There is a silly rumor out there that this girl InjiPennu of Ginger and Mango doesn’t know much of cooking and she makes very easy dishes which won’t take more than 15 minutes. Well, ahem. It is not because I don’t know okay, I work full time as a senior chef at a French Restaurant cooking up ohlala dishes, I purposely take it easy and blog the easiest everyday ones. I have my dear friend RP of MyWorkshop as an alibi to this claim. (RP, keep quiet!)
So, here comes a very complicated dish to shut all those rumor mills.
Buy a packet of readymade semiya payasam from some Indian shop, Double Horse brand is very good.
Follow the instructions or boil two litre of milk, empty the packet and cook it until done that is 15 minutes. That’s it, the contents of the packet has everything except milk.
That’s it, sweet payasam ready.
Payasam is Kerala’s signature traditional dessert. Any feast ends in payasam. Though Semiya is not really traditional, it is the easiest payasam and so easy to cook up, even without readymade semiya packets. Semiya is Malayalm for Vermicelli.
If you buy plain semiya, boil two litres of milk, roast the smeiya in ghee until they turn light brown (Thanks Bindu for reminding of this in the comments), cook 1.5 cup semiya in the milk, add sugar and keep stirring until the milk reduces to a three quarter of the original.
Heat 3 tsp of ghee, roast 3 tsp raisins, and keep aside. In the same ghee, roast 2 tsp whole cashew nuts and add everything with a little cardamom powder (cardamom seeds powdered) to the dish and mix. That’s it.
Apr 29, 2007
Apr 27, 2007
Vaazhakkoombu Thoran or Banana Flower Fry
There are a lot of blog posts by fellow bloggers for this banana flower side dish. But is there one with a banana flower plucked from your own banana plant? :-)
Well, this is my first entry of the GBP Summer 2007, hosted by dear Deepz at LetzCook.
A banana flower side dish from my garden. Vaazhakkoombu thoran. Vaazhakkoombu is Malayalam for banana flower.
Remember this Odissi dancer? It has grown and become a big banana plant. I had some honey from the same.
When the bananas start to mature, you can break off the flower from the banana bunch(?).
Banana flowers are without a doubt extremely nutritious with all that fiber content. It is a very tasty dish when prepared properly. The main thing one need to take care is the outer violet or res skin. Do not include that. It will taste bitter. Peel the skin until you reach the crème colored inside.
Cut of the stalk or the end-portion, dice them very small. If you have only one banana flower the amount will be very less when you cook it. So, I add whole moong beans.
Banana Flower diced and immediately immersed in water with a little turmeric. This keeps the color intact or the diced pieces will turn black. – 2 cups
Cooked whole mong beans (Cook this in a pressure cooker) – 1 cup
Shallots – ½ cup
Green chilies slit – 4
Garlic with skin crushed – 2 pod
Heat 3 tsp oil, add ½ tsp mustard seeds. When they splutter, add one whole red chili, add 1 sprig of curry leaves, and add the garlic. When garlic turns slight brown, add shallots and sauté them until translucent.
Add banana flower, add ½ tsp turmeric powder, enough salt, mix and cook covered in low flame for 5 minutes. Add moong beans and ½ cup coconut and cook covered for another ten minutes.
Cook in high heat for tow or three minutes uncovered to dry the dish.
Serve with roti or rice.
Okay, how are your plants doing? Are they all getting ready to enter GBP 2007?
Well, this is my first entry of the GBP Summer 2007, hosted by dear Deepz at LetzCook.
A banana flower side dish from my garden. Vaazhakkoombu thoran. Vaazhakkoombu is Malayalam for banana flower.
Remember this Odissi dancer? It has grown and become a big banana plant. I had some honey from the same.
When the bananas start to mature, you can break off the flower from the banana bunch(?).
Banana flowers are without a doubt extremely nutritious with all that fiber content. It is a very tasty dish when prepared properly. The main thing one need to take care is the outer violet or res skin. Do not include that. It will taste bitter. Peel the skin until you reach the crème colored inside.
Cut of the stalk or the end-portion, dice them very small. If you have only one banana flower the amount will be very less when you cook it. So, I add whole moong beans.
