Sunday, September 28, 2008

Multi Vitamin Pan Cake (Neer dosai)

Neer dosai has always been my favourite dishes. I have enjoyed preparing as well as eating neer dosai. Since the dosai is thin you tend to consume a lot of them in one go. The last time that I have had this dish in a Restaurant is at the Udupi Krishan Bhavan in koramangala when I had been to India for my vacation.


Here is a newer version of the neer dosai. A neer dosai filled with taste and vitamins called the Multi Vitamin neer dosa.


Ingredients:


Idli rice 2 Cups
Crushed wheat 2 tbsp
Methi seeds 1 tsp.
Moong dal 2 tsp.
Ragi powder 2 tbsp
Egg 1
Salt as per taste
Oil or Ghee


Method:

Soak rice with methi, dal, and wheat for about 2 hours. Grind all the soaked ingredients along with egg and ragi powder into a fine paste adding little water. Add enough water to the batter to have thin consistency. Add salt as per taste.


Heat, grease a non stick pan with oil or ghee and fry crispy dosas. Serve hot with green chutney & tomato ketchup.

Note: Crushed wheat can be substituted with wheat flour.

Friday, September 19, 2008

Kori Rotti

Kori Rotti..means roti with chicken. I'm not sure if my veggie friends would like to see me post a lot of non veg dishes. But I cannot resist posting this dish.

A Trade mark of Bunt community. The kori rotti is papad like, crackling dry bread made from rice flakes. One dips the uneven bits of this rotti into the curry whereupon the bread goes limp. The fun is to tuck in while some of the crispness can be still felt in your mouth.

Ingredients:

Chicken - 1kg, cleaned and cut
Coconuts -2
1 for milk
1 small coconut grated
Red Chillies - 15 -20
Coriande seeds - 2 level tbsps
Jeera seeds - 1 level tbsps
peppercorns - 6
Ghee for frying
onion- chopped
Turmeric powder - 1 tsp
Garlic - 10 flakes
onion chopped - 1
Butter - 1 tbsp
Salt to taste
Juice of 1 lemon

Seasoning :

Ghee -2 tsp.
Inion -1 chopped
Garam masala (elaichi, dalchini, lavang) 1 tsp

Method:

Grate 1 coconuts and grind finely with 2 cups hot water. Squeeze out thick coconut milk and keep aside. Add 3 cups of hot water to the residue and take out thin milk. Roast grated coconut till light brown. Fry ingredients from 4 to 8 in a little ghee. Fry the chopped onion till light brown in ghee. Grind all these together with turmeric powder and garlic flakes with a little of the thin coconut milk till very fine.

Remove the masala, wash the mixer with a little water and add it to the masala along with the thin coconut milk, cleaned and cut chicken. 1 chopped onion, 1 tbsp. Butter, salt to taste and boil in a cooker for 5 minutes under pressure.

Remove and add thick coconut milk, lemon juice and bring to a boil, then simmer for a few minutes. Keep 2 tsp. Ghee in a flat vessel on the fire. Add chopped onion and fry till brown. Add garam masala powder (lavang, elaichi, and dalchini) and pour the curry over the seasoning, cover and remove from fire. Serve with Roti, Idli, Neer Dosa, apam or Dosa Rice.

Usually served with Roti – a crisp rice flakes preparation which could be bought in any Mangalore store, in any big city of India or abroad. Roti is a traditional dish of the Bunts served at every wedding and party. It should be soaked in curry and eaten.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Mangalorean Chicken curry

Ingredients
Chicken 1 kg (cut into medium pieces)
Cloves - 4
Sticks of cinnamon - 3
Ghee - 3 tsp
Onion - 1 (thinly sliced)
Tomatoes - 3
Potatoes - 2Salt to taste

Masala for grinding
Onions - 4
Red Chilies - 6
Coriander seeds - 2 tsp
Jeera -2 tsp
Turmeric powder -1 tsp
Coriander Leaves (chopped)-3 tsp
Cloves of garlic -3
Ginger - 1 inch
Pepper corns - 6
Small lemon sized tamarind

Method

Boil the Chicken and potatoes, with cloves, Cinnamon and salt and keep it aside.

