Tuesday, 4 February 2025

The perfect tomato chutney

Tomatoes - 3 or 4

Stemless Guntur Red Chilli - 6 or 8

Handful of coriander leaves

Saute 3 spoons of cold pressed groundnut oil. Add a spoonful of udad dal, chana dal, red chillies, curry leaves. Saute. 

Once its sauted, I prefer to remove the chilli and the curry leaves out. 

Add tomatoes, cook till the tomato is well cooked. Add salt, hing, a little pepper. 

When you turn off the gas, add coriander leaves and let it cool.

Grind it all together (including the removed chilli and curry leaves).

This is the best tomato chutney ever. Why?

I have often added roasted groundnut to bind it - bad idea - it takes away the tomatoey-ness

I have added jaggery - bad idea - it lessens the spice and instead makes it flat.

Pudina added with coriander - works well, but not everyone likes the minty taste.

Small onions in the saute mix - works well, adds the onion flavour. 

But this recipe I cracked today is easily the bestest tomato chutney recipe ever. 

Monday, 28 March 2022

The Avial

 If you have ever tasted any Thai curry variant - you will notice how the Avial or the Pulinkari come so very close to the thai curry taste and texture. The Avial all the more because of the many vegetables in it. 

Cut - ash gourd, chenai (yam), carrot, beans, drumstick -add any other reasonably hard vegetable into it - but not soft vegetables like potato. You can add raw banana as well. They have to be cut into longitudinal strips of about an 1 inch in length and 0.5 to 1 cm in width. This is one of the uniqueness of Avial.

Boil the above in turmeric water (Add a small amla sized tammarind juice to it) with a bit of salt. Or cooker 1 whistle.

Grind coconut (has to be substantial) and green chilli. (Jeera optional)

When the boiling above is done, add the ground mixture to it. If you want the avial more liquidy - add more water - less, add less water. 

When it is done, add a teaspoonful of coconut oil and curry leaves (just like that - no tempering) and turn off the gas and close with a lid.

Note: If you dont add tamarind juice, at the end, add sour curd and mix in the end. 

Some people make it with coconut milk - but this is not a traditional recipe.

Wednesday, 9 March 2022

Chutney Infographic


 

Adai

 The Adai is something we hated with a lot of passion when we were children - but as an adult absolutely love it and the kids hate it now. 

1 measure Idli rice  (Raw rice makes the adai crispy - so if you like it that way do this substitution). Soak for 3-4 hours.

3/4th measure black moong + 1/4th measure chana dal + moong dal (the way amma puts it is 3/4 of the glass fill with black moong, remaining 1/4th the other two dals) Soak for 1hour max.

Add Curry leaves (lots), Red chilli (soak for an hour), a pinch of Hing

Grind all ingredients together into a not so watery consistency - it has to be thick. 

Cook like dosa on a tawa - and be generous with sesame oil and patient with time.

Monday, 26 July 2021

A collection of recipes I have used

 This is the internet and you think you will find things when you want you, but you dont, so, here a collection of recipes I have used...

A discovery of radish chutney led me to this: Kashmiri Walnut Raddish Chutney - yes

And the raddish chutney recipe I actually wanted: Raddish Groundnut Chutney.

One of the first recipes I ever used off the internet: Mirch ka Salan by Mahanandi

This is one incredible recipe for corn flakes mixture I have made over and over: Corn Flakes Mixture

A no-cook protein bar recipe that I followed and modified quite a bit: Protein Bar

A Himachali Madra recipe: Himachali Madra

A Sri Lankan dish I dont recall how I discovered - Twitter perhaps: Wambatu Moju

Chow chow chutney which has become a staple for Dosas/Idlis: Chow chow chutney

A hung curd dill leaves dip: Hung curd dip

A2B style mint chutney: Mint chutney 

Restaurant style tomato chutney: Tomato chutney or Beetroot chutney

A Bengali style dal: Lau Diye Teetor dal

Tuesday, 2 March 2021

Sesame (Ellu) Curry


Take one medium bitter gourd
Cut it ...add some salt and keep for 30 mns

Masala

One teaspoon black til....one small spoon rice
3 red chillies
Little methi seeds
Add 4 table spoon coconut
Grind and keep


In a kadai take little oil ...then mustard
After the mustard spurts add the seasoned gourd....Make little brown ..add tamarind water
Let it boil.add gud and turmeric

Take out karella..
In a kadai take little oil ...then rai
After spurts add karella....Make little brown ..add tamarind water and the ground masala from above
 

Let it boil. Add little jaggery and turmeric


Brown Gram Sundal

 Not exactly a sundal, but a "gujju"ised version of it.

