May 29, 2007

Artichoke Thoran

What will Americans do to a foreign vegetable? They would add cheese slices on it and put in between two breads.
British? They would make it a tikka or fry it in batter and serve with chips.
A malayalee woman? Add some coconut shavings and make it a thoran.

That’s exactly what I do when I see all these alien looking vegetables like Asparagaus, Artichokes etc. I used to read in story books about asparagaus, artichokes etc and wanted to see these vegetables at least once. That time there was no Internet and now anyone in any corner of the world can easily see a picture of anything. Exciting isn’t it? A child sitting under a table (supposedly study time), reading a story book, munching a mango with some salt, wondering what this vegetable would look like that keeps on coming up on her story book pages, can now just click on the mouse and can get every information she needs.

She grows up, gets married, lands in a small town at an alien land, where the most familiar vegetable you get is a cabbage. Rest everything looks completely out of this world. With a deep sigh, with the memories of all those veggies she told her mama she hates while at home, floods in with a deep hurtful taste, she picks up one of these alien vegetables and make a thoran and voila…home…now seems a little more nearer.

Recipe for Artichoke Thoran.

How to clean?
First wash thoroughly in between the leaves and then cut off the stalk and two inches from the top.
Then pluck out all the outer leaves until you reach the leaf where it is half yellow and half green. The outer leaves are hard and chewy. For thoran, you need to take only the soft inside leavesCut it into two. Dip the cut portions in ½ tsp turmeric water since artichokes turn black immediately. Now take out the violet colored leaves and the small hairy portion which holds the violet leaves.
Dice it small (two artichokes prepared like this would yield 1 cup).
I had one cup of moong dal sprouts too. Blanch the sprouts.

Small onion – ¼ cup

Heat 1 tsp oil, splutter mustard seeds, 1 sprig of curry leaves, 1 whole red chili split into two, add diced onion and 1 crushed garlic, 3 green chilies, sauté until onion is translucent, add diced artichoke and the blanched sprouts, add salt and turmeric cover and cook in low flame. After 10 minutes, add ¼ cup of grated coconut and mix and cook for another 5 minutes.
Keep the fire in maximum and open cook for one or two minutes until dry.
Serve as a side dish for rice or roti.

Now don’t you want to know what it really tastes like? It tastes like banana flower. Yes! Ditto! Missing banana flower thoran? Make with artichokes!

Note: The leaves you pluck out from the artichoke can be put into sambar. It would be like drumstick sambar. You eat artichoke the same way you eat drumstick. The outer leaves you discard for a thoran are chewy. You just suck on it like you do for drumstick and discard the harder skin.

22 comments:

Shah cooks said...

so this is mallu stuff?ha!

Mrs. K said...

That sounds interesting.. But what does artichoke has to do in a kerala blog? hehehe
Eat like drumsticks? Does it mean a part of it has to be discarded while eating? like the skin of drumsticks? Adding artichokes to my shopping list...

Priyamvada_K said...

Injipennu,
Glad to have come across your blog. Will buy artichokes this weekend.

Kribha said...

I love this vegetable in the spinach dip. But I have never attempted to cook it. That's really nice of you to post an Indian version of doing it. will try it soon. The step by step pictures are so much helpful for first-timers like me.

bee said...

what a great description inji - outer leaves of the artichoke are like drumstick. they are, indeed.

i agree with miss piggy, who said:
"After all the trouble you go to, you get about as much actual "food" out of eating an artichoke as you would from licking 30 or 40 postage stamps."

Sreelu said...

wow great idea, artichokes were limited as topping on Pizza till today, nice recipe should try it.

FH said...

LOL @ the description of what British would do!!
Great concept.Will try your delicious Artichoke Thoran!:))

Suganya said...

Pardon my ignorance. But, are the violet coloured leaves not edible? Where are the hearts?

Inji Pennu said...

Suganya, The violet colour is not edible, it is bitter. The ehart is the end portion you see when you remain the hairy portion

Mandira said...

Inji, this is fantastic post... artichoke thoran. I am adding artichokes to my shopping list.

JISHABABY said...

humm ethu engane thoran vekkamo kollallo..want to try it soon

JISHABABY said...

humm ethu engane thoran vekkamo kollallo..want to try it soon

Anonymous said...

ha! ha! for malayali, thoran with anything. fun read and interesting recipe. now i want to try this one.

ബിന്ദു said...

njanithu vare ee veg ne sradhichittillayirunnu. hhhmm... nokkanam.

Anonymous said...

This is fascinating! I often describe drumstick as being like artichoke (as far as how you eat it), but never thought to use the leaves in sambar. And I love, love, love artichokes, so I can't wait to make this recipe.

You are SO creative...

TNL said...

you're too cute..I love reading your posts.
Artichoke Thoran is new......I made spinach and artichoke dip last week.....that's about as far as I will take it. :)
I had a friend in Tampa, when we used to live there, she would do the same things with "foreign" veggies..it was lovely to taste her creations, you reminded me of her just then,

trupti

Sharmi said...

hey thanks for letting me know how to cook artichokes. but my banana flower recipe was a big disaster. it was so bitter that I couldn't put it in my mouth. does this one taste bitter?

Inji Pennu said...

Sharmi,
I have a link to the banana flower preparation.in this post. Pls refer to that. If you discard the outer leaves, it usually wont be bitter.

Anonymous said...

Nice recipe, thanks. Really missing our kerala banana flower thoran. If artichoke can substitute that, it will be great. Will surely try it out.

Anonymous said...

Hi,

Wanted to try your recipe since I love banana flower. Took out the outer leaves and used the inner part for cooking but it was so hard to cut and dice. Is this how it is supposed to be? Thank you.

Anonymous said...

HI
Tried the artichoke thoran today.Came out great!!thanks.

Sumi said...

Always wondering how to clean and cut the artichokes, great step by step procedure.Now I can Confidently buy these vegetables.