Jul 27, 2006

Drumstick Leaves Fry (Muringa ila thoran)

Did you all see how Kitchenmate grew her own drumstick tree in a pot? I was so excited to see that. Because that definitely meant everybody can grow it in a pot even if you live in a place with 6 months of winter, just like a curry leaf plant. Now, I don’t know whether it will fruit in a pot, but it doesn’t matter. We can eat the leaves!
Those tiny pretty oval shape leaves holds so much nutrients, your body will thank you for that nutrient laden pot-of-gold. For that reason, it is called The Tree of Life.

I have a drumstick tree in my backyard. But it always had yellow leaves. I was going crazy because yellow leaves normally meant nitrogen deficiency and as soon as I feed them ( Organic Nitrogen fertilizer like Blood Meal etc) and turn, it would have yellow leaves. The soil we have here is beach type sandy soil and it means not even 1% of nitrogen. We have to buy and feed tons and tons of good soil for plants to grow. Still it had yellow unhealthy leaves.
I then asked a virtual blogger friend Mr. Chandra Shekar, and he advised me to feed it Magnesium. I did and Voila! It never had another yellow leaf (touch wood!).

For people who are planning to grow this in pots, you don’t have any worries like this. Since, you can control the soil nutrients easily.

This grows very fast; it can reach up to seven or more feet in a single year. You can trim the top of the tree when it reaches a certain preferred height like 4 or 5 feet. It will grow back soon.So, if possible try to grow a drumstick tree. A sunny window is all you need. You can germinate from seeds or get a tree from TopTropicals.com.
Okay, now roll up your sleeves for some real work:-).

The stems taste very bitter if added. So you need to really pluck the leaves from the tiny stems. Inspect and wash the leaves thoroughly under running water. Now pluck the leaves from the stems.

For 3 cups of leavesHeat 2 tsp of oil, splutter ½ tsp mustard seeds and two dried red chilies and a sprig of curry leaves. Add 2 tsp of urad dal or chana dal and sauté them. Add 1 cup of diced onion or shallots along with 5 green chilies diced. When onions are sautéed well, add the leaves and mix everything with some salt and turmeric powder. Close and cook for 6 or seven minutes. This cooks very fast. Now, add ½ cup of shredded coconut to the mixture, mix well and close and cook for another 3 minutes.That’s it. Pot of Gold is ready. Serve with rice or chapathi.If you know Malayalam, check out this wonderful malayalam article about Muringa Leaves, by a dear blogger Devan.

5 comments:

Inji Pennu said...

21 Comments:
At 28/7/06 12:11 AM, Paz said...
A pot of gold indeed! I'm glad you were able to figure out how to solve the problem with the tree (thanks to your friend).

Paz

At 28/7/06 12:38 AM, Priya said...
Muringa ila thoran is my favourites. Loves these leaves in sambars too. They are very crunchy and have a unique flavor.

Those leaves from your drumstick tree look BEAUTIFUL ! Nice and greeeeen :)

At 28/7/06 2:25 AM, കല്യാണി said...
Good Work LG. I want to try growing this plant in my house in Bangalore. I have not seen Muringa anywhere in this city. Will get seeds from Kerala when I go there. I want to do it fast so that I can post a pic when it is grown :-)

At 28/7/06 5:43 AM, indosungod said...
LG, Love your thoran.
I have been holding on to these Drumstick leave seed for a while now, time to pot now.
I have seen my mom's mom add Drumstick leaves to the butter just before boiling when she makes ghee, smells heavenly.

At 28/7/06 7:05 AM, Krithika said...
Our neighbor next door in India has Murunga tree. So we got a free supply of leaves and kai. Now I get the leaves from the Indian store. I like to make Sambar, add it in Adai. Never tried making thoran. Will try it.

At 28/7/06 7:23 AM, renuramanath said...
you are something, LG, growing muringa in the US of A. but, would you have done this were you been living in kerala ?
really, i started longing for 'a little soil' after i started living in a first floor apartment, the punishment for having neglected my father's beautiful garden while back home !
add some muringa leaves to scrambled eggs. you'll get double dose of calcium. in kerala (i'm not sure about the US climate), muringa leaves are not usually eaten during the month of karkidakam. they're supposed to turn a bit toxic this month. (but all the other horrible stuff are edible now, including the 'kodithuvva,' which causes the ultimate allergy and irritation.
(well, don't let some of your anonymous US readers hear of this, they will prosecute us for feeding toxic stuff !!! what a scare these people have of all things natural !

At 28/7/06 11:47 AM, surya said...
Hi LG,
Thanks for the wonderful post.It leads to me the nostalgic feelings about my mom's muringayilaa thoran.drumstick leaves are not available here and no sunny area in my apartment to grow this plant.I miss this curry lot!!

At 28/7/06 1:46 PM, archana said...
Ingi penne ( p.k.a LG)Tell me about somehting that you don't have in your garden. We had three good muringa trees growing in our back yard. My mother is so keen on making every possible curry with these leaves. As Renu said, it tastes so good with eggs too. God, i never heard about this Kodithuva slowly creeping into our plates !! I have too many disturbing memories about that plant. But just out of curiosity Renu, what do people make out of it, thoran ??

At 28/7/06 1:47 PM, archana said...
"We had three........... backyard " I meant back home, not here !!!!!

