Saturday, October 26, 2013

Mataki UsaL

Ingredients:

Mataki (Moth) - 1 cup - let it sprout
Curry leaves - 10-12 or one branch
Black masala - 1/2 tsp
Gud or brown sugar - 1/2 tsp or to taste
Chili powder - 1/2 tsp or to taste
Fresh coconut - 3-4 Tb
Fresh cilantro/coriander leaves - a handful
Salt - to taste

Recipe:

Remove unsoaked mataki grains and add sprouted mataki in a pressure cooker pan.
Add enough water to cover mataki and cook mataki in pressure cooker.  
Prepare basic oil tempering.
Add 1/8 tsp hing powder and curry leaves. 
Add cooked mataki in it and add 1/2 cup water.
Add chili powder, black masala and salt.  Stir well.
Add gud at the end and cook for 2-3 min.  Turn the stove off.
Add fresh coconut and fresh chopped cilantro.
Serve as a side dish.

Notes:

1) Remove stones and impurities from mataki and wash it.
2) Tie it in a cloth and keep it in a dark place so that it would sprout.
3) Check every day.  If mataki is old it will not sprout and may get sticky due to fermentation. Don't use it as it will have bad smell.
4) If you add gud early, sometimes beans (here mataki) become tough so add gud only at the end of cooking.
5) Add more masala, coconut or cilantro if you wish.  When you don't measure all the ingredients exactly as the recipe...every time it will taste different...I really like it that way!
6) You can use this recipe for other beans like chana (Harbhara), dry peas, Moong, black eyed beans, lentils or mixture of all or some of these beans. 
7) Glossary of Pulses & Lentils - Indian Names
http://www.syvum.com/recipes/indian/glossp1.html


Shahi Garam Masala (Garam Masala by Sailana Maharaj)

Ingredients: 

Shahajeera (black cumin seeds) - 6 grams
Cloves - 6 grams
Cinnamon - 6 grams
Peppercorn - 6 grams
Bay leaf - 6 grams
Ilaichi - 6 grams
Badi Ilaichi - 6 grams
Mace (Jaypatri) - 3 grams
SunTh (ginger powder) - 3 grams
1 whole nutmeg - make powder
Saffron - 1 gram

Recipe:

Warm above spices on a nonstick pan so that they become crisp and you can grind them in a mixer/blender and store the masala in a tight lid glass jar. 

Notes:

1) Be careful while roasting cloves and peppercorns as they can splatter and jump from the pan and
cause burns.
2) Store all your spices and masalas in tight lid glass jars in a freezer. This way they don't go rancid and last a very long time.
3) I have 2 masala containers (spice boxes) in my kitchen close to my stove. I just take out a little bit of all the spices in these containers and save the rest in the freezer.
4) This masala is very strong so use it only 1/4 tsp per dish (for 4 people).


Black Masala or Goda Masala


Ingredients:


Coriander seeds -  500 grams
Cumin seeds - 125 grams
Sesame seeds - 100 grams
Red chili peppers - 100 grams
Dry coconut - 100 grams
Dagad phool or Kallupachi (Black Stone Flower) - 25 gms
Nagakeshar - 20 grams
Shahajeera (black cumin seeds) - 10 grams
Cloves - 10 to 20 grams  (use 10 for milder flavor)
Cinnamon - 10 to 20 grams (use 10 for milder flavor)
Peppercorn - 10 grams
Turmeric - 1 Tb
Bay leaf - 50 grams
Hing (asafoetida) - 2 tsps
Salt - 1 Tb
Peanut oil to shallow fry

Recipe:


Add a little oil (2-3 tsps) in a nonstick pan. 
Fry ingredients with following order.
Start with Hing powder /asafoetida.  Stir well in oil
Add Turmeric powder. Stir well in oil
Add dry coconut and cook on a very low heat until golden and remove it to a bowl.
Add little oil each time for the rest of the ingredients and roast them one by one.
Once roasted transfer them to the bowl.
Be careful when you roast cloves and black peppercorn ( they can pop and burn you)
Once all the ingredients are roasted, mix them well and grind them in a blender/mixer and store the masala in a tight lid glass jar.  Store it in a freezer so that it won't go rancid and will last for months.
Just take out enough every time that will last for a month in your spice box.

Notes: 


1) Every family has their own masala recipe in India. This recipe is my family recipe.  It came from 
my mom's mom, my maternal grandmother (Mrs. Pramodini Joshi) to my mom (Mrs. Sheela Datar) and now to me.  

2) Dagad phool - make sure it is free of soil /stones. 













3) Nagakeshar - It looks lot like cloves.



4) Glossary of Spices & Condiments - Indian Names
http://www.syvum.com/recipes/indian/glosss1.html

5) What is asafoetida?   
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asafoetida

Friday, October 25, 2013

Cauliflower Bhaji/ Rassaa with coconut 1


Ingredients:


Cauliflower - cut into 1" pieces (try to keep flowers intact) - about 2 cups
Potatoes - 1 medium - peal and cut into cubes - about 1/2 cup
Tomatoes - 2 small or 1 medium - cut into 1" pieces
Curry leaves - 1 branch or 10-12 leaves
Brown Sugar or Gud - 1/2 tsp
Chili powder - 1 tsp or to taste.
Salt to taste.

