Prologue

One day when I get famous and need fillers for my book, I might give this more thought ..... for now this will do. I claim to be no expert at either travelling or cooking or the random things I write about... But I would like to collate all my good memories (and efforts) into this space for reminiscing on those grey rainy days... What Blog its more of a 'Brag'!!

My Thank You Speech..........

I was introduced to cooking in the early years of my life by my Aayi while I sat at the kitchen dining table while she mixed spices and vegetables to create those sumptuous dishes. My brain took in what I did not intend to learn. My Aayi is a fantastic cook. Each day I woke up to a sit down breakfast of Idlis, Dosas, Upma, Dodak, Usli and the likes. A far cry compared to the ‘eat while you dress’ cereal we make do with these days. Any efforts Aayi made of training me in the kitchen went futile. It is hence ironic that Aayi, ‘my first teacher’ is still to taste anything cooked by my hand. My hard core cooking days started only when I moved to UK with my husband a few years ago. My husband, like a true martyr, suffered through my numerous cooking expeditions. His encouragement, fulsome praise where due and frank critical review drives me to try something new each week. It is to these two people that I owe whatever little cooking I know or strive to know today.

Ragda Pattice

This one is a definite for entertaining. The pattice can be half fried in advance then completed just before serving.

For 2 people

For the Pattice:
  • 3 Huge potatoes- boiled and mashed
  • 2 slices of bread
  • 1/4 cup milk
  • salt
  • coriander leaves
  • 1/4 finely chopped large onion
  • green chillies finely chopped
  • oil for shallow frying- I used mustard oil
Heat a pan. Add oil in this for shallow frying. Soak the bread slices in the milk and mash. Add the rest of the ingredients. shape little flat 1.25 cm thick and 4.5 to 5 cms wide.
When the oil is sufficiently hot, put the pattice on the pan (there should be a sizzling noise when the oil meets the pattice). Keep an eye on the pan so the pattice doesnt burn. Turn sides using a flat spatula when the bottom is golden and take off the pan when both sides are crisp and golden.
These pattice (Aloo Tikki) are a snack in themselves when eaten hot with ketchup or chutney.

For the Ragda:

  • 1 cup white peas (dry white vatana)- soaked overnight and then pressure cooked
  • 1 small onion chopped
  • turmeric- 1/2 tsp
  • 1 tsp red chilly powder
  • 1/4 tsp cumin powder
  • 1 tsp coriander powder
  • 2 tsp jaggery
  • 1 tsp tamarind paste
  • salt
  • 1 tsp ginger+ garlic- finely chopped

Heat Oil and saute the onion till pink. Add the ginger+ garlic and the dry spices and salt and fry for a minute. Next add the peas and tamarind+ jaggery and a few cups of water. Mash some of the peas against the side of the pan to thicker the sauce.

Serve the pattice with ragda, sliced onion, tamarind chutney and yogurt.

Bliss.

Guacamole

2 ripe avodaos
2 green chillies
1/4 red onion
1 pod of garlic
1/4 large tomato
1 tsp cumin seeds
3 tbsps yogurt
salt to taste
1/2 to 1 bunch of coriander leaves

Scoop out the insides of the avocados and dicard the pit and shell. Grind this along with the other ingredients. Adjust salt to taste.

Rice Kheer


This was my second attempt at rice kheer. The first time, I googled a recipe off the net and followed it from start to finish.It turned out to be a tasty mismash of cooked rice, milk and elaichi-but not kheer. A final post mortem was conducted. The verdict: Rice needs to be cooked before it is finally added to the milk.

A few months later, I tried again. This time I opted for one which sounded like a good combination of the phirni and rice kheer. I must say I struck gold with this one.