Banana Flower diced and immediately immersed in water with a little turmeric. This keeps the color intact or the diced pieces will turn black. – 2 cups
Cooked whole mong beans (Cook this in a pressure cooker) – 1 cup
Shallots – ½ cup
Green chilies slit – 4
Garlic with skin crushed – 2 pod
Heat 3 tsp oil, add ½ tsp mustard seeds. When they splutter, add one whole red chili, add 1 sprig of curry leaves, and add the garlic. When garlic turns slight brown, add shallots and sauté them until translucent.
Add banana flower, add ½ tsp turmeric powder, enough salt, mix and cook covered in low flame for 5 minutes. Add moong beans and ½ cup coconut and cook covered for another ten minutes.
Cook in high heat for tow or three minutes uncovered to dry the dish.
Serve with roti or rice.
Okay, how are your plants doing? Are they all getting ready to enter GBP 2007?
Apr 24, 2007
Spring...and a good camera...
Just for this day, I got hold of my cousins digital point and shoot and had a riot taking picures of our garden which is starting to bloom again this Spring. Was clicking frantically until the battery was dead. hehehe.
Have uploaded them on my Malayalam blog.
Here is the link.
Have uploaded them on my Malayalam blog.
Here is the link.
Mutton Stew
Most Malayalee Christian families make Stew as an accompaniment with the soft and lacy paalappam. Kerala Mutton Stew without any doubt is a completely Western dish changed to adapt to the Malayalee palate. I don’t need to check any history but the basic method and soul of this dish screams foreign. Hence, Stew is spice-less according to Indian standards.
I was not a big fan of this watery version of a mutton curry as I called it ealier. My mom too hated it and I don't remember her cooking it ever. Though I didn’t mind eating it, I never had any interest in cooking it. Which Malayalee wants to cook something where you don’t have to fry some spices which will burn your nose, grind some spices which will burn your hands while mixing it to the dish? Whenever I checked the recipe it had an ingredient ‘flour’ or maida (as we call it). Nah! I am not going to put flour into a Kerala dish.
Then one day I was bullied. “You cook mutton stew!” shouted the indispensable potluck 'head' one fine day in an obscure meeting of housewives.
I want to cook something complicated, I pleaded. But they were adamant.
So I checked the recipes books and liked one written by the old faithful Mrs. K.M Mathew.
I am not gloating here, but seriously I liked what I made. It is not watery if you cook it properly. It is not spice less if you follow the instructions and sneak in a little more pepper. Viola! I love stew. I now make it regularly as an accompaniment to appam. My husband and his whole family love gravies. So he loves stew since he can make his fingers swim in the gravy unlike any other dishes. Stew is technically supposed to have lot of gravy than any other curry.
Mutton – Cut into bite sized pieces. Yes, bones are welcome. – 3 cups
Cinnamon sticks – 1 inch length as whole – 2
Clove – 10
Green Cardamom whole – 8
Whole black pepper – ¼ cup crushed. Do not grind, just crush.
Onion diced – ½ cup
Green chilies slit – 6
Ginger diced very thin – 1 table spoon
Garlic – 20 pods
Curry leaves – 1 sprig
Potato – 1 cup
Unbleached All purpose flour – 1 table spoon
Vinegar – 1.5 teaspoon
Fresh Thick Coconut milk Cream – ½ cup
Coconut milk thinner – 3 cups
(If using canned coconut milk, take out the crème from the top without shaking the tin. This will be the thick coconut milk)
Heat 5 tsp oil, in low flame sauté the Cinnamon sticks, cardamom, clove and black pepper. Sauté onion, green chilies, ginger and garlic diced, and curry leaves. Keep aside this whole spice mix.
Heat 2 tsp oil, add flour and sauté again for two minutes in low flame. Add the mutton and sauté again. Add vinegar and enough salt and cook this meat in thin coconut milk. Cook in medium flame. Stews are supposed to be cooked slowly, but if the mutton is too hard, cook it for ten minutes in a pot and then cook it in the pressure cooker.
