November 8, 2009

Pasta in White Cream Sauce

Serves two.

Quick to put together and delicious to taste, it isn't exactly the healthiest of foods. I don't have a picture, but I've borrowed one from image search.
You need -
2 tbsp butter
1 cup milk
2 tbsp flour/maida
1/2tsp salt and pepper
2 cups of boiled macaroni or pasta
1 tsp oregano

What you need to do -
- In a pan, heat the butter and add the milk, salt and pepper
- Once heated, add the flour and stir briskly to avoid any lumps (add more milk if you'd like the cream to be thinner)
- Add the boiled macaroni/pasta and mix until adequately cooked
- Garnish with oregano seasoning

Serve hot with garlic bread!

November 6, 2009

Tri Color Veggies

Serves two.

This is a side dish that goes well with rasam & rice, and even dal and roti. It's easy and quick to make and makes boring vegetables (re: carrot, beans) interesting!

You need -
1 cup of chopped up beans, carrot and potato, each
1 tsp cooking oil
1 tsp cumin seeds
Salt, pepper, garam masala to taste
Coriander to garnish

What you need to do -
- In a cooker, steam the veggies for ten minutes - it's easier to cook this way and takes up less oil
- Heat the oil in a pan and add the cumin seeds until they're adequately brown
- Put in the steamed vegetables and add salt, pepper and garam masala to taste
- Cook for another 5-10 minutes depending on how crisp you want it, and then garnish with freshly chopped coriander

November 5, 2009

Idly Upma

My maternal grandmother used to make this for me when I was younger and I loved it! Usually, she'd make this for lunch or dinner, and would make it with leftover idlies from the morning. I think it makes a great snack and goes very well with South-Indian filter coffee!

You need -
3 left over idlies
3 tsp idly powder/mollagapodi (recommend MTR if you don't have the homemade variety)
2 tsp sesame oil
1 tsp mustard seeds for seasoning

What you need to do -
- Powder the idly with your hands until it gets a rough consistency like rava upma
- In a pan, heat the oil and burst the mustard seeds
- Add the powdered idly and sautee until the oil spreads evenly
- Add the mollagapodi and sautee for another 2-3 minutes

Serve hot with coconut chutney!

*Apologies for the poor picture quality. My camera's out of order and I am using my phone to take pictures.

November 2, 2009

And, I'm back!

I've been away a long time, and I feel awful about it. I was sick, then I was travelling, and then I had visitors, and my list of excuses go on and on.

Any how, I'm back now. With new and exciting recipes and not so exciting photographs. My camera fell and broke when I was travelling and is currently getting fixed. So, we'll have to make do with pictures from my phone.

Come back in a couple of hours for more!

October 5, 2009

Corn and Pepper Sandwiches

Credits for this recipe & picture go to one of my closest friends, Deepika -

It takes about 5 mins to get all the veggies cut and about another 5 minutes until you serve.


You need -
2 cups of sweet corn (you just scrape off 3 quarters of a corn)
1 capsicum/bell pepper
20 gms butter
Salt & pepper
Basil
Parsley
Broken wheat bread (or brown)

What you need to do -
- Melt butter in a pan
- Add a little salt
- Add the cut corn & capsicum/bell pepper
- Stir for a minute and turn the stove off
- Toast broken wheat bread (it’s the yummiest and crunchiest)
- Spread some corn and capsicum mix on the toast and garnish with herbs on top according to taste

You can even eat it with a single slice of bread (as opposed to a two slice sandwich). And eat the left over mix just like that!

On nice cozy morning, whether a weekend or not, this could make a yummy start to the day.

September 24, 2009

Cilantro & Mint Risotto

When I was in Rome in June '08, I had the best spinach pasta ever! So, I decided to try it out at home, but with a few variations. I made a cilantro-mint version of it, with easily available ingredients, and I must say, it came out better than I expected.


