It's time to get serious about this blog and I intend to post 2 sets of recipes each week. I will add pictures as and when possible.
Here's this week's first set:
Menu # 2
Here's this week's first set:
Menu # 2
The other day, a friend of ours was coming over for lunch
and he prefers Indian food, it’s not summer right now but it is kind of warm so
I wanted to make a substantial meal that did not sit too heavy in the stomach.
I was not at all interested in making any of the usual curries and dal and
things, I did not feel that an elaborate
dessert was called for either; but I cannot imagine a meal without a dessert!
So here is the menu I
came up with:
2a) Easy Mutton Curry (Main Course)
Ingredients:
½ Kilo
Mutton (any cut will do)
1 Large
bunch of Coriander
1 Large
Tomato
1 or 2 green
chillies
2 inch pc
cinnamon
3 green
cardamoms
1 to 2 tsp
cooking oil (preferably, mustard as that is what’s best for most Indian mutton
curries. In its absence, any cooking oil will do)
Salt to
taste
Method:
Try and ensure that all the pieces of mutton are of similar
size, (this is best done when selecting it from the butcher or store), trim the
fat off the pieces and keep aside. Clean and chop the Coriander leaves,
tomatoes and green chillies and grind all three together in a liquidizer; add a
little water if required.
Heat the oil in a pressure cooker and add the whole spices,
add the mutton as soon as the spices’ aroma is released. Stir the mutton for a
few minutes, until each piece is sealed. Add the coriander, tomato and chilli
paste and enough water to cover the mutton.
Pressure cook for about 20 to 30 minutes, depending on the
mutton. It is prudent to take the mutton off the fire after about 20 minutes
and then cook further if required.
Tip: When cooking mutton in a pressure cooker, I often cook
on high flame for till the 1st whistle and then. Lower the flame for
three more – works for me each tie.
Variation (If you have a ‘non mutton eating’ person, like my
husband to cook for): Cook for about 15 minutes or a total of three whistles;
add pieces of reasonably small pieces of chicken and cook till done. If it is
just one person, who is going to have the chicken, about 200 to 250 grams of
chicken is enough. The picture of the cooked curry has chicken in it.
Please note that this curry will turn out to be quite like hospital food, should you make it with only chicken. The flavour of the curry comes from the blending of the coriander and tomato paste with the juices of the mutton.
Please note that this curry will turn out to be quite like hospital food, should you make it with only chicken. The flavour of the curry comes from the blending of the coriander and tomato paste with the juices of the mutton.
Serve with steamed rice.
Suggested accompaniments:
Finger Chips
Cucumber
salad
Crisp potato
discs
Masala
Masoor
2b) Masala Masoor (Supporting Dish)
Ingredients:
½ cup masoor
dal
1 onion
chopped
1 tbsp
cooking oil
1 flat tsp garlic paste
1 flat tsp ginger paste
1 tsp Coriander powder
1 tsp cumin powder
½ tsp turmeric
½ tsp red chilli powder
2 tsp kastoori methi
1 soup cube
1 – 2 tsp ghee
1 tsp cumin seeds
Pinch of kashmiri chilli powder
Finely chopped coriander and mint leaves for garnish
Method:
Wash and soak the masoor daal for at least 30 minutes.
Place the ginger paste, garlic
paste, coriander powder, cumin powder, turmeric and chilli powder in a bowl and
add enough water to make a runny paste; this allows the powders to soften
really well and makes it easy to add everything with ease during actual
cooking.
Heat the oil in a pressure cooker and sauté chopped onions till soft,
add 2 tablespoons of water and reduce the heat to prevent further cooking of
the onions. Add soaked spices, kasturi methi and soup cube. Add a little more
water if required and cook over low heat till the smell of raw spices
disappears.
Drain the daal and add it to the spices, stir for a minute or so till
all the grains are coated with the spices. Add 2 cups of water and cook till
the daal is cooked to an almost mushy consistency.
Tip: I often wait for three whistles of the pressure cooker – allow the
steam to reduce and then check the daal for water and softness before
proceeding to cook it further (if required).
Once the daal is cooked, check for salt and add to taste; the soup cube
is usually salty enough for the daal to need no further seasoning.
Heat the ghee to smoking, turn off the heat and then add the cumin
seeds. As soon as the seeds have popped open (which they should) add the
kashmiri chilli powder and add to the cooked daal. Garnish with a generous
amount of freshly chopped coriander and mint leaves.
2c) Crisp Potato Discs (Side Dish)
Ingredients:
6 medium
sized potatoes
2 tbsp rice
flour
½ tsp red
chilli powder
1 flat tsp
coriander powder
1 rounded
tsp cumin powder
1 flat spoon
amchur or chat masala
Salt to
taste (a little less if using chaat masala)
Oil for
frying
Method:
Boil the
potatoes in salt water (with skin on is always better), keep aside to cool.
It’s a good idea to do this ahead as cooling takes a fair amount of time. Peel
and cut width ways into 1 cm discs.
Mix all dry ingredients thoroughly and coat each disc in
this powder. Heat oil and fry the potato discs to a golden brown. Serve hot.
Tip: It’s always a good idea to begin by frying a
single disc and tasting it to check for any adjustments in salt or spice that
may be required and then proceed with the rest.
Variation: Skip
the amchur or chaat masala in the rice flour and sprinkle it on top of the
fried discs before serving.
The dessert added to this menu is not at all in harmony with
the rest of the meal; but then, I am Chapati and Pink Floyd and have therefore
given myself the license to ‘unharmonise’ to some degree! It’s just that the
following dessert is easy to make, not too rich and a wonderful and light
ending to any meal:
2d) Minty Lemon Solid (Dessert)
Ingredients:
600 ml milk
5 – 6 sprigs
of fresh mint (More, if you love a minty essence as much as I do)
2 large
lemons (or 2 ½ of medium lemons)
175 gms of
castor sugar
15 gms
gelatine
Fresh mint
leaves
Method:
Wash the
sprigs of mint thoroughly and let it dry while you bring the milk to a boil,
put the sprigs into the milk and cover to infuse them and let it cool
completely. You can even do this part ahead and leave the ‘minty’ milk in the
fridge.
Wash the
lemons and grate the rind, or use a rinder if you have one, then squeeze the
juice. Add the lemon rind to the sugar
and half the milk. Heat the remaining 300 ml of milk with the gelatine, stirring
till the gelatine dissolves, ensure that the milk does not come to boil. Add
the hot milk and gelatine mixture to the cold milk mixture and stir to dissolve
the sugar.
Add the
lemon juice immediately – the milk will curdle a bit and this is the desired
outcome.
Pour into 4
individual bowls/glasses or a serving dish (preferably, a clear bowl) and let
it set for a minimum of 5 hrs in the refrigerator. Garnish with the mint leaves
before serving.
You can also
set this dessert in a jelly mould and turn it onto a flat dish before serving.
You ought to have two distinct layers in the dessert – one ‘clearish’ and jelly
like and the other almost like a curd. I just set it in a corning or Pyrex
dish.
Hey thanks a pile for taking this up again ...sounds simple and achievable enough for a novice like me and more importantly,all the ingredients would be available in 'sadda gaon' ! My weekend menu's planned !!!
ReplyDeleteCheers
M
let me know how it turned out - esp the dessert:)
ReplyDelete