When meat is 3/4th done, add the sautéed whole spice mix and the potatoes. Add 1.5 teaspoon of vinegar again into this and add salt again. Cook covered until meat is well done. Lower the flame completely, add the thick coconut milk and add 15 count whole black pepper. Keep for one minute and remove from heat.
Whenever thick coconut milk is added to any dish, make sure the milk gets only lightly warm. It shouldn’t be boiled. This you should make sure depending on the type of stove you use. If you use a heating coil, make sure you pot doesn’t sit on the coil after switched off.
Serve with rice or appam or any other rice based dishes. Since this dish is very mild in spices, you can turn up the heat by increasing the crushed pepper.
Recipe source: Mrs. K.M Mathew Cook books.
Also read:
Shynees Mutton Ishtu
Bee's Vegetable Ishtu
I was not a big fan of this watery version of a mutton curry as I called it ealier. My mom too hated it and I don't remember her cooking it ever. Though I didn’t mind eating it, I never had any interest in cooking it. Which Malayalee wants to cook something where you don’t have to fry some spices which will burn your nose, grind some spices which will burn your hands while mixing it to the dish? Whenever I checked the recipe it had an ingredient ‘flour’ or maida (as we call it). Nah! I am not going to put flour into a Kerala dish.
Then one day I was bullied. “You cook mutton stew!” shouted the indispensable potluck 'head' one fine day in an obscure meeting of housewives.
I want to cook something complicated, I pleaded. But they were adamant.
So I checked the recipes books and liked one written by the old faithful Mrs. K.M Mathew.
I am not gloating here, but seriously I liked what I made. It is not watery if you cook it properly. It is not spice less if you follow the instructions and sneak in a little more pepper. Viola! I love stew. I now make it regularly as an accompaniment to appam. My husband and his whole family love gravies. So he loves stew since he can make his fingers swim in the gravy unlike any other dishes. Stew is technically supposed to have lot of gravy than any other curry.
Mutton – Cut into bite sized pieces. Yes, bones are welcome. – 3 cups
Cinnamon sticks – 1 inch length as whole – 2
Clove – 10
Green Cardamom whole – 8
Whole black pepper – ¼ cup crushed. Do not grind, just crush.
Onion diced – ½ cup
Green chilies slit – 6
Ginger diced very thin – 1 table spoon
Garlic – 20 pods
Curry leaves – 1 sprig
Potato – 1 cup
Unbleached All purpose flour – 1 table spoon
Vinegar – 1.5 teaspoon
Fresh Thick Coconut milk Cream – ½ cup
Coconut milk thinner – 3 cups
(If using canned coconut milk, take out the crème from the top without shaking the tin. This will be the thick coconut milk)
Heat 5 tsp oil, in low flame sauté the Cinnamon sticks, cardamom, clove and black pepper. Sauté onion, green chilies, ginger and garlic diced, and curry leaves. Keep aside this whole spice mix.
Heat 2 tsp oil, add flour and sauté again for two minutes in low flame. Add the mutton and sauté again. Add vinegar and enough salt and cook this meat in thin coconut milk. Cook in medium flame. Stews are supposed to be cooked slowly, but if the mutton is too hard, cook it for ten minutes in a pot and then cook it in the pressure cooker.
When meat is 3/4th done, add the sautéed whole spice mix and the potatoes. Add 1.5 teaspoon of vinegar again into this and add salt again. Cook covered until meat is well done. Lower the flame completely, add the thick coconut milk and add 15 count whole black pepper. Keep for one minute and remove from heat.
Whenever thick coconut milk is added to any dish, make sure the milk gets only lightly warm. It shouldn’t be boiled. This you should make sure depending on the type of stove you use. If you use a heating coil, make sure you pot doesn’t sit on the coil after switched off.
Serve with rice or appam or any other rice based dishes. Since this dish is very mild in spices, you can turn up the heat by increasing the crushed pepper.
Recipe source: Mrs. K.M Mathew Cook books.
Also read:
Shynees Mutton Ishtu
Bee's Vegetable Ishtu
Apr 23, 2007
Apr 21, 2007
Nature's Shampoo (Thaali)
This is not about food. I can eat all I want, but who will take care of my hair? :-) I just want to note down some Kerala traditions.