You need -
1 cup rice (I used regular white rice, but you could use brown rice or the original arborio rice)
1 cup of mint leaves
1 cup of coriander/cilantro leaves
1/2 an onion
2 tsps olive oil
Some garlic salt
1 cheese cube/slice or 1 small cup of Parmesan cheese
5 tbs of white wine

What you have to do -
- Mince the onions and sautee in the olive oil until it turns translucent
- Add some garlic salt and regular salt to taste
- Grind the mint and cilantro into a rough paste and add to the mix on the flame
- After a minute, add the raw rice
- Allow rice to cook and after it's half done, add the white wine
- When the rice is almost done, add the cheese and wait for it to fully cook
- Garnish with freshly chopped mint/cilantro

Serve hot!

September 22, 2009

Gajar/Carrot Halwa


You need -
6-7 medium sized carrots
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup milk
1 tsp powdered cardamom
10-12 cashew nuts
5 tsps ghee

What you have to do -
- Grate the carrots and set aside
- On low flame, in a pan, crush and roast the cashew nuts
- Take the nuts out once they're golden brown and then add the carrots (add more ghee if you want it richer)
- Cook carrots until the raw smell goes away
- Once they're soft, add the sugar, powdered cardamom and the milk
- Cook for another 10 minutes and take it down from the flame
- Garnish with the roast cashew nuts

Serve hot with ice cream!

September 21, 2009

Banana Preserve

A bunch of bananas were rotting on the kitchen top when I decided to try make something of them. It took lesser time than I expected and turned out quite well!
You need -
6 Bananas
1/2 cup sugar
1 tsp powdered cardamom
1 pinch of citric acid

What you have to do -
- Chop up the bananas and in a kadai let them get soft
- Add the sugar and wait for everything to turn into pulp
- After about 10 minutes, turn off the flame and wait for it to cool
- Once it cools, use a blender to get a fine paste
- Once again, pour it back into the kadai and cook after adding the powdered cardamom and citric acid
- Take it off the stove after about 5 minutes and store in a bottle for future use

Kill your evening hunger by making these quick choco-banana sandwiches: put the jam and some chocolate syrup between slices of fresh toast and you're good to go!

September 19, 2009

Chocolate Pancakes

Anu and Joy came over last weekend, and as promised I whipped up some pancakes. Easy to make and very fulfilling as a breakfast, this is ideal for a lazy Sunday morning.


You need -
3 cups maida/flour
3 eggs
3 cups milk
1/2 cup sugar
2 small spoons of baking powder
2 spoons of molten butter
2 spoons of vanilla essence
Some choco chilps or Hershey's chocolate syrup
Honey/more chocolate syrup

What you have to do -
- Mix the maida, eggs, milk, sugar, baking powder, butter and essence to make a thick batter. It has to have the consistency of dosa batter.
- Add either chocolate syrup or the chips to the batter depending on how chocolatey you want it.
- Heat a wide flat pan with a small amount of butter.
- Pour out the batter evenly, while ensuring that you're maintaining a half centimeter thickness.
- After it cooks for a bit, it will separate from the pan. Turn it over and let it cook on the other side.
- As it cooks, add honey or/and chocolate syrup.

Serve hot with coffee and you're set for a good day ahead!

September 17, 2009

The Vineyard Brew

Chennai. College. Conversations. Coffee.

It all started over a couple of Vineyard Brews at Coffee?. Through my college days in Chennai, I was a regular at this tiny little coffee shop near home. The place has now moved and isn't as cosy as I remember it being earlier. I'm not even sure they still serve these brews and that's just a pity, because they've got to be the best semi-alcoholic evening drinks I've ever had!

Never the less, here's how you can do it yourself!

You need -
Instant coffee powder
A dark cola (preferably coca cola)
Red wine
Ice cubes

What you have to do -
- In a tall clear glass, put half a spoon of coffee powder (add up to a spoon if you want it strong) and add a very small amount of red wine (as alcoholic as you'd like it)
- Add ice cubes per your preferences
- Tilt the glass at a 45degree angle and slowly pour the cola from the rim of the glass (if you rush this, it fizzes and turns foamy)

Serve with popcorn or other light snacks!

September 15, 2009

Cherry Cheesecake

Makes 6 slices

Inspired by Nigella Lawson, I tried this out at home - and I'm proud to say that it was a success. Overall, it works out to be expensive - but makes every paisa spent completely worth the while! This is the non-bake variety of cheesecake.