Rice kheer

Ingredients
Rice - 1/2 Cup +1 tbsp
Milk 4 cups
Condensed Milk 1 cup
Sugar - 1 to 1 1/2 cups
Cashews, Elachi powder and Saffron

Method :

Pressure cook 1/2 cup rice with 1 cup water and 1/4 cup milk.
Meanwhile, boil milk, in reduced flame, add condensed milk.
Soak one spoon of raw-rice and 10-15 cashews in milk for 10 minutes. Grind it to a coarse paste. Add to the boiling milk. Add the sugar, stir till it dissolves.
Then add the cooked rice, and boil for a few more minutes. Finally add Saffron, Elachi powder and cashews and almonds (fried in butter/ghee)
Can make this kheer in any consistency you want. Can be served hot or chilled.

Fish Cakes

Salmon 1 fillet

Haddock1 fillet

Potatoes 4 big

Green Chillies as per taste

Garlic 3 pods

Ginger 1 inch

Coriander Powder 2 tsp

Cumin powder 1 tsp

Mustard (optional)

Coriander leaves 1/2 bunch

Pomelo Salad

http://nosheteria.com/dailyspecial/2006/03/pomelo-salad.html

Banana Bread

With the influx of overripe bananas in my fruit bowl, I set out to bake a healthy banana bread.

This one is a really easy recipe and can be finished within an hour from start to finish (by finish I mean eating the last crumb).

It is a bread recipe but its more like a cake, only mildly sweet.

I have made this over and over again since the most memorable of them all was for our trip to Berlin when I forgot to add the quitessential ingredient from the recipe---the bananas. Must say it is a forgiving recipe and even that turned out quite good.


Wet ingredients:

2 over-ripe bananas mashed
2 tablespoons melted butter
1 tablespoon milk,
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla essence (optional)
Nuts and raisins (optional)


Dry Ingredients:

1½ cup plain flour
½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
¼ teaspoon baking powder
½ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon salt

Mix the wet ingredients and dry ingredients separately. The add the dry ingredients in the wet ingredients and pour into a well greased bread tin.

Bake in a preheated oven for 30 minutes or till done.

Punjabi Samosa


Banofee Pie


Semolina delight



Thats what I call it. When I was a kid, I was invited to an Aunt's house who had made this. I loved it instantly and probably scoffed off a whole lot of it. i never thought that one day I would make it myself. It might not be the exact same possibly because the aunt had steamed it rather than baked it but I cant be bothered to go through the whole steaming process as it would take just too much time. Baking is very easy and quick. The best bit about the cake is that it can get whipped up in minutes with ingredients readily available at home at all times.
I finally found the recipe on a fellow blogger's site. Here is the recipe: http://annaparabrahma.blogspot.com/2006/12/shravani-cake.html.
The only thing I changed is replaced saffron with cardamom and added a bit more sugar.
A bit fancier than sheera?..whot say!

Spanish Feast

Squid Ink Paella (Paella Negro), Olives, Garlic prawns and a few glasses of sangria.

Baked Patra ni Macchi

I love parsi food. This recipe is inspired by Patra ni Macchi but is really my way of finishing off leftover Coriander Chuntney.

2 Salmon fillets

for the chutney
One bunch Coriander
handful of dessicated coconut
green chillies
1 clove garlic
Jaggery
salt
jeera powder
Lemon

Rub the salmon with lemon and salt and keep aside.

Gring all the other ingredients for the chutney.

Rub the chutney into the salmon and bake in a preheated over for 20 minutes.

Oven baked Tandoori Chicken-It couldnt have been this easy

This is my version of tandoori chicken without oil.

I used Chicken Breast and drun sticks. Cut slits into the chicken pieces lengthwise. Rub salt and lime into the pieces and keep aside for at least 15 minutes.

Meanwhile grind the onion, ginger, garlic and chilly into a thick paste. Add to this red chilly powder, coriander powder, garam masala, jeera powder and yogurt.

Rub this mixture into the chicken. Cover with cling film and marinate for a few hours (or overnigh) in the fridge.

