Clearly there are two parts to this dish. And by themselves, each can be a stand alone dish. The pakora and the Kadi -Pakoras are fried/baked fritters usually made with besan/chickpea flour and veggies like onions and chilies. They can also be made with spinach as this recipe explains. The second part of this recipe is the Kadi, which is also called Mor Kozhambu in the south with a few differences. Kadi is essentially a yogurt based sauce to which you add some chickpea flour, herbs and condiments for spicing it up. I present to you both recipes, both extremely simple and I hope the pictures I present make you salivate enough to want to make this right away :)
This can be had by itself as a HOT snack :) |
For the Pakoras
- 1lb of frozen fresh spinach
- 2tbsp chickpea flour
- 2 spicy green chilies
- 1tsp caraway seeds
- salt
- grated ginger (optional)
- oil to fry
For the Kadi
- 2cups of plain yogurt
- 1tbsp channa dal (or chickpeas)
- 2 fresh (and spicy green chilies)
- 1tsp whole black pepper
- 1tsp cumin
- A pinch of asafetida
- Cilantro - 2tbsp chopped (optional) I use it liberally because i LOVE the smell of it
- Salt
For Garnish
- 1/2 tsp caraway seeds
- 1tsp coconut oil
- 1tsp mustard seeds (small ones preferably)
- 1sprig of curry leaves
Method
Preparing the Pakoras
- Cook spinach with small quantity of water if fresh or thaw out if frozen
- Drain the water
- Add salt, green chilies, caraway seeds and besan and mix until it is of thick and "ball-able" consistency. Add the ginger in along with the rest of the ingredients if you are using it.
- Make the balls and keep
Prepare your Kadi
- While your spinach is cooking, soak all ingredients except for the yogurt and salt in about 1/2 cup of warm to hot water for about 15 -30 minutes
- Grind finely in mixera
- Add salt
- Place on stove in a pan and cook until it thickens.
- Allow it to cool for a few minutes
- Whip the yogurt into a smooth thick paste
- Add to the pan and mix in well.
- Add the garnish
- Now heat the oil in a frying pan and fry the pakoras
- Drop them hot into the kadi and serve immediately
Note: if you are not serving right away, hold off on making the pakoras until you are ready to eat.
If your spinach remains soggy, you could add more besan or powdered cashews (about 5 -10 nuts)
Enjoy this classic north Indian dish with freshly cooked white fluffy and incredibly aromatic basmati rice :)
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