You need -
200gms Philadelphia/Danish Cream Cheese
90gms of digestive biscuits
50gms of butter (unsalted preferred)
40gms of icing sugar/powdered sugar
175mls of Amul fresh cream
A fresh lemon
Vanilla essence
A bottle of fruit preserve - I chose St. Dalfour's Black Cherry preserve

What you have to do -
- Beat the fresh cream into a thick mixture and set aside in a bowl
- Put the icing/powdered sugar, a dash of lime, vanilla essence and the cream cheese into a bowl and beat it up until it's consistent and fluffy
- Put the biscuits and butter in a blender until you get a coarse mix for the base
- Butter a flat medium-deep bowl and press the base on to it evenly
- Mix the fresh cream mix with the second mix until you get an even consistency
- Pour the fresh batter over the base evenly and then put away in the fridge for a few hours
- Place on a plate and pour our generous portions of cherry preserve on top of the cake just before serving

Serve cold and don't count the calories!

September 14, 2009

Aloo Jeera

Serves two.

I love the flavor of ginger and coriander. Typically, you wouldn't make this side dish with these ingredients. But, I do. Feel free to make without.


You need -
4 small-medium sized potatoes
Some red chili powder, garam masala, asafoetida, salt to taste
Cumin seeds for garnishing
Freshly chopped ginger and coriander

What you have to do -
- Pressure cook/Microwave the potatoes until they're soft enough to be eaten directly
- In a kadai, heat some oil and add the cumin seeds, asafoetida and chopped ginger
- Once it turns dark brown, add the chopped pieces of soft potatoes
- Allow the oil to coat each piece gently - do not add more than a total of 2 tsps of oil unless you want it crunchy
- Mix the salt, garam masala and chili powder in a spoon of water and then sprinkle on to the potatoes
- Mix it up well and cook for another 3-4 minutes while ensuring that no one side burns
- Garnish with freshly chopped coriander for an interesting flavor

Serve with -
- Rotis & dal
- Rasam & rice

September 12, 2009

Coconut Laddu

Makes 12 balls.

I had some left over coconut after I was done making Kozhakattais. So. I decided to quickly try my hand at coconut barfi. That didn't work out very well, so I was left with coconut balls. Trust me, they taste as good - just look different!


You need -
1 large cup of shaved coconut
3 tb spoons milk
2 spoons sugar (more if you want it sweeter)
6 pieces of ground cardamom
Some ghee

What you have to do -
- Fry the shaved coconut in one spoon of ghee until it gets crispy
- In a kadai, boil the milk along with the sugar, a spoon of ghee and the ground cardamom
- Add the fried coconut shavings and sautee until it's hard
- Make small balls and put away in the fridge until you have to serve it

September 10, 2009

Bread-Jam & Milk

Serves one.

My mother would make this for me when I would return from school ravenously hungry. It's fuss-free, fast, filling and delicious!

You need -
2 slices of bread
1 glass of milk
Jam of your choice (I prefer the fruit preserves by St Dalfour)
Vanilla essence (optional)

What you have to do -
- Make jam sandwiches and then chop it up into small cubes
- Heat some milk until it's warm enough to drink and then add a drop of vanilla essence
- Put the sandwich cubes in a bowl and pour the milk over it

Spoon it up and you won't be hungry anymore!

September 8, 2009

Spaghetti

Serves two.

This turned out to be surprisingly easy to make and is quite fulfilling as a dinner.
You need -
Good quality wheat spaghetti
2 tomatoes
1 onion
1 bell pepper/capsicum
Some oregano/basil seasoning, salt to taste
Some olive oil
Chili flakes, cheese (optional, be recommended)

What you have to do -
- Boil a portion of the spaghetti in hot water until it turns soft - be careful not to break the strands
- Make a paste of the onions in a blender
- In a kadai, let the paste turn golden brown by heating in a small tsp of olive oil
- Similarly, make a paste of the tomatoes and add to the mix
- Once it's cooked adequately, add the capsicum (chopped lengthwise)
- Add salt and the oregano
- Add the soft spaghetti and let it cook together for 4-5 minutes
- Add chili flakes (if you want it spice) and Parmesan cheese (use regular cheese slices if you want it to melt fast)

Serve hot!

Serve with -
Garlic bread & salads

August 30, 2009

Rajma Masala

Serves two.