Masala ( Ground Spices):


Fresh coconut - grated - 1/4 cup
Fresh ginger root - peal and grate - about 1 Tb
Coriander powder - 2 Tb
Add 1/2 cup water to grind it into fine paste.

Recipe:


Prepare oil tempering (see recipe).
Add curry leaves. 
Add potatoes.  Saute it for 3-4 minutes and then add cauliflower. Stir well.
Add tomatoes.  Stir well.
Add 1 cup water and cover the pot with a lid.
Let the veggies cook for about 5 minutes or until desired tenderness.
Add ground masala, salt and chili powder.
Cook it for 2-3 minutes without the lid.

Notes: 


1)If you are going to serve it with rice, add more water to have more gravy (called as Rassaa)
2) If serving with chapatis, add less water and let most of the water evaporate while cooking. When you use fingers to eat chapati, you should be able to pick up veggies with a bite size piece of chapati. 
3) When you are making gravy using fresh or dry coconut or peanuts, add the masala at the end of 
recipe.  Stir well so they won't stick to the bottom of the pan and burn. Remember,  masala should get cooked too but don't stir it so much that veggies will get mushy. 
4) I don't eat curry leaves as they are tough.  
5) Glossary of Vegetables - Indian Names
http://www.syvum.com/recipes/indian/glossv1.html


Onion-Garlic Masala


Ingredients:


Dry onion - 1/2 cup shallow fried in oil until lightly brown
Garlic - 5-6 large cloves - shallow fry in oil until lightly brown
Peanuts - dry roast raw peanuts in shallow pan - about 1/2 cup
Cumin powder - 1 Tb
Coriander powder - 1 Tb
Chili powder - 3-4 tsp (or to taste)
Citric acid - a pinch

Recipe: 


Grind all the ingredients together and store in a glass jar.
Refrigerate (anything that has oil in it can go rancid).

Notes: 


1) You can use this masala with many dishes that has beans or dals (split beans).
2) You can use this masala with vegetable preparations that don't have curry (soupy consistency) or prepared dry like potatoes, bell peppers etc.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Chili Garlic Oil

Ingredients:

1/4 cup additional peanut oil
4/5 large cloves of garlic chopped
3 Tb chili powder
1 Tb cracked red pepper
pinch of salt

Recipe:

Heat oil in a tall pan. 
Add chopped garlic and let it cook until lightly brown.
Add cracked red pepper.
Remove from the heat and add chili powder (it burns easily).
Add salt to taste.
Cool and pour in a glass jar and store it in refrigerator. 

Notes:

1) It keeps well in refrigerator for many weeks.. Take it out and let it thaw before using it.
2)I serve this chili oil with many soupy curried vegetables like spinach/methi bhajis.
3) I use it with Chinese, Thai or Italian dishes.
4) You can use it as a condiment with fresh chapatis, phulkas. 
5) when I make pita bread pizza,  I spread this oil on pita bread before adding tomato sauce and then add veggies and cheese on top of it.  

Spinach Bhaaji 2


Ingredients:


2 tsp peanut oil
1/8 tsp hing powder or 2/3 cloves of garlic cut lengthwise.
1 cup frozen chopped spinach (palak) (thaw and squeeze water out) or use 2 cups  fresh spinach.
2 handful toor dal washed well.
2-3 Tb besan flour
3/4 dry red chilies
1/4 tsp tamarind paste (add 4-5 Tb water and mix well)
1 tsp brown sugar or cut gud (Indian brown sugar)
1 cup fresh or frozen or canned corn, washed and drained (optional)


Recipe: 


Cook spinach and toor dal in a pressure cooker.
Heat oil in a flat pan or Kadhai (wok)
Add mustard seeds and let them pop.
Remove from heat and add 1/8 tsp hing powder or garlic and 1/4 tsp turmeric powder.
Return to heat and add 2-3 dry red chilli peppers.
Add cooked toor dal and spinach and stir.
Add 1 cup of water and let it cook.
Mix besan flour in 1/2 cup of water, add to mixture and keep stirring.
Add tamarind and brown sugar.
Add salt to taste.  Cook for 5 more minutes until all ingredients mix well.
If needed, add water...it should have consistency of soup.
Add corn (optional)
Serve it in a bowl and add 1 tsp of chilli garlic oil on top. 
Serve as a side dish with rice, chapati, paratha, puri, naan or pita bread.

Notes:


1) I use the same recipe for methi (fenugreek) leaves.  
2) I use Toufayan pita bread. I roast pita bread on top of stove (using cake cooling rack). I use tongs and keep turning the bread until it puffs up and then open it and apply 1 tsp ghee on it. I serve this immediately.
3) Glossary of Vegetables - Indian Names
http://www.syvum.com/recipes/indian/glossv1.html