Year: 2011

Easy Coconut Rice Recipe, South Indian style

Easy Coconut Rice Recipe, South Indian style

In India coconut is one of the most common offerings to God.  Since is considered ‘sreshtha’ (superior) and auspicious it is offered as a way of prayer. It is first de-husked, broken along with the shell and then offered. After that the coconut is treated 

Corn Chivda/ Corn Mixture

Corn Chivda/ Corn Mixture

Chivda is a popular snack of Maharashtra and North Karnataka usually made of flattened rice/poha. It is then spiced with masala and jazzed up with other ingredients like peanuts, raisins, cashews etc. When we talk about chivda, usually the picture of poha chivda comes to 

Palak Daal Recipe

Palak Daal Recipe

The past few days have been an emotional roller coaster ride for me. I did a normal WordPress upgrade on both Redchillies and FoodWorld but that went wrong and crashed both of them. I have done many upgrades before on both of them, but this time I was trying too many things at the same time and guess it was meant to be a disaster. As soon as I realized my mistake, I did some restoration work with the backup that I had taken earlier, but that made the situation even worse and the blogs became inaccessible.

 As you can imagine, it was a shattering experience seeing the blog being ruined right before my very eyes. I did some research on the web, but the mumble jumble of technicalities did not help in any way to restore the blogs back. More stress followed and the fact that I might lose my precious blog, along with 4 years worth of recipes hit me hard.

 Finally I approached the web host provider BlueHost who after a nerve wracking 16-24 hours did a decent job of restoring the data and the blogs back to normal. Phew! At least in this process, I have learnt things that I should not be doing with the data and the blog 🙂

 It truly feels good to back to blogging and I feel that a part of me is back. Thanks for the overwhelming support on FB, my dear blogger friends it was truly touching. I frankly did not know that there were so people who cared for my blog.

Anyway, coming back to the recipe Palak Daal , this is a simple recipe and comfort food at its best. And comforting food was what was needed during those tense, jittery days. There are different ways of making this daal, I make it pretty much this way, sticking very close to our Konkani Daal, Daali thoy recipe.

 We get cleaned, pre-washed spinach right out of the bag all throughout the year. So it is very handy for people like me, who do not have the patience to clean, remove roots, stems, wash, wash and then wash J  You can substitute any greens in this instead of Spinach (methi, dill etc).

 I prefer having this daal with rice than with Rotis.

PS: On another note, thank you all for taking time and contributing wonderful Dosas to the event Dosa Month @ Redchillies. I plan do a roundup soon.

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup Toor daal
  • 3 cups fresh palak/spinach (washed and chopped)
  • 1 /2 cup onion (chopped)
  • 2-3 garlic pods (peeled and crushed)
  • 1/2 tsp grated ginger
  • 3 green chillies (slit and chopped )
  • cumin seeds/jeera
  • 1/4 tsp turmeric
  • Oil/ghee
  • Salt to taste

 Method:

  • Pressure cook the Toor daal till soft along with water, cumin seeds/jeera and turmeric. After it has cooled mash it and keep aside.
  • Take a pan and heat oil (ghee will be much better).
  •  Add the cumin seeds and after they start spluttering add the crushed garlic. Sauté until it turns light brown.
  • Now add the chopped onions and green chillies. Sauté until the onions are cooked and transparent.
  • Add chopped spinach, turmeric and salt. Fry the mixture till it turns soft and the greens are cooked. (Spinach does not take a long time to cook).
  • Add the mashed daal to this and mix well (along with little water). Add the chopped ginger, salt (if required) and let it continue to boil.
  •  Remove from flame and serve hot with rice or rotis.
Whole Moong Bean Dosa

Whole Moong Bean Dosa

I learnt making this Dosa only after coming to the US. I had not tasted or heard of this Dosa while I was in Bangalore. But now I understand that this Dosa is referred to as Pesarattu in Telegu.  The procedure for this is pretty 

Horse Gram Dosa /Kulitha Polo

Horse Gram Dosa /Kulitha Polo

Konkani cuisine uses lot of Horse Gram (called as Kulith) in its cooking. There are so many recipes like ghashi, koddel, idli, the regular saar/upkari and this Dosa which uses Horsegram. People who are not familiar with this bean are surprised when I mention the 

Set Dosa/ Aval Dosa/ Poha Dosa

Set Dosa/ Aval Dosa/ Poha Dosa

set_dosa_saagu

Unique to the state of Karnataka, the dosas are called ‘Set Dosa’ because they are served in a stack of three. These Dosas are famous in the restaurants and ‘darshinis’ of Bangalore along with Masala Dosa and Rava Dosa. I found an interesting story here as to how the name was coined and why restaurants serve in sets of three.

These are Indian version of savory pancakes that are soft, spongy and fluffy. They are not greasy unlike a regular Masala Dosa.In the restaurants Set Dosas are paired with Vegetable Saagu and coconut chutney while serving. Even though the dosas appear small, they are quite filling. By the time you are done eating two of them, especially with saagu and chutney you would be ready to call it quits.

This is very easy to prepare at home using the basic ingredients. Both my mom and mom-in-law prepare this similar way and serve with red coconut chutney. Since the dosa had good amount of Poha (Flattened Rice) these are called as Poha Dosa/ Aval Dosa.

setdosa

Category: Requires Soaking, Grinding and fermenting.

Recipe Source: Set Dosa and Saagu 

Ingredients

  • 2 cups raw Rice  (use regular or sona masuri rice)
  • 1 cup Urad daal
  • 1 cup Poha/ Aval/Avalakki (thick or thin)
  • 2 tsp Channa daal
  • ½ tsp Methi/fenugreek seeds

set_dosa

Method:

  • Soak the rice, urad daal, chana daal and methi in enough water for about 7-8 hours.
  • Soak the poha/aval separately in water for about 1 hour.
  • After 1 hour drain the water from the poha. Grind all the above soaked ingredients (including the aval/poha) together. Do not use too much water, just enough so that the mixer/grinder motor can move.
  • Transfer the batter to a container, cover it tightly and set aside for at least 10-12 hours.
  • After that the batter should have been adequately fermented. Add salt and mix the batter well. Add little water if required.

Making Dosas

  • Heat a Dosa Tava on medium high heat. Make sure it is lightly greased.
  • Sprinkle some water in the center and when the water almost evaporates pour a ladle of dosa batter in the center. 
  • Spread the batter in a circular motion from the center towards outside. Do not spread a lot. It should have the same thickness throughout.
  • Put a spoonful of oil around the edges of the dosa and little on the top.
  • Cover the dosa with a lid and cook until the bottom part has browned. Note: I usually do not flip the dosa and cook the top part. This is optional.
  • Transfer to a plate. Serve warm with chutney and Saagu!
Cornmeal Dosa

Cornmeal Dosa

You know how you plan something in advance, have plans to execute it methodically but then something happens and the plan takes a 180 turn? Well, this is what happened to me last week. Here I was all geared up for my Dosa Month event,