Rajma Masala was the standard Sunday family lunch when I was growing up. It's not very easy to make, but is definitely worth all the effort!


You need -
1.5 cups of red rajma beans
Finely chopped - 2 tomatoes, 2 onions, some ginger and chillies, coriander
Garam masala and salt

What you have to do -
- Soak the beans in 8 times the amount of water for 24 hours and then pressure cook for 10-15 whistles depending on how soft you want the beans
- In a kadai, sautee the onions, ginger and chillies in 2tsps of oil until golden brown
- Add the tomatoes and salt to taste
- Once it turns soft, add 2 spoons of garam masala, and the rajma with the water, and cook until the water evaporates to make it as dry/wet as you prefer it
- Garnish with fresh finely chopped onions and coriander

Best served with -
- Basmati rice
- Rotis

Enjoy on a cold rainy Sunday afternoon!

August 28, 2009

Dal Tadka

Serves two

This is one of the easiest foods to cook up and goes with both rotis and rice.


You need -
- 1 cup toor dal/lentils
- Some cumin seeds, turmeric, freshly ground pepper, chopped chillies and coriander, salt to taste and asafoetida

What you have to do -
- Steam cook the dal in a pressure cooker for 4 whistles
- In a kadai, heat some oil with 1 tsp of cumin seeds, asafoetida and chopped chillies
- Take the dal out of the cooker and add it with the excess water
- Add a pinch of turmeric and salt and mix well
- Cook until dal boils and the water is no longer separate from the actual lentils
- Garnish with freshly ground pepper and chopped coriander

August 27, 2009

Arbi / Chepankazhangu (Colocasia) Fry



You need -
A bowl full of Colocasia / Arbi/ Chepankazhangu
Some chilli masala, garam masala, rasam powder, turmeric and salt
5-6 spoons of oil

What you have to do -
- Steam the unpeeled arbi in a pressure cooker until the whistle goes off 4 times
- Take it out after the cooker cools and and peel the arbi
- Chop it up into similar sized pieces and add the masala powders
- Shallow fry the arbi in a pan until it turns dark-brown and crisp

Serve with rasam, rice and papad!

August 26, 2009

Choc-Almond Fudge Drops

Makes 12 balls


You need -
2 bars of dark chocolate (bournville)
1 can of condensed milk
1 tablespoon of butter
A handful of crushed almonds

What you have to do -
- Break the dark chocolate into little pieces, put in a bowl and heat
- Add condensed milk immediately and mix it up until the pieces melt into the batter
- The batter will get bubbly (within 5-6 minutes) so be careful to make sure it doesn't burn - mix until you get an even consistency and the batter seems to be consistent
- Add the almonds and take it off the flame
- Wait for it to cool and then use your palms to make small Ferrero Rocher sized balls

Wrap these little drops of heaven in small pieces of foil and share!

August 25, 2009

Channa Masala

Serves four.

I'd never made Channa Masala before and I decided to give it a shot. It turned out to be surprisingly easy and so gave me a great sense of accomplishment.


You need -
3 cups of Kabuli Channa
3 tomatoes
2 onions
Chopped Chillies & Coriander
Channa Masala Powder
Coriander Powder
Garam Masala
Salt

What you have to do -
- Soak the Channa overnight in a bowl full of water - before cooking, drain and wash the Channa
- Cook in a pressure cooker for 5 whistles on high flame
- Chop up the onions and tomatoes in small cubes
- In a Kadai, sautee the onions in oil until golden brown and then add tomatoes and chillies
- Add salt, 1 tsp. Garam Masala, 1 tsp. Coriander Powder and 2tsp. Channa Masala Powder (add more Channa Masala Powder if you want more flavor)
- Add the steamed Channa into the mix and add water based on how dry/wet you like the Channa and then cook for another 15 minutes
- Garnish with chopped coriander

Serve with -
- Rotis
- Basmati Rice
- Poori

August 24, 2009

Neer More (Butter Milk)

Serves two.

Easy-to-make, quick drink, to beat the heat.

You need -
2 small cups curd
1.5 glasses water
Salt to taste
Mustard
Chopped coriander
Asafoetida
1 tsp oil/ghee

What you have to do -
- Put the curd, water and salt in a bowl and churn with a hand blender or a fork for 2-3 minutes until you get an even consistency
- Garnish with burst mustard and asafoetida in oil/ghee, and with chopped coriander

Serve chilled on a hot afternoon!