Preheat the oven. Pick out the chicken (retain the leftover paste to use during baking)and place in a foil covered baking pan and bake for 15 minutes. Brush the chicken with leftover paste from time to time. Brush with oil if required (I do not bother at all).

Broil for 10 minutes turing sides after 5 minutes.

The chicken can be served with onion slices and lemon.

Simple Coffee Chocolate Cake

This one was an improvisation of a cake my mother in law's sister makes.
'Maasi' bakes brilliant cakes and that too without an oven. As I came home from office one friday evening I sniffed out this aroma of fresh baking from the windows of one of my neighbours.

Next morning, completely motivated, I set out to bake my version of Maasi's cake.
The batter quantity wouldnt have fit onto my 8 inch cake tin so I divided it between two 8 inch tins. It was my hubby who came up with this brilliant idea of adding instant coffee and chocolate to one of them and whoa the coffee cake was born.

Ingredients

1 cup butter
1.25 cups of sugar
1.5 cups of Plain Flour
4 eggs
1 tspn Vanilla essence

Additions
Cooking Milk Chocolate (cut into tiny chunks)
1 Tsp instant Coffee mixed in 1 tbsp hot water

Preheat the oven. Beat the sugar and butter till it is mixed well. Add an egg and a little flour alternately beating all the time. Add baking powder and beat a bit. Finally add vanilla essence coffee and choclate and beat for some time.

Pour into two 8 inch pans and bake at 150 degrees celcius for 45 minutes.

Psst: Spread chocolate spread on top of both cakes and place one on top of the other.
If you are not a chocolate or coffee lover then avoid these and just add walnuts and raisins instead.

Blueberry Streusel Cake

One of the sites I visit often by way of internet 'window shopping' is Joy of Baking. This site has a treasure of cake recipes.

It was hubby's birthday and I was on the look out for a cake recipe.
I picked the Blueberry Coffee Cake (http://www.joyofbaking.com/BlueberryCake.html) only because there was a pack of blueberries in my freezer.
I followed the recipe from start to scratch and the only thing I would change is the amount of butter in the streusel. I feel using half the suggested quantity next time would make this cake a bit lighter.

The author suggested the use of fresh blueberries and had I followed the advice, a few of the blueberries wouldnt have decide to settle at the bottom.

Either way it turned out well.

Thai Green Curry

Most satisfying making my own green curry paste. Though it sounds like a long difficult recipe the fact is that it isnt. The list of ingredients is quite big and thats all there is to it..

Here is my version of the veggie one:

For the green curry paste:
dry roast and blend-
pinch of turmeric
1 tbsp coriander seeds
1 tsp peppercorns
1 tsp cumin seeds
1/4 tsp aniseeds (or fennel)

Chop and add to the above-
2 stalks of lemon grass (or 2.5 tbsp from a bottle)
10 big cloves garlic
1 bunch of coriander (stem/ leaves and roots)
15 leaves of thai basil (I used regular basil)
3 inches galangal (or regular ginger)
a few kaffir lime leaves (I used lime zest)
2 shallots (or 1 small onion)
This can be prepared in advance and refrigerated.

The Veggies
Thinly slice and stir fry in a bit of oil (vegetable/ coconut)-
tofu
mangetout
bean sprouts
carrot
french beans
bamboo shoots
peppers (red/ green)

Add the curry paste to the veggies and saute for a bit
Add 1 can of coconut milk and simmer then add jaggery, salt, fish sauce.

Serve hot with rice..

Mackerel Recheado

Here is a good recipe. This is probably the only way I would eat mackerel. The hot chilly and vinegar partners perfectly with the very strong flavour of fish.

Recipe courtesy: http://superfood.blog-city.com/mackerel_recheado_another_mackerel_barbeque_recipe.htm (for the original)

I omitted the fresh red chilly only because I didnt have any. Added lesser cloves and grilled it in the oven. I served with Lemon, onions slices and steamed basmati rice.

Yummy...