Take ghee in a pan and fry the thinly sliced onion till golden brown, then add tomatoes to it and fry it for a while. Then add the masala and fry thoroughly for about 15 minutes.

Add the cooked chicken along with stock, add some water as required and bring it to boil. Garnish with coriander leaves.

Salt, Pepper and the Spices of Life

Now that I have mentioned what my blog would contain, it's time to start off my first post. I wanted to post someting about the name that I chose for my blog. Not like the regular names, I chose something unique. After a lot of thinking, I chose to name my new blog as "Salt, Pepper and the Spices of Life". I don't want to restrain my posts to be related only to food. Instead, I thought it's a good idea to have anything and everythiing that would help you spice up your life.

Imagine that you're sitting at a table, having a meal with some friends. Bowls of soup are served to everyone at the table. Before tasting the soup, the person next to you reaches for the salt and pepper, and for the next 20 seconds vigorously shakes into the soup more salt and pepper than you would use in a month.

You have a pained look on your face. These thoughts immediately go through your mind: "Why would you put salt and pepper in soup, or on any dish, BEFORE you taste it? How do you know how much to add?" You might also think, "How can someone put so much salt and pepper in their food?"

Of course, the roles could be reversed. You might be the one who loves to put a lot of salt and pepper on your food and the person next to you eats the soup without adding salt or pepper. In that case, you think, "How can she eat this bland soup without putting any seasoning in it?"
When it comes to salt, pepper, onions, garlic, curry or just about any type of seasoning, we tend to see things only one way - OUR way. It's hard for us to understand how someone could enjoy food when it is not seasoned as we think is appropriate. We cringe when we see someone "overdoing" or "under-doing" the spices.

How we season our food is a matter of preference and personal taste. There is no right or wrong way to use seasonings. Furthermore, the way in which another applies salt and pepper does not affect us in any way. They're not putting the salt and pepper in YOUR soup. They are putting the spices in their own soup.

Our world is so diverse, and yet it is difficult for us to accept each other's preferences. Often, when we see people doing things we wouldn't do, our mind says:

Why aren't they thinking as I think?
Why aren't they acting as I would act?

Your mind would often have you believe that your way is superior. Your beliefs and habits are shaped by your genetics and your environment. Each person has different genetics and has grown up in an environment that is different than yours.

Why expect everyone to come to the same conclusion?

Our spiritual growth comes when we learn to accept that others have different preferences, and we honor those preferences. There is no universal religion that everyone will agree to practice. There is no universal political viewpoint that all will accept. There is no one way of raising children that all cultures will agree upon. Marriage customs will vary from culture to culture.

Getting people to agree on these issues is like trying to get everyone to use the same amount of salt and pepper on their food. It's not going to happen.

The diversity in this world is beautiful and we can open our hearts to it. Within our own country and in our relations with people in other countries, we need to continually remind ourselves that it's perfectly acceptable for people to have preferences. If the other person is not harming us,

why can't we just smile and get on with life?

The next time you're tempted to judge or criticize the way other people think or act, realize that in most cases, they're just using a different amount of salt or pepper than you would use. Allow them to have their preferences, and there is no need to even consider what YOU would do.

About this blog

Not many of you would have had the experience of cooking in your childhood. But I still remember the day I started my cooking. It was when I started assisting my mom in her cooking in my early teens. I used to observe her as she instructed me to take the right measures for preparing the masala for the curries.

Starting from preparing simple stuffs like the morning coffee / tea to a not so simple dish as preparing idli's and dosa's my passion to cook grew in leap and bounds as days passed. I always used to find cooking more interesting and sometimes it was amusing too. It was fun to see the dosa take it's shape after the battar was poured and spread onto the pan (tawa). It was also fun to see the chappati taking the shape of a continents like Africa or Ausralia. Those were the days when I was still learning the art of cooking.

This blog will contain posts not just of the recepies but anything and everything to do with things that would spice up your life and hence the name "Salt, Pepper and the Spices of Life".
Many of the indian recepies in this blog would be that of my mom with a slight tweak or two. Since I am a non-veggie, you would see a mix of dishes (both veg as well as non veg) being posted in this blog. The only thing that you would miss out would be the pictures.