Showing posts with label quick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quick. Show all posts

Friday, February 01, 2008

Hariyali Matar

What a lyrical name for this simple and yet tasty dish. It lay buried in my recipe book -- perhaps overlooked because this was not one of R's, written in her beautiful handwriting but in my horrible scrawl. This was given to me by Hema who studied french with me in Alliance Francaise Kolkata. She took cookery classes on weekends and very kindly gave me a few.


You will need:

Coriander leaves: 1 cup
Garlic 8 cloves
Green Chillie: 6 (I used half a chilli only)
Onion: 1 medium
Little water

Grind the above to a paste

Tomatoes: 2 cups finely chopped
Peas: 2 cups boiled (I used frozen peas and had only to thaw them)
Turmeric: 1/2 tsp
Coriander powder: 1 tsp
Water: 1 cup
Oil: 6 tbsp
Garam masala powder: 1/4 tsp
Salt, sugar


How to:

  1. Heat oil in a pan and add the ground coriander paste.
  2. Stir fly lightly till oil separates.
  3. Add tomatoes and stir fry till they become soft.
  4. Add peas, turmeric, salt, a pinch of sugar and water.
  5. Mix well, simmer till gravy is thick.
  6. Sprinke the garam masala and remove.
  7. Serve with rice or rotis.

Thanks Hema, wherever you happen to be. I tried your recipe 6 years after you had shared it with me...and it was wonderful and worth the wait.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Okra with Panchphoron & Brinjal with spring onions

I was really eager to attend the wedding of a friend's sister today. I had been planning on this for quite some time. The saree, the jewellery, A's clothes (phenomenal for me...since I always start planning with 5 secs left to spare)! And then last night, I got fever with chills and shakes and how. And this is really ominous since chills and shakes usually is a sign of Malaria. Today, thankgod, didnt have another attack but my temperature hovered around 100 deg C. At 7pm, I sadly gave up the idea of attending and called up my friend to explain...it sounded really lame over the phone. But what to do? That done, I had to prepare dinner. Thankgod I had bhindi, spring onions and brinjals. Could whip up two dishes in about half an hour. Another 15 minutes, 5 rotis were ready and we had our simple home cooked dinner (in place of the no-doubt lavish spread at the Sheraton...).

The bhindi recipe is one I learnt from m-i-l. Before this, I had never heard of bhindi being cooked this way and was a bit iffy about it at first. But really, its quite tasty and a regular fare for us.

Bhindi with Panchphoron

You will need
Bhindi / Okra 250 gms
Onion 1 medium sized
Panchphoron 1 tsp (equal parts of black mustard, anise, methi, cumin and kalonji)
Salt to taste
Sugar 1/4 tsp
Oil for frying

How to


  1. Wash and drain the bhindi. Cut them into 1" pieces.
  2. Heat 2-3 tbsp oil in a kadai.
  3. Add the panchphoron.
  4. When they start spluttering, add the onions and saute till they turn translucent.
  5. Add the bhindi, the salt and stir well.
  6. Cook over high flame for 5 minutes.
  7. Cover, lower flame and leave for another 5-7 minutes or till the bhindis are done.

Brinjals with spring onions



Strangely, I never liked this dish although this is a popular bengali one, till I got married. A likes all things with brinjals in it. He likes them in pizza too (yes...). But once I made it (and it turned out good and really easy to make) I started liking it too!!

You will need:

Brinjal / Aubergine 1 medium
Spring Onions: 3 - 4
Salt to taste
Oil for frying

How to

  1. Wash the brinjal and dice into small cubes, smear with salt and keep aside.
  2. Cut the spring onions into small pieces about the same size of the brinjals.
  3. Heat oil in a kadai to smoking and add the brinjal.
  4. Stir well and fry till softened.
  5. Add the spring onion and stir well.
  6. Fry for another 3-4 minutes and remove from fire.

Both are very subtle flavored, with minimal or no spices, easy to make and tasty too!

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Cabbage Khichdi

I have managed, in this heat, to catch a cold. My head feels heavy and my movements lethargic. On top of that, my cook did no a show, but she was kind enough to inform me about that. I was not really feeling up to doing much cooking, so I made a one dish meal. This is a recipe that A taught me and it has been a life saver (mine) on many an ocassion.

You will need:
These are the proportions I used; these can be easily varied

Cabbage: 1/2 of a medium sized cabbage
Rice: 1&1/2 cups
Peas: a handful
Tomato: 1
Onions: 2 - quartered
Potato: 2, halved
Garlic: 4 cloves smashed
Ginger: 1/2 tsp grated
Bay leaf: 1
Cinnamon: 1" stick
Cumin seeds: 1 tsp
Cloves: 2/3
Green elaichi: 2 pods
Salt: 2 tsp
Sugar: a pinch
Oil: 2 tbsp

How to:

  1. Shred the cabbage, wash well and drain.
  2. Wash the rice and drain.
  3. In a pressure cooker, heat oil. Add the cinnamon, cardamon, bay leaf and elaichi.
  4. After 30 sec (by this time, the spices will have released their aroma), add the cumin seeds.
  5. When the cumin start spluttering, which is almost immediately, add the cabbage, peas, garlic and ginger and turmeric and salt. Stir well.
  6. After a minute, add the tomatoes. Stir well.
  7. After a minute, add the rice. Stir well otherwise, the rice will stick to the pan.
  8. Add the quartered onions and the potatoes.
  9. Add 2&3/4 cups water - the same cup that was used to measure out the rice.
  10. Cover the cooker and cook for one whistle. Remove from flame. Let the cover drop by itself. Don't lift the weight on top of the lid to release the pressure.
  11. Viola! Done. Enjoy. Bon Appetit.

Note:

  • The onions can be sauteed right in the begining right after adding the cumin. Any other vegetable can be used too.
  • Since it's a khichdi or Khichudi in bengali, it can be accompanied by fritters - begun /brinjal, parwal /potol, papads.

And it does not take more than 20 minutes start to finish.