August 23, 2009

Kozhakattai (sweet coconut dumplings) Part 2

Today I put together the two mixes and made the final sweet.


After bringing both mixes to room temperature, here's what I did:

- Apply a little coconut oil on your hands, and make little balls out of the rice mix (meil mau) using your palm
- Using your fingers, spread it out into thin flat cakes of 2" diameter - making it thinner towards the edges
- Put 1 tsp of the filling (poornam) in the center and then shut the filling with the edges - much like you'd do while making aloo paratha
- Pinch off the thick top part to give it an even outer coating
- Steam for 15 minutes by placing in a perforated plate over hot water, or by placing in an idly plate in a pressure cooker

Best when served hot!

August 22, 2009

Kozhakattai (sweet coconut dumplings) Part 1

Every year, my grandma would make the most delicious Kozhakattais on Ganesh Chaturthi day. This year, I'm in Hyderabad, and so I decided to try making them myself. This is a delicate dish and takes time, so I'm making it over two days.

Today, I made the two batters (meil mau & poornam), and tomorrow I'm going to make the actual kozhakattais. Here's what I did today:

For the outer shell (meil mau)

You need -
1 cup rice
4 spoons of coconut oil
A pinch of salt

What you have to do -
- Soak the rice in 2 cups of water for 2 hours
- Strain the water (but save for later use) and put the rice in a blender
- Blend until you get the pasty consistency of a very thick soup
- On a very low flame, put the rice paste, the coconut oil and the pinch of salt in a kadai
- Stir continuously until it gets hard but not too dry - it should have the same consistency as the batter you'd make for rotis
- Put away in a box in the fridge

For the inner filling (poornam)

You need -
1 coconut
Some jaggery
Some ground cardamom

What you have to do:
- Grate the coconut or put it in a blender for a few minutes
- Heat a kadai on a low flame and melt a small cup of jaggery
- Once it starts to turn into liquid, add the coconut and cardamom
- Continue to stir the mix on the low flame until it gets crunchy and the liquid is no longer separate from the coconut
- Put in a bowl and put away in the fridge

For part 2, visit this post.

Indianized Pasta & Garlic Bread

Serves two.

I don't have an oven or a toaster, but still find this to be a very easy-to-make dinner - using just the stove, a kadai and a pan. It takes me about 15 minutes.

(Taken using my phone one evening - please excuse the quality of the picture!)

Pasta:

You need -
2 cups of macaroni
1/2 pack of tomato puree
1 onion
2 tomatoes
Garlic salt, oregano, salt, pepper
Cheese slices (optional, but recommended)
Coriander (optional)

What you have to do -
- Boil the mac until it's soft - add some salt and a drop of oil in the water to keep it from sticking to one another
- In a kadai, sautee chopped up the onion and tomatoes, and add half a pack of puree and wait for it to bubble
- Add salt, pepper and the garlic salt and mix
- Then, add the boiled mac and mix well
- Put in the cheese slices and watch it boil into the mix
- After letting the mac absorb the 'gravy,' add some oregano, garlic salt, chopped up coriander, and then take it off the flame

Garlic Bread:

You need -
4 slices of bread (brown/multi-grain if you want to make it healthy)
Garlic Salt
Butter
Grated cheese (optional)
Chopped green chillies

What you have to do -
- Apply butter on both sides of the slices of bread and sprinkle with garlic salt
- Heat on the tawa on a low flame and wait for both sides to turn golden brown (to make it crispy, turn the flame off and leave the slices on the hot tawa for a short while)
- Sprinkle the grated cheese and green chillies on top and wait for it to form a crust (with the heat of the toast)

August 21, 2009

Basundhi

Serves four.

I had a few friends coming over for lunch and card games one Saturday, and I decided to try my hand at Basundhi. It took time - but was actually quite easy to put together.
You need -
1l milk
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cardamom (powdered)
6 crushed almonds
3 strands of saffron

What you have to do -
- Boil the milk in a kadai until it reduces to half its quantity - you'll start seeing layers in the milk
- Add the sugar and mix until it dissolves
- Once it comes down to 1/4th it's quantity, add the cardamom and saffron
- When the mix is layered and coarse, take it off the flame and garnish with almonds
- Serve hot or cold!