For quarter kg of Brown kadalai, take one ladle of Besan (gram dal powder). Add chilli powder, Dhania-jeera powder, a little salt and sugar and a spoon or so of oil. Mix till it is of powdery consistency - not pasty consistency. 

Soak Brown Kadalai overnight

Pressure cook for about 10-12 whistles

During the final saute, some water will remain in the vessel - add this besan mix and close and steam for a few mns till the besan is cooked. 

Garnish with onion, coriander leaves and serve.

Tip: You can add amchur powder, chaat masala etc to this mix as per your taste. Just take care that it is not overly "masala"

Friday, 6 November 2020

Chenai Kootu

Ingredients:

Chenai (Yam)

Tamarind (marble size ball)

Grated Coconut + Green chilli + Ginger: Ground to paste

Boiled Brown Chana or Chana dal (Either one will do)

Turmeric  (1 tea spoon)

Salt, Jaggery

Garnish: Mustard, Udad, Curry leaves


Procedure

Cut and Boil Chenai (Yam) with a little tamarind and turmeric

Salt after boiling plus little jaggery

Drain

Mix the Chana/Dal with the Coconut+Chilli+Ginger paste

Garnish on top

This is a dish typically served in weddings and comes almost always right after the pachadi on the left corner of the leaf.

Monday, 31 December 2012

Forgotten Recipes

I received this interesting set of Kerala Iyer recipes on email. I have heard of some of them, even tasted a few of them. Have also made (and continue to make) one or two of these even now, so thought I will post it here for future reference!

