Showing posts with label Indian Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Food. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2015

Brinjal in Spiced Yoghurt


Fried Brinjal Rings in Spiced Curds
As children, none of us liked brinjal or aubergine as it is called in the Western world.  No matter that my Mum did her best to entice us with various recipes.  None suited us and in fact it was our pet hate.  The sight of it was enough to send us into the doldrums.  My children are the same.  It is only now as an adult that I appreciate the humble brinjal.  This is a recipe from my Mum and goes well with rice as a side dish or even with any kind of spiced rice.

The Recipe:

1 large brinjal, sliced into 5 rounds ( I used the round purple variety; 250 ml curds; salt; 1 tsp chilli powder; 1/4 tsp turmeric powder; 1 tbsp vinegar; salt to taste; oil for shallow frying.

1 clove garlic, smashed; coriander leaves for garnish- optional.

Soak the brinjal in salted water for 15 minutes. ( Add enough of water to cover the brinjal with 1 tsp salt).    Drain and marinade with the chilli powder, turmeric, salt to taste and vinegar for 15 minutes.  Heat oil in a nonstick pan to medium heat and gently fry the brinjal slices till brown on both sides.  Drain on kitchen paper.

After all the slices are fried, add the garlic to the residue in the pan and gently stir fry for a minute.  Scrape this mixture into the curds (yoghurt), add salt to taste and beat with a fork until smooth.  Arrange the brinjal in a shallow dish and pour the beaten, spiced curds over.  Garnish with coriander leaves and serve with the rest of the meal.  This is a very simple dish that goes extremely well with biriyani, pulav, spiced rices and white rice.




Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Grilled Masala Fish

Fishy Flavours
There's nothing easier than Grilled Fish.  All you need is one large fish enough to serve two or three persons.  Get your fishermonger to scale and gut it.  Then it's all yours.  Recently I won an electric grill, so decided to make one of our usual fish recipes.  The grill won a standing ovation and we now know what to do when surprise guests turn up.

The Recipe:

1 medium pomfret, scaled & gutted, keep whole with fins and tail.

For Marinade:  2 tbsp vinegar or lemon juice; salt to taste; 1/4 tsp turmeric powder; 1 tbsp chilli powder.  Mix to a liquidy paste.

Wash fish thoroughly with water, salt and turmeric.  Drain on kitchen towels.  Marinade ( in refrigerator) in the above mixture overnight.  Next day bring to room temperature.  Plug in the grill and adjust settings to 240 Centigrade.  Place a banana leaf on the grill with a little oil on it.  Place the fish on preheated grill (until desired temperature is reached) and grill 5 minutes each side.  Serve hot with lemon wedges.  The aroma wafting on the air is bound to bring the household into the kitchen, awaiting the moment to attack.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Omlette In Mango Sauce

Moz San Go
I was very excited when my recipe for Mango Sauce was published in the Eve's Weekly years ago.  I have always loved experimenting in the kitchen and the Mango Sauce I made is today a household favourite.  I always have a bottle handy and use it with fried eggs, omlettes, chaat, bread and butter and plain boiled vegetables as well.  I gave it a fancy name because that's just what it is- a delectable figment of my imagination stored in a long glass bottle.

The Recipe:  

One  2 egg omlette cut into 3 pieces.  Keep warm

For The Sauce:  2 cups water; tamarind to taste; 4 country mangoes, skinned; 3 dried red chillies, broken into bits; a pinch of mustard; a sprig of curry leaves; 1 tsp ginger garlic, minced; oil for frying; jaggery or brown sugar to taste; a pinch of salt.

Soak the mango skins and tamarind  in the water for twenty minutes.  Squeeze and keep aside.  Heat the oil and add the mustard.  When it spurts, add the curry leaves and broken chillies.  Add the minced ginger garlic and stir for a minute.  Lower heat and add the tamarind water and the mangoes, jaggery and salt.  Bring to the boil.  Lower heat and simmer till sauce consistency is reached.  Cool, remove mangoes (can eat them) and bottle.  Keep in the refrigerator and use as and when desired.