Note: This is a very heavy dessert.

August 20, 2009

Dry Capsicum Masala

Serves two.

This is amongst the easiest veggies to make - it takes me less than 7 minutes and goes very well with rasam, rice and papad.
You need -
1 large capsicum
1 teaspoon oil
Some salt, garam masala, cumin seeds

What you have to do -
- Heat the oil with cumin seeds
- Add large chopped pieces of capsicum
- Sautee for 2 mins and add salt and garam masala
- After another 3-4 minutes, take it off the stove

August 19, 2009

Rawa Dosa

I love Rawa Dosa, but the closest I've come to making it at home is to use MTR's Instant Rawa Dosa Mix. Credits for this recipe also go to Deepsy's mum.

Made by Deepsy's mum, held by Deepsy, and eaten by yours truly!

You need -
1 portion maida (flour) or wheat
2 portions rice powder (arsi powder)
3 portions rava
Some coriander
Some jeera/cumin seeds
Some curry leaves
2 chillies
Chopped Onions (optional)

What you have to do -
- Mix all the above ingredients with water to get a loose consistency
- Set aside for 5 minutes
- Heat the pan with a little oil, and pour the batter out (the batter shouldn't be spread in sweeping circular motions like a regular dosa - it should be poured out in a circle while maintaining minimal thickness)
- Sprinkle some oil all over and around the corners - the dosa will come out with a lot of little holes (it's very natural)
- Serve with curd/chutney/sambar

A variation -
Instead of mixing the batter in water, mix with would sour butter milk. This gives it a completely different taste. Once you mix the batter, leave it aside for about 30 minutes before cooking.

Serve with -
- Tomato or coconut chutney
- Pickle
- Curd
- And a cup of strong hot coffee!

August 18, 2009

Kannadiga Rasam (Deepsy's mum's recipe)

I've spent most of my school days in Deepika's house. Deepsy's mum makes a really different kind of rasam and I could never quite figure out what was so unique about the taste. As you know, I spent the last weekend at her place, and this time, I watched her in action. Here's what the final product looked like:

I took this picture in a hurry, so it's not very good - but it's a start.

You need -
2 cups boiled dal/lentil
Rasam powder
Jaggery
2 tomatoes
Tamarind
1 piece of green chilli
Jeera/cumin seeds
Mustard
Coriander
Curry Leaves
Asafoetida

What you have to do -
- Put the tamarind in hot water and boil
- Add chopped tomatoes and continue to boil
- Add the rasam powder, the single chilli, a pinch of salt, a small piece of jaggery and continue to boil until fully cooked
- Add the two cups of boiled dal
- Boil it together for 5 minutes and take it off the flame
- Burst mustard, jeera, curry leaves and asafoetida in hot oil and garnish rasam
- Finely chop coriander and sprinkle on the rasam

August 17, 2009

Hummus

I spent my weekend in Bangalore, with Deepika's family. Deepsy has been one of my closest friends since school, and she was getting engaged. I obviously had to be there for it!

While she was away working on Friday, I spent a lot of time with her younger sister, Surekha. And, we got to talking about many things - caricatures to photos, the River dance to Irish authors, and recipes to cuisines. That's when she asked me about Lebanese food and, specifically, hummus. I love hummus and would recommend it anytime, to anyone.

Surey, if you're reading, this one's for you.

You need -
500gms chickpeas/channa that has been soaked overnight & boiled (drained)
lemon juice from 2 lemons
4 spoons of water
1 teaspoon salt
Half cup tahini (put 50 gms black sesame seeds, few drops of sesame oil, some salt and water in a blender to make tahini paste)
2 cloves garlic—roughly chopped (optional)
Some cumin seeds (optional)
and a blender!

What you have to do -
- Put all items in a blender and blend until you get a smooth paste
- Put in a bowl, and garnish by sprinkling some chilli powder and cumin powder on the top
- Also create a groove in the center and pour a spoon of olive oil (it should look like this)
- Put it in the fridge for a bit, and serve cold!