Old but forgotten Kerala Iyer Recipes
P.R.Ramachander

Over the years some of the very special dishes have gone out of fashion from the Kerala Iyer family. It is not because they are not good nor because they are difficult to prepare but because of the migration of families to different areas and their adopting to the recipes of the new area, that these are not prepared. Some of these are given here.
1.Arachu Kalakki
Normally these are prepared using mangoes or Nellikais preserved in salt in Kerala Iyer homes and used to be prepared in off seasons for vegetables. The only exception is Chenai. The method of preparation is given below: -
1.Take sufficient quantity of Kanni Mangai or Nellikkai preserved in salt or Chenai (Thoroughly washed tender mango pickles can be used instead of Kanni Mangai)
2.Grind it in Mixie with coconut and green chillies
3.Pour the ground mixture in sour buttermilk and mix thoroughly.
4.Season it with mustard, red chillies and fenugreek (Menthiyam) and garnish with curry leaf.
5.Add small amount of salt in case of salt preserved pickles and sufficient quantity in case of Chenai.
2.Manga Kadi
This can be prepared only in the mango season. The method is extremely simple: -
1.Boil cut pieces of green mango (with skin removed) in water.
2.Add salt and small amount of chilly powder and boil till mamgo pieces are cooked well.
3.Season it with mustard, red chillies and fenugreek.
3.Mezhukku Peratti
This is another very simple side dish, which was extremely popular in Kerala Iyer homes. The method of preparation is: -
1.Cut into small pieces Plantains (cooking type banana) and chenai. (In places where Chenai is not available we have found that carrot can be used) Jack fruit seeds if available or Koorkan Kizhangu during seasons are also added
2.If available at cut pieces of jack fruit seed and/or Koorkan Kizhangu
3.Boil with salt and turmeric powder in pressure cooker.
4.Take coconut oil and heat it. When sufficiently hot, put the boiled vegetables and mix well.
The kari tastes good even if other oils are used
4.Puliyitta Keerai
This is another very simple dish prepared using either amaranth leaves or tender non-itchy type of colacasia (Chembu) leaves. The method of preparation is as follows:-
1.Cut the leaf into very small pieces.
2.Boil the leaves in tamarind water, turmeric and salt , till the leaves are cooked well. Add also green chillies while boiling.
3.Take out the green chillies and grind them and mix with the boiled leaves
4.Season with mustard, red chillies and fenugreek.
5.Puliya Kuthi Upperi
This is a peculiar dish prepared only in Kerala iyer homes. In some homes , it is directly mixed with rice and in some others it is used as a side dish for Mulagootal.The method of preparation is as follows:-
1.Cut plantains, brinjal . ash gourd (Or Chowchow) and red pumpkin into thin long pieces similar to aviyal.Traditionally bundled non-itchy colacasia leaves used to be added in Kerala.
2.Boil in tamarind with turmeric and salt. Till well cooked. The tamarind water should be just sufficient to soak the cut pieces. And after boiling, very little watery portion should be there.
4.Fry without oil, rice, red chilies and fenugreek and powder.
5.Take some oil . splutter mustard and Uzhuttan Parippu..Put mixture of the boiled vegetables and the powder and stir till it becomes semi solid.
6.Mulagooshyam
This is possibly one of the very simple Kerala recipes. It is also called Karingalan by some Here is the method:-
1.Choose either plantains and Chenai(Where Chenai is not available choose carrot instead).Cut into small pieces.
2.Boil till coked with turmeric powder, pepper powder and salt with medium water.
3.Season it either with raw coconut oil or mustard and uzhuttam parippu
7.Mulagu Vellam
This needs very sour buttermilk to prepare. Here is the method
1 Cook pepper powder in water for some time.
2,Add sour butter milk , salt and turmeric powder and boil till it is reduced to half the quantity,
3.Season it with mustard, red chillies and fenugreek.
8.Moru Charu
This is an instant recipe when you don’t have time and nothing else except sour buttermilk. Here is the recipe.
1.Heat Oil , splutter mustard , red chillies, uzhuttam parippu and fenugreek
2.Pour buttermilk and add salt.
3.Remove from the stow before buttermilk comes to boil.
9.Podi Podicha Pulungari
This is possibly the Kerala substitute for Tamil Nadu Sambhar.Here is the recipe:-
1.Cut into long thin pieces, Brinjal, red Pumpkin, ash gourd or Chow Chow.
2.Cook in pressure cooker in tamarind water.
3.Fry in a dry pan rice and red chillies.The colour of the rice should turn ivory.
4.Powder the rice , chillie mixture.
5.Add to the vegetables and boil.
6.Season with mustard and garnish with curry leaf.
a. The interesting variant is prepared by using only Jack fruit instead of all the above vegetables.
b. A super variant is the Puducode Pulungari prepared only on all days of Navarathri in the temple at Palakkad. The recipe of this is given below: -
Needs:
Pumpkin 150 g, Yam 150 g, Ash gourd 150 g, Plantains 50 g,
Raw rice 10 g, tur dhal 25 g, dried chillies 3, Fenugreek (Mentha) 5 g, Tamarind 50 g, Coconut (shredded) 25 g, Mustard 2 g, green chillies 5 g, Jaggery 20 g, curry leaves, Coconut oil 25 g and some quantity of curry leaves and salt to taste.
Method:
1.Cut and cook Ah gourd and yam together in a cooker
2.Also cook Tur dal in the cooker
3. Cut and boil pumpkin and plantains
4. fry rice till they pop and powder it
5.fry fenugreek (Mentha) to golden brown and powder it
6.Grind coconut and green chillies together
7 Extract Tamarind juice and boil it for 5 minutes
8. Add all vegetables, jaggery, and cooked dhal for 10 minutes
9.Add rice powder and boil for 5 minutes
10. Take out from stove and immediately add coconut paste, mentha powder, coconut oil and curry leaves and stir.
11. Season it with mustard and dry chilies in coconut oil.
10.Murunga ilai Adai
This was a popular Tiffin item of yester years. Here is the method:-
1.Soak parboiled rice for more than 6 hours
2.Grind in to smooth paste adding sufficient salt
3.Add cut drumstick leaves to this mixture
4.Prepare thick adais from this batter
11.Chakkai Adai
This used to be prepared in jack fruit season in yester years.Here is the recipe
1.Soak parboiled rice for more than 6 hours
2.Grind in to smooth paste adding sufficient salt
3.Add also cut pieces of jackfruit and small quantity of jaggery half way while grinding.
4.Prepare Adais with this batter
12.Koozhu.
This is normally prepared only when batter prepared for Verumarisi adai becomes sour. Being very tasty many families used to prepare the batter and allow it to become sour to make Koozhu.The method is as follows:-
1.Soak and grind par boiled rice and allow the batter to become very sour.
2. Mix the sour batter in more water and make it of thinner consistency.
3.Heat gingelly oil (sufficiently more) , splutter mustard, uzhtham Parippu, Milagai Vettal. Perungayam, and thairu milagai in the oil.
4.Pour the semi liquid batter in to this and keep on stirring till , the colour changes and the batter does not stick to the vessel
5.Keep ready an oil-coated plate(Olden times oil smeared banana leaves were used)
6.Pour the hot Koozhu in to this and allow it to cool.
7,Cut in to small pieces and serve
13.Koozhu dosai
For dosai normally par boiled rice is being used. In the olden times for Vritha days, it was felt that it was Vetthu. So it was necessary to eat some thing prepared of wheat or Pachaarisi(ordinary rice).But tiffins prepared by Pacharisi were not tastey.The following is the recipe for making tasty dosas out of Pacharisi.
1.Soak Pacharaisi and grind into smooth paste,Add salt
2.Take out a small portion and mix it with water
3,Put little oil and heat it. In this pour the liquefied batter and keep on stirring, till the colour changes and it does not stick.
4.Remove from the stove and mix thoroughly with the main batter,
5.Prepare very soft dosas now.
14. Aracha Kozhakattai
Normally on Amavasya days , at night Kozhakattai used to be prepared in olden days.The method is as follows:-
1.Soak Parboiled rice and grind it to coarse consistency.When the grinding is about to be over add shredded coconut (about quarter of the dough) and grind for a few minutes further.
2.Heat oil splutter mustard, Uzhutham Parippu , Milagai Vettal and Perungayam
3.Add the batter in to this and keep on stirring till it becomes solid
4.Make small balls using this batter
5.Put it in boiling water gently and cook for more than 15 minutes (Other alternative is steam cooking)
6,Remove and serve with Sambhar or Chutney.
15,Mooda Kozhakkattai
This can be prepared only in jack fruit season.Method is as follows:-
1.Heat water and bring it to boil
2.Add jaggery and jackfruit pieces and boil till jackfruit is cooked
3.Add the rice powder gently and keep on stirring till it becomes solid
4.Make it in to small balls, roll these balls in banana leaves and tie them
5.Steam cook these balls.
There are possibly many other very special dishes of a Kerala Iyer household which , I may not even know. If you know any please contribute .So that we keep living the culture of tasty food of Kerala Iyer households.
I am adding the recipe for Kalan’
1.Prepare sour butter milk
2.Take little water , add pepper powder and turmeric powder and boil for some time
3.Gently add the churned butter milk to this mixture
4.When it comes to boil add well cooked plantain pieces also(normally Chenai is used.)
5.Allow to boil.after adding salt
6.Unless the vessel is a deep one , it will boil and spill out.To avoid this keep on removing the froth
7.Reduce to half the quantity
8.Grind coconut and green chillies without adding much water
9.Add it to the boiled buttermilk
10 Heat for some time
11.Remove from tava and add curry leaves
12.Season it with mustard red chillies and mentha
(If buttermilk is not sour enogh , the boiled mixture will curdle. Put the entire mixture without vegetables and blend)

Friday, 28 December 2012

Banana Stem

One of the delicacies and an amazing healthy food is the banana stem. There is some degree of art in choosing a banana stem and there is a fair level of gaming to be crossed while cutting the stem right, but if you cross those two levels, what you get is easy and worth it.

Cut the stem into a 5mm cube slices. A 3 mm cube would be great, but your fingers may not survive that. While cutting, it is important to remove some of the overhanging fibres so that is not a tangled mess that nobody can eat.

Soak these cut pieces in turmeric water for half an hour. Drain the water and stir fry with a little more salt to taste.

A simple, unassuming, crunchy delight...

Porichoyambu

The Porichoyambu is another cousin of the sambar, like the pitla. Usually made with brinjals, but not quite a brinjal sambar.

In this case, the brinjal is cut into small pieces (like in sambar)
Oil, mustard and grated coconut is roasted till mild red.

And this is mixed into the regular sambar  -Tamarind water with veggies brought to boil till raw taste of tamarind goes away and added with the above and boiled toor dal.

So you can see those little coconut bits floating around. But the coconut flavour is not as strong as the flavour in the pulinkari...and the little coconut gives it a nuttier (obvious) taste than the sambar...

Jeera Rasam

Ah, this is the Tamil version of Chicken soup, I suppose. And the simplest of all things to make and the lightest of all things that go into your tummy.

Mustard plus jeera in oil - till it bursts.
Add water, turmeric, little raw tamarind, asafoetida, salt and bring to a boil.
Add curry leaf, jeera powder and pepper powder (optional).

Thats it...simble!

Sambar Powder

Of course, there are many sambar powders in shops. All brands. From Everest to MTR to so called organic brands. But then again, I have not found any of these coming close to the flavour at home. Wonder why.

But here is the simple way to make it.

1 measure Dhaniya seeds - roast separately - quick roast
2 measures Red Chilli - roast separately - quick roast
1/2 ladle methi seeds - roast separately
1 ladle chana dal - roast separately

Add salt - 2 spoons max and grind. Thats it, done! Delicious sambar powder for almost a month worth of sambar.