Malayalee women are known to have abundant lustrous long, a little curly and dark black hair. We massage our hair and scalp with a little coconut oil everyday and wash it off. Many wonder how we do it everyday. But once you get used to the routine it is just a normal thing as brushing your teeth.
Earlier, that is even before my grandmother, kondakettal was the fashion.
Source Excerpt: Kondakettal (hair being bunched upon the left side of the head with strands of jasmine flowers circling it) was accepted as the coiffure of the art form. In any old picture of traditional Kerala women one can see this coiffure, let alone the royal women in Ravi Varma paintings.
This is a movie still of a recent Malayalam movie (Ananthabhadram). Wanted to show you the old hair style. No, this is not how we wear our hair now. :-)
Couple of years ago, short hair became fashionable and there were many Western type hair styles. I remember Remo in Cochin for a show and looking around wondered what happened to the stories of Malayalee women with long hair because all he could see were short haired women. Hehehe. However, now long hair is back in fashion.I never cut my hair short, but honestly few times I have had the urge to do so. But you know once you cut it; it will take years to grow it to the same length.
Hibiscus plants are abundant in each and every Kerala home. We make a shampoo out of it. It is so simple to make and very good for your hair. Pluck some hibiscus leaves, like a handful and put it in like one cup water. Shred or grind it in a mixer or what I do is, I just squeeze squeeze with my hand while watching TV. Then strain the thick juice which is a little slimy and use it to wash my hair. No need to use anything else. You can refrigerate this upto one week. This is known as thaali in Malayalam.
If you continuously use it for more than a week, your hair just turns sooo soft and healthy.
Malayalee women are known to have abundant lustrous long, a little curly and dark black hair. We massage our hair and scalp with a little coconut oil everyday and wash it off. Many wonder how we do it everyday. But once you get used to the routine it is just a normal thing as brushing your teeth.
Earlier, that is even before my grandmother, kondakettal was the fashion.
Source Excerpt: Kondakettal (hair being bunched upon the left side of the head with strands of jasmine flowers circling it) was accepted as the coiffure of the art form. In any old picture of traditional Kerala women one can see this coiffure, let alone the royal women in Ravi Varma paintings.
This is a movie still of a recent Malayalam movie (Ananthabhadram). Wanted to show you the old hair style. No, this is not how we wear our hair now. :-)
Couple of years ago, short hair became fashionable and there were many Western type hair styles. I remember Remo in Cochin for a show and looking around wondered what happened to the stories of Malayalee women with long hair because all he could see were short haired women. Hehehe. However, now long hair is back in fashion.I never cut my hair short, but honestly few times I have had the urge to do so. But you know once you cut it; it will take years to grow it to the same length.
Hibiscus plants are abundant in each and every Kerala home. We make a shampoo out of it. It is so simple to make and very good for your hair. Pluck some hibiscus leaves, like a handful and put it in like one cup water. Shred or grind it in a mixer or what I do is, I just squeeze squeeze with my hand while watching TV. Then strain the thick juice which is a little slimy and use it to wash my hair. No need to use anything else. You can refrigerate this upto one week. This is known as thaali in Malayalam.
If you continuously use it for more than a week, your hair just turns sooo soft and healthy.
Apr 19, 2007
GBP Announcement
We can grow veggies in Winter
We can grow veggies in Winter
(repeat after me please)
Don't believe me? Please check out the wonderful Green Blog Project Winter 2007 Round Up by the lovely Mandira of Ahaar.
Missed the deadline for Winter. You mean, it is already Spring there? Dont worry. We have one coming up on Summer, GBP Summer 2007. Who is hosting it? Ah! I tricked Deepz into doing that :).
If you just landed from another planet, check out What is GBP all about? :)
Apr 11, 2007
Break!
(Trying to post this via email.)
On a break! (Yes, I am broke too!) :-)
Keep all those dishes warm until I get back home. tata. cee you. bye bye.
On a break! (Yes, I am broke too!) :-)
Keep all those dishes warm until I get back home. tata. cee you. bye bye.
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