I was dreaming about the beautiful seaside café in the town I was born  - Pondicherry and the most exciting India Coffee House located right by the Gandhi Statue… a terrace where we sat inhaling the salty moisture of the Bay of Bengal while we waited with great anticipation for the cutlets… They were beets and potatoes served with raw onions on the side … We could not get enough of those! And this as usually rounded of with THE best cold coffee I have had! We came home completely sated. But no ICH here and I am my chotu or Lakshmi or who ever usually works in our homes in India L
A simple, healthy low caloric cutlet (burger) – Really?!! Yes that is what I am presenting you with two ingredients that have been touted as the best foods in their categories of seed/grain and vegetable- I am talking about Quinoa Flakes and Beets.



Cutlets2

The recipe is really cinchy!  It is wrought from a mom who wants to keep it really simple and yet have the WOW effect! Needless to say it was a hit! The quinoa flakes act as the binder much like bread crumbs do.



beets and QF cutlets

Ingredients
5 medium sized beets
1 ½ cups of Quinoa Flakes
1 cup of peas and carrots
1-2 green chilies
2 sage leaves
5 sprigs of Rosemary
1-inch stalk of thyme (about 10 tiny leaves)
Salt
1tsp curry powder



Cutlets

Preparation
Peel and cook beets in open stove in a pasta boiler or mw (do not pressure cook or they will get soggy)
Add the peas and carrots (I used frozen thawed)
Add salt
Add the quinoa flakes and mix in well

I tried making these in two methods
Method 1
A flat pan (like a dosa pan) I added 1tsp of oil and made little flattened balls and cooked them for about 5 minutes and flipped them over for another two minutes and then remove from heat

Method 2
I used my now ubiquitous  up-pum pan to make these. Perfect sized, half the oil  and wonderful soft, patties, crisp on the outside – voila!
Check out the pictures!
And I served them up with raw onions with cut up chilies and lemon juice squeezed on top.  Eat with me folks J



beets cutlets

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Potato-onion Roast With Garlic Rasam




Potato Roast

For any south Indian, this is a menu that can be a default menu any day and it is a meal to come salivating back home to after even a week of travel to a country/ city where Indian food is hard to find! The “comfort” food in my home is rasam with spinach – but the potato-onion roast makes it a very festive meal J
My blogger pal, Priya of Bon Appetit had asked me to post pictures on FB, but I thought this is always a happy meal for all of us and decided to blog it



potato roast

Here is the recipe
Boil, peel & dice potatoes (I always use the pink variety)
1 large pink onion chopped into thin slivers
Curry powder
Turmeric
Asafetida
Curry leaves
Oil
Salt
Cumin
Mustard seeds



Garlic Rasam

Preparation
Use required amount of oil splutter cumin, mustard and asafetida.
Add the onions and roast for a bit
Add the boiled and diced potatoes
Add the curry powder (make as spicy or bland as you desire), salt and the turmeric powder and toss the potatoes around until all of them are coated evenly.
Add a little more oil and allow it to roast.
Add washed curry leaves and mix once more before removing from stove.
It should be golden brown



Potato roast
with yogurt rice and rasam on the side! bliss!!!
Rasam
1 can of diced tomatoes or 3 fresh tomatoes
3 cups of water
2 cloves of garlic finely minced
Turmeric
Cilantro
Rasam powder
Salt
Tadka with 1 tsp ghee – mustards, curry leaves, cumin and asafetida
Dal water – ½ cup

Preparation
Cook the tomatoes in some water. Cool and grind if desired
Add the rasam powder to the puree along with the dal water and allow it all to boil with some salt
In some ghee lightly brown the garlic 
Splutter the mustard seeds and cumin
Remove the boiled rasam from the stove and add the sauté
Add some freshly minced cilantro as garnish and serve hot with potato roast



Potato-roast

A quickie meal, most satisfying, mes amies, as Poirot might say J

Friday, August 19, 2011

Sweet Potato Kofta




Kofta

Kofta has always been a No No anytime I’ve been to a restaurant because the only kind you get is the “malai” koftas, meaning – cream koftas – They are heavy, lumpy and doughy and even in the very best restaurants are either over soaked and soggy, melting into the sauce OR you have the kinds that never soak and are hard and tasteless that stand alone, unrelenting.  And then over the past year that I’ve been blogging, I have seen some memorable koftas that have inspired me to come up with this one.



SPK 16 pita

Definition of Kofta from the Oxford Dictionary
noun (plural same or koftas)
   (in Middle Eastern and Indian cooking) a spiced meatball.
Origin:
From Urdu and Persian, literally 'pounded meat'



SPK12 saucy

Look how far we have come from its actual meaning if we have wholly adapted this dish to a vegetarian palate



SPK15 bawlz

To the best of my knowledge these are deep-fried and soaked into hot sauce/gravy
So the kofta served by itself, is rather like a cutlet, along with a pita, a falafel and served with gravy the kofta curry we know so well to be an Indian gourmet dish.



SPK14 bawlz

Things that I like about my kofta
1)    I used a healthy substitute to the usual potatoes by using sweet potatoes
2)    I liked using Garbanzos for a fiber and low fat factor
3)    I did NOT deep fry it and that did NOT compromise on the taste an iota
4)    My gravy was just as healthy in that I used my standard gravy companions onion and tomato with chilies and some spices – adding NO cream whatsoever getting that creamy texture by cooking the veggies first and adding no more than 10 -12 pieces of cashews. The end result was immensely pleasing and I felt mighty triumphant that I had made this dish – finally – in my home and realized how cinchy it is to make it.
Bu But it would be remiss of me to not give credit to my new dippy pan that has inspired me to make several wonderful preparations.
I encourage you to try this combo at home and see for yourself how incredibly tasty these come out.
Off to the recipe



SPK8 mash




SPK7 mash
Add caption
Ingredients
3 sweet potatoes
1 can of garbanzo beans
Green chilies – to taste
1 Red chili
Cilantro – 1tbs crushed
Sage- 2 leaves
About 1tsp of oil
Mustard seeds (optional)
Cumin seeds (optional)
2 tsp of curry powder




SPK3 pan




SPK2 closeup




SPK1 closeup

Preparation
Cook and mush the sweet potatoes
In a food processor, add washed and drained garbanzos and make a crumbly powder
In a pan, heat the oil and splutter mustard and cumin seeds
Add the chilies, herbs and the curry powder to the oil followed by the potatoes
Add the crumbled garbanzo
Add the salt and mix all the ingredients well
This mixture should be soft but thick now



SPK13 bawlz




SPK14 bawlz




SPK11 saucy

Get the pan ready by placing it on low heat
Add some nonstick spray to the holes and ½ tsp of oil in each slot
I used an ice cream scoop to dole out the mix into the holes



SPK10 saucy

Let the one side brown and gingerly flip over and brown the other side as well
Wait for it to get well cooked on both sides before removing from the slots

You can serve this as stand alone patties or cutlet dish with some raw onions and ketchup
You can use it as a Falafel and stuff into a pita and sink your teeth in verily
Or you can make kofta &curry with it, which was my original intent



Sweet Potato Koftas

For the sauce, simple sauté 1 big red onion and 1 can of diced tomato with required amount of spices (clove, cardamom, cinnamon, bay leaves, red chilies, garlic (optional) and about 10 cahsews.
Let it simmer and cool before grinding
Pour the sauce in the desired serving bowl and then arrange the koftas in the sauce.
Serve with naan or rotis



SPK9 saucy

Now Serving with love (: