Showing posts with label Veg Curry for Indian Bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Veg Curry for Indian Bread. Show all posts

Gobi Musallam - easy everyday recipe




Gobi Musallam is Mughlai recipe with a rich gravy and an exotic taste. This could be served for special occasion or just on a very regular day...it would make your day brighter for sure. I have made a pot method instead of the baking method and can be done in just less than half an hour.

Ingredients

To blanch the cauliflower

1 cauliflower - around 700 gms
1 tbsp salt

For the gravy

Butter - 1 tbsp
Ghee - 1 tbsp
Green Cardamom - 3 whole
Black Cardamom - 1 whole (optional)
Cumin seeds - 1/4 tsp
Bay leaf - 2 medium
Onions, very finely chopped - 2 large
Tomato paste from 2 medium tomatoes

Ginger - 3/4 inch
Garlic - 6 cloves
Green chillies - 2 medium

Red chilly powder - 3/4 tsp
Kashmiri Chilly powder - 3/4 tsp
Coriander powder - 1 1/2 tsp
Turmeric powder - 1/2 tsp
Garam Masala - 3/4 tsp
Salt to taste

Kasuri Methi - a large pinch (forget it if you dont have)

Thick curd - 150 ml
Cream or Milk - 150 ml

Coriander leaves chopped - 2 tbsp



Method

Boil water in a pan and add salt. Immerse the washed and cleaned cauliflower and let it blanch for 3 to 5 minutes. Remove from water and place it in a plate.

Heat a heavy bottom wide pan or a wide pressure cooker. Add butter and ghee. When partially melted add cardamom, cumin seeds and bay leaf. Once the aroma comes out add the onion and saute till translucent. Make a paste using ginger,garlic and green chilies and add to the pan. Saute well and then add all the powders - red chilly to garam masala and then add salt (blanched cauliflower already has salt in it, so salt is required only for the gravy. Add the tomato paste and let everything cook well. Add few teaspoons of water if need be. Once the gravy is fully done, turn to high heat and add the curd and stir vigorously....this is to prevent the gravy from curdling. Once the gravy looks nice and smooth add the cream / milk. If you have kasuri methi add it to. Check salt. Now add the blanched cauliflower and pour gravy from sides over the cauliflower. Cover and cook for 5 to 7 minutes. The gravy will thicken as it sits. You can check whether the cauliflower is fully cooked by poking the flower in the middle using a knife. Serve hot with rice or roti or bread. You can serve by cutting into florets as in the second image.

It tasted really good....try it soon and let me know!!

Rajma & Carrot Makhani




This recipe is inspired by the Rajma Masala prepared by Sona. Since the makhani gravy is much liked by all at home i prepared the rajma makhani  with the carrots to give a mild sweetness.

Rajma - 1 cup (soaked overnight or for 6 to 8 hours)
Carrot - 2

Oil - 1 1/2 to 2 tbsp
Onion - 1 large
Garlic -6 cloves
Ginger - 1/2 inch piece, peeled & julienned
Tomato - 2 large

Powders
Turmeric - 1/3 tsp
Chilly powder - 1 tsp
Coriander powder - 1 tsp
Cumin powder - 1/2 tsp
Garam Masala - 1/3 tsp

Coriander - 1 sprig, chopped
Butter - 1 tsp
Milk or cream - 2- 3 tbsp

method

Pressure cook the rajma for 8 whistle or till turns slightly mushy.

Heat oil in a pan. Mince the onion and garlic and add to oil. Saute for a while. Add the julienned ginger.Stir for few seconds and add all the powders. Grind the tomatoes to a fine paste and add it to the masala. Add the chopped carrots and cooked rajma. Add salt. Bring it to boil and then simmer for 15 to 30 minutes. Check taste. Add milk, sprinkle the coriander leaves and add the butter. Stir well. Turn off heat. Serve with naan, roti or rice.

the recipe goes to Blog Hop by Radhika

Vegetable Stew – Kerala Style (without coconut milk)






Vegetable stew has a prominent place in a Malayalee breakfast. It goes well with appam (hoppers), idiyappam (string hoppers) or chappati. You can have this vegetable stew with puttu (steamed rice cake) or whatever you like.

When I mentioned a Kerala style, I wanted to imply that stew of any kind in Kerala is usually prepared with oodles of coconut milk . Since we are in the age of busy lifestyle, grating coconut and extracting milk is a tedious task. Though coconut milk or coconut powder is readily available in the market, I wanted to create something that comes in even more handy. Therefore this vegetable stew is gravied with milk, a dash of rice flour for thickening and a pinch of sugar to bring in the sweet taste which the coconut milk would have added to the stew. This is a quickie recipe which can be prepared in about 30 minutes.

the recipe

potato – 2
carrot – 3
beans – 12
oil – 1 tbsp
onion – 1
green chilly -1 or 2
garam masala – ¼ tsp
salt – ½ tsp

for seasoning

oil – 1 tbsp
ghee or butter (optional) – ½ tsp
onion – 1
curry leaf – 1 sprig
cinnamon – ¼ inch piece
cloves – 3
cardamom – 4 medium sized

other ingredients

milk – ½ cup
rice flour – 1 -1 ½ tbsp
sugar – a pinch
raisins, fried – 4 tbsp
cashew nut or almonds, julienned – 2 tbsp
pepper powder (white or black) – ½ tsp
turmeric powder – 1/8 tsp
salt to taste




the method

In a pressure cooker add 1 tbsp oil and sauté 1 chopped onion and green chilly. When the onions turn translucent, add the chopped vegetables and salt. Saute for two minutes. Add garam masala and stir for few second. Add 1 ½ cup water and pressure cook the vegetable for 2 whistle (as per Indian standard pressure cooker). Turn off heat.

In another pan, heat the oil and ghee. Add chopped onion and curry leaves. Add the whole spices, turmeric and stir well. Add the cooked vegetables. Bring it to boil. Mix the rice flour in 4-5 tbsp water at room temperature. Pour it into the stew and stir. Make sure that the rice solution does not form lumps. In medium heat keep stirring and bring it to boil. Add sugar. Turn to low heat and add milk. Check salt. When bubbles are seen at the side of the pan, turn off heat (overboiling will curdle the milk). Add the fried raisins and almonds. Serve hot as you please.

Chilly Tomato (Chinese)



Just before posting this recipe, I googled to check whether there is any similar dish already. After the googling I just felt I should a clue to the title. Because there are many other chilly and tomato combinations that is not Chinese.

Chilli tomato is like a chilly gobi or a chilly chicken which is very suitable for a side dish. The inspiration to prepare this recipe is from the fast food joints in Kochi that serve chilly tomato with parotta….. We had this with chapathi.

the recipe

Tomato – 3
Capsicum – 1
Green chilly – ½ or 1 small
Onion – 1 big
Chilly powder – ½ tsp

Pepper powder – 1/8 tsp
Soya sauce – 1 ½ tbsp
Tomato sauce – 1 tsp
Salt to taste
Sugar – 2 pinch
Oil – 2 tbsp

Garlic – 4 cloves

Method

Cut the tomato into half. Scoop out the seed and flesh in the inside and keep it in a bowl..
Cut the tomato into cubes and place it in another bowl.


Cut the onion, capsicum and chilly into juliennes. Chop the garlic.

Heat oil in a pan and the garlic, followed by onion and green chillies. Saute for about a minute and add the capsicum and the scooped out tomatoes. Saute for a minute. Add salt and chilly powder. Add the cubed tomato. Turn to high heat and sauté till the tomatoes are just cooked. Pour the soya sauce and sauté briskly. Add sugar immediately. Stir for about 5 seconds and add the tomato sauce. Add the pepper powder. Turn off heat. Serve hot with fried rice, noodles or chapathi.



Kashmiri Paneer



I saw this tomato based Kashmiri paneer recipe on TV a few months back. After two trials I made some improvisation in terms of ingredients to bring out my own version. The original recipe calls for the use of ghee. My first trial was with complete ghee and the second trial was with complete oil. Learnt that the use of ghee is essential for a nice texture to the gravy. For calorie reasons I used a combination of ghee and vegetable oil. Can be had with roti’s or rice.

the recipe

paneer – 200 gms
tomato – 4
curd – 3-4 tbsp
chilly powder – ¾ tsp
salt – to taste
black cardamom – 2 or green cardamom – 3
bay leaf – 2 small
ghee - 2 tbsp

ingredients not in the original recipe

Pepper powder – ½ tsp
Sugar – ½ - ¾ tsp
Oil – 2 tbsp
Onion – 1
Garlic – 3 cloves

the method

Cut the paneer into 4 cm long x 2-3 cm wide slabs.

Chop the tomatoes, onion and garlic and puree it with the curd.
Heat oil in a frying pan and add the ghee and vegetable oil. Deep fry the paneer pieces till light to golden brown (may be fried in batches). In the original recipe, the paneer was fried till it turned almost black. Drain the fried paneer pieces and place it in ¼ cup water or milk.

To the remaining ghee + oil add the bay leaf and cardamom and fry till the aroma comes out. Add the pureed tomato and curd mix. Add the chilly powder and salt and let the puree boil for five minutes. Add pepper powder and sugar. Check taste and add more sugar and pepper if needed. Half cup water may be added if the gravy is too thick. Add the fried paneer pieces and simmer for ten minutes.

Green Pea Green Kurma



Green Pea is a favourite at home: be it in curries, biryani or the roasted ones as a snack. I used dried peas for this kurma but wanted to give a green colour by adding some green bell peppers. The addition of coconut however has given a lighter colour to the kurma. Tastes good with chapati or hoppers.

Usually dried green peas turn mushy when pressure cooked. This time I adjusted the soaking time (6 hours)
and reduced the pressure cooking time to just half the usual one (three whistle) and boiled the peas with salt. The peas were cooked but still hard. The rest of the cooking was done along with the masala and then it turned to have a soft texture while not losing its shape.

the recipe

Boiled green peas - 1 1/2 cup

ingredients to be ground to a paste

Onion - 1
Green Bell Pepper - 1 medium sized
Green chilly - 1 or 2
Garlic - 6 cloves
Ginger - 1/4 tsp
Cloves - 3 or 4  small
Cinnamon - 1/2 inch piece

ingredients for the coconut mixture

Coconut, grated - 5 tbsp
Fennel seeds - 1/2 - 3/4 tsp (soak for 5 minutes)
Cumin - two pinch
Poppy seeds - 1/2 tsp (soak for 10 tminutes)

other ingredients 

Salt to taste
Oil - 1 tsp + 1 tbsp
Pepper powder - 1/4 tsp

the method

Heat 1 tsp oil in a pan and saute the ingredients to be ground to a paste for one minute. Grind it to a paste.

Heat 1 tbsp oil in a pan and add the cooked peas without water. Saute for two minutes. Add the onion mixture and cook for another two minutes. Pour the water from the cooked peas. Grind the coconut with fennel, cumin and poppy seeds to a smooth paste. Add it to the peas. Add pepper powder. Cook till the kurma gains preferred consistency.

Soya Mince Curry


It is a tough task to zero in on a quickie curry for breakfast and therefore I tried the soya mince curry with inspirations from a mince meat curry preparation I saw in a cookery show. Most of the ingredients are the same as in a spicy curry and the new ingredient is boiled onion paste that gives a rich texture to the gravy and balances the pungency of all the spices.

About soya mince (dunno whether it is readily available in shops), I placed a few soya chunks in the blender for about 3 – 5 seconds. It comes out in a coarse powder form which when soaked in water bloats a little.

Hope you will like my experimentation!!





the recipe

Soya mince – ½ cup (blend about 20 soya chunks – the mince can be prepared in advance and stored)
Ginger juliennes – 1 tbsp
Garlic, chopped – 1 tbsp
Tomato – 1 large
Oil – 1 tbsp
Salt – to taste

Spice powders

Pepper powder – ½ tsp
Chilly powder – ½ tsp
Coriander powder – ½ tsp
Turmeric powder – ½ tsp
Garam masala – ¼ tsp

Boiled onion paste - boil 1 large chopped onion in ½ cup water and cook till all the water is absorbed. Grind it to a fine paste

the method

Soak the soya mince in hot water for ten minutes. Drain the water and wash again. Use a sieve to drain the soya mince.

Heat oil in a pan and add the garlic. When lightly brown add the ginger. Saute for a minute and stir in the chopped tomatoes till soft. Stir in the spice powders and sauté. Pour the boiled onion paste and ½ cup water. Add salt. Let it boil for a minute. Stir in the soaked soya mince and let it simmer for 5 minutes or till oil separates and is visible above the curry. Check salt. A dash of lemon juice enhances the taste. Serve as you please. We had it with pidis (rice dumplings). 


the recipe goes to Dish it out by Vardhini




Vegetable Kurma (Korma)

Kurma in Tamilnadu, korma in North India...that is my understanding. It is a spicy vegetarian dish that tastes good with rice as well as chapati. This is another dish which i have been relishing since childhood with most of the vegetables in the recipe coming from our garden. You have that option of growing and plucking fresh vegetables when you live in a hill station. Now those experiences are just memories to cherish especially the climate factor...





the recipe

carrots - 2
potato - 1
beans - 15 -20
peas, cooked (green or dried) - 1/4 cup
tomato - 2
cauliflower, medium sized or small - 1

turmeric powder - 1/2 tsp
chilly powder - 1/2 tsp
pepper powder - 1/2 tsp
coriander powder - 3/4 - 1 tsp
garam masala - 3/4 - 1 tsp (depending on your spice requirement)

for the masala to be ground

onion - 2
garlic - 8
ginger - 1 inch
green chilly - 1
oil - 1 or 2 tbsp
salt - to taste

Coconut, grated - 1/4 part
Poppy seeds (optional) - 1/4 - 1/2 tsp soaked in 3-5 tbsp water for abt 15 mins

the method

Saute the onion in oil. When it starts to brown add garlic, ginger and chilly and saute till it is soft. Add chilly powder and saute for few seconds. Grind it to a smooth paste.

Cook the peas separately. Cook the carrot, potato and beans till half done and then add tomatoes, the ground paste, turmeric, salt and coriander powder. When the vegetables are three fourths done add the cauliflower, peas, pepper powder and garam masala.

In another pan lightly roast the grater coconut without losing its color (takes abt 2 minutes). Grind the coconut with the soaked poppy seeds. (For more aroma soak a pinch or two of cumin and fennel seeds).

When the vegetables are almost done add the coconut and poppy seed paste and bring it to boil. Done.

Ladies Finger Creamy Curry

When I was a kid i have heard that eating ladies finger would increase your acumen for mathematics......after a research on the web it seems to be true....

the recipe

Ladies Finger – 200 gms
Onion – 1
Garlic (optional) – 3 cloves
Chilly powder – ¼ tsp
Pepper powder – ½ tsp
Turmeric – ¼ tsp
Garam Masala - ¼ tsp
Salt – ½ tsp
Oil – 2 tbsp
Milk – ½ cup







the method

Cut the ladies finger into slivers (2 inch long slant pieces). Pour oil in a pan and add chopped onion and garlic. Stir for a minute and add the ladies finger and salt. Stir for two minutes. Add turmeric, chilly powder, pepper powder and garam masala. Cover and cook till ladies finger is soft. Add milk. Bring it to a boil. Serve with rice or chapati.

the recipe contests in Show me Your Curry

Pumpkin and potato saute



the recipe

Pumpkin -200 gms
Potato – 150 gms
Tomato - 1
Onion – 1
Green Chilly – 1
Chilly powder – ½ tsp
Turmeric – ¼ tsp
Pepper powder – 1/2 tsp
Oil – 2 tbsp
Salt – ¾ tsp

the method
Add oil to a pan. Add onion and stir till it starts to brown. Add green chilly, turmeric, chilly powder and pepper powder. Add chopped tomatoes. Stir till the tomatoes are soft. Add potato cubes and cook for 7 minutes. Add the pumpkin cubes and salt. Cook till potato and pumpkin is cooked. Serve with rice or chapati.

Soya chunk curry


the recipe
Soya chunks – ½ cup
Onion – 2
Garlic – 5 cloves
Ginger – 2 cm piece
Tomato – 2
Chilly powder – ½ tsp
Pepper powder – 1/4 tsp
Turmeric – ½ tsp
Garam Masala - ½ tsp
Oil – 2 tbsp
the method

Soak the soya chunks in 3 cup salted water for 20 minutes. Squeeze out the water from the chunks and wash it again.

Heat the oil in a pan. Add finely chopped onion. When it starts to brown add finely chopped or pounded garlic and ginger. Stir for two minutes. Add turmeric, chilly powder, pepper powder and garam masala. Stir for a minute and add finely chopped tomatoes. Stir. Add half cup water and ½ tsp salt for the gravy. Bring it to a boil. Add the prepared soya chunks (you may halve it if needed). Let it simmer for 10 minutes and absorb the spices. Serve with chapatti, string hoppers or rice.

Spicy Brinjal and Potato Stir Fry

Brinjal is one of my favourite vegetables. Growing up in the hillstation Valparai we had our own patch of vegetable garden and we use...