I love herbs and rare has been the case when I have made a visit to the market and not gotten myself minimum of two herbs. Something about them - the scent, the freshness or the taste - attracts me to them and I find myself looking for various permutations and combination to add them to my daily diet. I got myself some fresh looking Dill last week and for my usual dinner of Roti (which is Indian flat bread), I added the herb along with often forgotton spice - Dill seed.
Depending on your taste buds and preferences, add the herbs since many ppl find the herb little overpowering. I found 1 tbsp of the herb added only the slightest hint of its presence but enough to make a wonderful change and the dill seeds only help to compliment it. Its very simple and not at all time consuming.
Method
Mix all the ingredients together
Add enough water to make it into pliable dough, soft yet not sticky.
Divide the dough into small balls and using a rolling pin roll it out.
Make it into a circle, not too thin nor too thick
Cook it in a griddle, add little vegetable oil around the roti, to cook.
Turn it after 2-3 minutes when golden/brown spots appear on the surface.
Serve it warm with any greens or any curry of your choice.
Lunch for me is a very subdued affair.As I have mentioned umptieth times before here in this blog, I hate cooking for myself. I am not a fan of leafy salads either. They really dont fill me up and I end up feeling doubly hungry, deprived and I end up overeating later on. To avoid that, I opt for healthy and filling soups accompanied by sizable piece of breads. Warm and nutritious, Soups are one of nature's best foods.
I have this recipe from a gal pal of mine who got it from her sister (and so on...goes the chain). I have made Red Lentil soup before but the addition of coconut milk along with lemongrass makes all the difference. Bursting with flavour and protein, this will soon become your go-to meal often enough, mark my words :) Serve it with a crusty bread.
Method
In a saucepan, in 1/2 tsp oil saute onions, garlic and lemon grass until soft.
Add the lentils along with the spices.
Add the coconut milk, 2 cups water (add more to suit your consistancy) bring to a boil and then simmer covered until soft and mushy
Add the juice of lemon, scallions, salt, pepper.
Serve warm garnished with scallions, paprika and cilantro.
For all those mushy ladies finger haters and also for 'Oh no! Same old lady finger curry!!!" naysayers - this Bhindi Do Pyaza is for you :) Bhindi (Ladies finger) Do (two) Pyaza (Onions) is a North Indian dry curry where it denotes onions used twice the normal amount with Ladiesfinger to make this dish. One just needs more onions and do a stir fry along with ladiesfinger and ta-da, the dish is ready. I am going to dissapoint the 'Hail Frozen Foods' folks here since I am really sorry, Frozen ladiesfinger will not work at all. If you really want to, then its mushy heaven for you :)
I have seen few variations, esp one with tomatoes added to it. Somehow I prefer when the fusion of onions and ladiesfinger is not distracted by the addition of tomatoes.Although this dish will not find its way under "Done within 10min" category, it sure is worth that wee bit of extra patience. The trick to avoid the mushiness is not to cover when cooking these ladiesfingers and also to use fresh ones. Not frozen. Prep time is approx 5-10min and cooking time another 15-20min. But the 30minute wait makes it worth it at the end of it all :)
Method
Wash, clean and dry the fresh ladiesfinger thoroughly. Should not be wet. Chop of the ends and slice them.
In a pan, in 1/2 tsp oil, add the cumin seeds. When lightly brown, add the onions, ginger garlic paste, salt and the spices (except Garam Masala and Mango powder) and stir until soft
Add the Ladiesfinger, give a quick stir on high flame until it is coated with the onion-spice mixture. Then reduce the flame to low-medium and give it a stir every 5 minutes.
The dish is done when the ladiesfinger turn soft - takes about 15-20min..
It will not be mushy nor will it be crunchy. Just the right bite to it. Just 2 min before taking off the flame, add the remaining two spices, stir and serve warm with Phulkas, Chapathi or White Rice
I try to drink Barley water at least once in 10 days or so. But there are times, thanks to hectic lifestyle, such things tend to slip my mind. One thing which is more dangerous than anything is blaming time for not eating properly. That being said, these Barley Roti's come to rescue. I use Barley flour, along with whole wheat flour, which are available in everywhere, even in Indian stores. Instead of using plain water to knead the dough I use barley water. You can use the cooked barley as an alternative to plain white rice - for the same meal or refrigerate it and use the next day for salad prep, patties etc.