To complete the meal, serve with -
- Salad: Toss some cucumber, tomatoes and bell peppers in a spoon of olive oil, a dash of lime, some salt and pepper
- Bread: pita, roti, naan or toast

This makes for a healthy and light dinner, but needs some advance shopping and planning.

PS - If you're looking for a good Lebanese platter with fantastic hummus in Hyderabad, I strongly recommend '4 seasons' at either Tolichowki or Kondapur.

August 16, 2009

Rasam (molaga tanni)

Credit for this recipe goes to my grandma.

You need -
A cup of boiled dal/lentil
2 tomatoes
Some coriander and curry leaves
Rasam Powder (if your grandma doesn't make it for you, you can buy MTR)

What you have to do -
- Boil 5 cups of water
- Chop up tomatoes lengthwise and allow it to boil with the water
- Add the cup of dal/lentil and allow to boil for another few minutes
- Add salt to taste, and two spoons of rasam powder and boil for another 10 minutes
- Take off the stove and add chopped coriander
- Heat a spoon of oil, add mustard, asafoetida and curry leaves and add to rasam

Serve with hot rice, any dry curry and roasted papad - and you have your quintessential Tamil meal!

August 15, 2009

Parisian Crepes

I tasted my first crepe while in Paris, in 2007, at a little cafe opposite the Louvre museum metro stop - and I loved it!

(at the Louvre, soon after the crepes)

Since then, I've experimented in my own kitchen and I must say - it has come out very well.

You need -
3 cups maida/flour
3 eggs
3 cups milk
1/2 cup sugar
2 small spoons of baking powder
2 spoons of molten butter
2 spoons of flavored essence (optional)
Fruit of your choice (banana, apple, strawberry, pineapple recommended)
Honey/chocolate syrup

What you have to do -
- Mix the maida, eggs, milk, sugar, baking powder, butter and essence to make a loose flow-ey batter. It has to have the consistency of olive oil.
- Let it sit for about 10-20 minutes. You can put it away in the fridge and come back to it later if you're preparing it ahead of time.
- Heat a wide flat pan with a small amount of butter.
- Pour out the batter evenly, while ensuring that you're maintaining the least possible thickness.
- After it cooks for a bit, it will separate from the pan. Turn it over and let it cook on the other side.
- As it cooks, add cut fruit and honey/chocolate syrup.
- Roll it over or fold twice and serve!

Some interesting variations -
- Make chocolate pancakes with slices bananas and leave it in the fridge for a few hours. They're quite yummy on a hot summer afternoon or make for a good dessert.
- Chocolate + Banana + Coconut shavings = very yum!
- Strawberry + Honey = very very yum!
- Add white/brown chocolate chips to make them crunchy and super-chocolatey.

August 14, 2009

Bread Upma

This has got to be my favorite Saturday morning breakfast. When you wake up late on weekends, and live with girls who are too lazy to buy real vegetables to cook with, this comes as a savior. It's easy to make and the ingredients are usually available in the kitchen.

Naagu posted about this once, after we spend a lovely Christmas day together, way back when she still lived in Hyderabad. Click here for what happened that day and how you can make the upma.

August 13, 2009

Vanilla French Toast

I don't have any pictures yet - I'm still to get into the habit of taking pictures after I cook, so that I can post them. But, here's my recipe, anyway.

You need -
Brown Bread or Multi Grain Bread
2-3 Eggs
3 spoon fulls of Sugar (add more if you like it really sweet)
5 drops of Vanilla Essence

What you have to do -
- Beat the eggs, milk, sugar and essence together
- Heat a flat pan with some butter
- Dip the bread in the mix (be careful not to dip for long as that breaks the bread)
- Cook the bread on both sides until it turns golden brown

If you want to make it fancy: Stack three full slices of bread one on top of the other, and top it off with a fried egg.

Pour yourself a glass of orange juice, cut up some fruit, brew some mild black tea, and there you have it - the perfect heavy Sunday breakfast!

August 5, 2009

My inspiration

Very inspired by my paati's (grandma's) ability to cook up the world's most delicious south-Indian food in minutes, and by Naagu's ability to make recipes look so exciting, I've set this blog up.
(It was also one of my to-do things before I turn 25.)

Here's to a blog full of easy to cook breakfast & dinner ideas!