At 28/7/06 2:06 PM, Vineela said...
Hi LG,
Can you parcel some leaves and fry too.
Yummy Yummy
Great GOING
Vineela

At 28/7/06 2:40 PM, KeralaGirl said...
Ha ha Inji Pennu?? :-) Do u grow Inji also in your garden? Who am I asking!!!...you must be having for sure..I was just kidding :-)...For me you are not Inji Pennu but "the" gardner Pennu. I have been telling lots of friends there is a Malayali in Florida who grows everything what we malayalees love to eat and here you come with another one...Muringa Ela....Kewllll....:-)

At 28/7/06 7:00 PM, Linda said...
Hi LG,

Your drumstick tree is beautiful! Next spring maybe will try, with all this inspiration -- thanks for sharing.

At 28/7/06 10:40 PM, കേരളഫാർമർ/keralafarmer said...
I saw the back links to my wordpress page. I shocked because when I opened the page that seems in English. Then visited the profile to understand about LG. Thank you for ypur back link.

At 29/7/06 7:07 AM, കേരളഫാർമർ/keralafarmer said...
LG: Please visit this link about few more leaves
http://chandrasekharannair.wordpress.com/2005/10/27/edible_leaves/

At 29/7/06 1:45 PM, RP said...
LG, pot of gold indeed!
Back home, when mom adds this leaves to dal, I used to get mad with her for doing so. It was before learning about nutrition and all. :) I miss it now.

At 29/7/06 2:15 PM, Kitchenmate said...
I love the freshness of your leaves and they look pretty! and thoran invites too and i lhave enough leaves on the plant for egg scramble...and sadly my drumstick plant leaves turing yellow pretty fast too...
L.G, What other plants in your garden...

At 29/7/06 9:26 PM, Priya Bhaskaran said...
LG, I think you have all the indian veggies in your backyard:) Good job:) I didn't know amazon is selling drumstick seeds:) Muringa ila thoran is one of my favorites.

At 29/7/06 9:56 PM, Shaheen said...
muringya ila with chakkuru is my all time favourite. how did u grow the palnt here? where did u get the sampling/seed?imported? please do share.

At 31/7/06 1:12 PM, Inji Pennu said...
paz, thanks :)

priya, thanks :)

kalyaani, yes! please do grow a drumstick tree! If it will grow here, it surely will grow in Bangalore :)

indosungod, thank you for the tip.

krithika,never made adai with it.

renu, hmm..actually i got the garden thing from my parents,both of them are trained in other-professions,but they love to do agriculture.So got the bug from them.Surely would have done a whole lot more if I were in Kerala. But as you said, I truly appreciated what I am missing when I me here.I think living in a flat in Kerala would be torture for me.

surya, :-( ..hope you can move to better apartment. When we moved from apartment to apartment,we also made sure the patio would get enough sun. that was one of our requirement.

archana, ha! :) your mom is smart.
I think we can throw away the capsules and tabletes if we have this regularly

vineela, thanks :) when i find a way to virtually swap the sweets you make :)

keralagirl, hehehe thanks :) There are lot of malayalees her and they even grow athipazham.. im the only one blogging about it i guess :)

linda, yes...please do have a tree.

KeralaFarmer, thanks a lot!

Rp, You can grow it easily. Try please :)

kitchenmate, I am sooo glad you grew it. I am pretty sure you inspired a lot of people with that.

Priya, Get a seed from amazon, put it in a pot and grow it!

shaheen, I have given two links one for seeds and one for the tree in my post. Please do check out out.

At 31/7/06 7:38 PM, Indira said...
How fresh the leaves look. Gorgeous LG.

Oh.. how I crave for a piece of land where I can have my own private garden.:)

At 14/8/06 3:19 AM, Sreeja said...
I think i am going to haunt your blog from now on ;-). All your recipes are my favourites. Muringa ila is one of the specials. On days when muringa ila thoran or erisseri is on the menu, amma used to make us pick the leaves out of stem. 3 of us sisters used to get a bunch of leaves and after a lot of singing and chatting, a pile of leaves, separated from the branches will be ready. and erisseri made out of this was my favourite and even now when I visit home or my dh's home this will surely be there...!!! Wish I could get muringa ila in UK...

Kribha said...

Your drumstick leaves fry is so good that I just want to eat it out of the picture. I never get it in Atlanta. When I was young my grandma would say that my skin would glow like gold if I ate it. For many years I remember saying it as 'gold keerai poriyal'. Anyway, I'm happy atleast to see it on your blog.
Never knew that Drumstick tree could be grown in pots.Good pictures, especially the curry.

Anonymous said...

Hello,

I recently came to know that a company located in south India is promoting cultivation and exports of Moringa in a large scale.

Their website is: www.drumstickindia.com

Beena, Kochi.

anudivya said...

Inji Pennu, I think this person has used your picture from this post as hers.

http://www.ifood.tv/recipe/drumstick_leaves_fry_muringa_ila_thoran

Malar Gandhi said...

Dude, first time to ur blog. but I need to alert you...that some of ur pictures have been stolen by this lady chef srividya76 a member of ifood.tv Please check it out...ur muringaila thoran photo is published there. Please trail back to my site for more information. She has copied my stuff too.