He : Honey..I am so hungry! Whats special for dinner tonight? She: mm..Usual Rasam but I made Cabbage Upkari..(looking at him with happy bright eyes!) He : Oh cool! Sounds new! Lemme take a taste..... (comes into kitchen, scoops a spoonful of the upkari ...chews..chews some more and now there is a small frown in his forehead!) He : Ok Ok..I am tired but not that tired to not even notice that you are trying to cheat me with the same old cabbage that you make by giving it a different name! Its the boring cabbage after all! She (grinning) : yeah - This same old boring cabbage (for you that is!) that I made is actually called Upkari and its not boring! I love it..
....And thus goes the conversation/ Has it ever happened to you that what you thought was "your creation" actually exists with a name to top it off? It has happened quite so often. I have posted the other famous egg-in-a-hole which was supposedly my creation until I saw the same being made on TV!!!! I have been cooking cabbage this way ever since..mm..I started cooking and only last year, thanks to bloggers I got to know that it is actually called Upkari - a Konkani dish meaning "side dish" in that language. It is called so when any vegetables are cooked with coconut and in water. So much for my originality! (smirking!) Anyways here is my version(!Duh!)
Method
In 1/2 tsp of oil, saute the lentils , chillies until lightly golden, add the mustard seeds
and once they start popping add the onions
Add the cabbage along with little salt, asafoetida and turmeric.
Saute for 2 minutes, sprinkle slightly with water (I dont like my cabbage too mushy!), close the lid and cook until the cabbage is slightly soft.
Add the coconut and curry leaves.
Cook for another 2 minutes in open flame and serve warm.
Lentils(dal) is predominantly a major player in my kitchen. We love dals and we usually accompany it for our dinner with roti's / phulkas. The protein in the dal helps to satisfy our hunger faster and thereby eat less. I consume these often enough to cut the amount of rice I eat per day. I cannot do without rice though, hence eating minimal works for me. Also including greens at least twice each week is another habit in my kitchen. The nutrients that it has to give is immense. Try to buy fresh greens and cook them on the same day. That way nutrients are not lost too much.
Recently on my recent grocery shopping, I came across the freshest looking Red Chard. I bought them home and thought of making a stir fry. I was not too sure if it will go well with my khasta roti, so thought of making it into a dal instead. The afternoon lunch was a joke with not so much of protein hence I thought I will make a mixed dal constituting 5 different lentils cooked together and add in the red chard alongwith it. It turned out to be a very satisfying meal.
Method
In a saucepan, in 1/2 tsp oil add the spices. Saute for few seconds until aromatic. Add the onions and tomatoes along with salt, stir for 1 min and then add ginger and garlic.
Add the lentils(washed with cold water until clean water runs through),
stir for few more minutes and then add about 3 cups of water (or vegetale stock) along with turmeric.
Close the lid and cook for 8-10 minutes until the lentils are almost soft.
Add the chopped chard, close the lid and cook until the greens have wilted.
I have said it before. Hyderabadi's know to eat well! Their food reeks of delicious aromatic smells and appetizing rich plates. After the Biryani and bread pudding, the next thing I love about their cuisine is Bhagara Baingan. The Indian eggplants (small variety), stuffed with aromatic spices and immersed in a rich gravy is my kind of having fun while eating!
I love my mom's version which has pretty simple south Indian ingredients - but I also love Tarla Dalal's version which has more of North Indian spices. Since I couldn't decide between them, I made my own version which has a mix of these! Talk about hybridization! Choosing very small brinjals will help to reduce the amount of oil, used for cooking since they cook faster and need less oil. I choose the smallest ones, I can find among them. I know they look quite big in the picture, but they are not. :)
Method
Dry roast the ingredients for the Spice mix in low heat until aromatic.
Grind it into powder and stuff them inside the brinjals as shown in the picture. If the spice mix is left over, dont worry - it will be used for the gravy
In a pan, add enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan and once hot, place the brinjals inside on their sides. Close the lid and let it cook for 5-10 minutes.
Gently turn them on the other side and let them cook for another 5-10 minutes. The smaller the brinjals, faster these get done. Turn them gently until they are soft and done. Set aside.
In the same pan, add mustard seeds and cumin. Once they splutter, add the onions, ginger garlic paste along with tamarind. Let it cook for 2-3 minutes.
Add about 2 cups water and let it come to a boil Add salt. Take care with the salt since you have already some in the stuffing. Let it come to a boil and then add the remaining spice mixture. Usually this will help to thicken up the gravy.
About 10 minutes before serving, drop the eggplants in the gravy. Be gentle, else the eggplants will break apart.
Garnish with cilnatro and serve along with some phulkas/roti