A Golden Anniversary Cake


Hi folks.    For those of you who missed me,  apologies!!!!!  Have been busy with this and that and was unable to give time to our blog.  Am very much around and assure you that wont ‘jilt’ our blog in a hurry.

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For starters,  please view a cake that I made for the ‘Golden Wedding Anniversary’ for the parents of a dear friend.   Making the cake was really a piece of cake ;)  but the challenge was carting it all the way to Sharjah from Abu Dhabi.  It reached in one piece.

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Any constructive criticism on the cake always welcome.  Assure all of you that I will be blogging actively from now on.   Cya soon.

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Chholay Bhatura

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Bhatura is a traditional North Indian bread which is usually paired with a Chick Peas side-dish called Chholay – together called as “Chholay Bhatura”. This is a recipe by Sanjeeve Kapoor, and adapted slightly to suit our taste. Enjoy.

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For Bhatura :
Flour -Maida 2-1/2 cups
Yogurt 1/2 cup
Baking powder 1/2 teaspoon
Baking soda a pinch
Salt 1 teaspoon
Sugar 2 teaspoons
oil – 2 tablespoons (during kneading)
Oil for frying
Extra flour for rolling the bhatura

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Take flour and add baking powder, baking soda and salt. Mix well and sieve it into a large bowl. Mix yogurt and sugar. Add this to the flour and about a cup of water and mix gradually to make a sft dough by light kneading.

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Incorporate two tablespoons of oil into the dough and knead. Then cover the dough with a wet cloth and keep it aside for an hour.

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Divide into about 16-18 equal portions and roll them into balls. Cover and keep to ferment for 10 minutes.

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Grease your palms with a little oil and flatten the balls and roll into five inch circles. Use dry flour to roll only if needed.

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Heat a deep frying pan and deep fry the Bhaturas on high flame till light brown on both sides.

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Serve immediately with Chholay.

For Chholay (Chick Peas side dish) :

Chick Peas -1-1/2 cups
Salt to taste
Tamarind (lime size) or Dried indian gooseberry -3 (for tanginess)
Onions -3-4 large
Ginger – 2 one inch pieces
Garlic 10-12 cloves
Green Chillies – 2
Tomatoes – 4 medium
Corriander leaves 1 small bunch
Oil 4 tablespoons
Cumin seeds 2 tablespoons
Coriander powder 3 teaspoons
Red Chilli powder 1 teaspoon
Anardana-pomegranate seeds (1 tablespoon)
Turmeric powder – 1/2 teaspoon

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Soak the chick Peas in water overnight. The next day boil with water, salt, tamarind/gooseberry till tender.
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Peel and chop onions. Peel ginger garling. Wash green chillies and make a paste of ginger, garlic and green chillies. Wash and chop the tomatoes and coriander leaves. Dry roast cumin seeds, cool and grind to a powder.

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Heat oil in a pan, add chopped onions and saute till brown. Add ginger garlic and green chillie paste and saute for sometime. Add coriander powder, ground cumin seeds, red chillie, turmeric and anardana and cook till oil separates.

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Add drained Chick Peas and mix well. Add tomatoes and cook till the channas are well mixed with gravy and the tomatoes are cooked too. Add any seasoning, if required, at this stage, like salt or chillie.

Serve hot, garnished with lots of coriander leaves.

Singapore Chicken Satay


satay4One of the most famous Malay dishes in Singapore, Satay is a must-try. It is made of skewered meat grilled over charcoal or a grill, to an irresistibly smoky, savoury finish. This meaty delicacy is served with a velvety peanut-based sauce and accompanied with cucumber, chopped onion and steamed rice. I had some lemon grass left over and so made a fried rice with mixed vegetables and was amazed at the flavour the lemon grass infused into the rice. Do try it.

satay8Serves 4-6

Ingredients

For the Chicken Satay
1 Kg Chicken breasts/boneless chunks
1 tablespoon coriander seeds
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1/2 tsp fennel seeds
5 candlenuts or macadamia nuts or cashewnuts
10 shallots or 1 large red onion
2 cloves garlic
1 stalk lemongrass (use only the root)
1 cm slice galangal or blue ginger
1 cm slice fresh ginger
1-1/2 tsp salt
1 teaspoon turmeric powder
50 grams jaggery or palm sugar
2 tsps tamarind pulp
1/2 cup water

satay2For Satay Sauce
40 grms to 60 grms tamarind pulp, 2 cups water
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 cup toasted skinless peanuts ground till fine
1/4 cup peanut butter (crunchy)
1 stalk lemon grass
1/4 cup sugar or equivalent jaggery
3/4 tsp salt

satay7Spice mixture for Satay Sauce
3 candlenuts or macadamia nuts or cashewnuts washed and drained
15 dried red chillies, soaked in hot water till softened
3 cloves garlic
30 g shallots or 1 large red onion
1 tsp shrimp paste or belacan (optional)

satay9Method :

Satay Sauce
Mix tamarind pulp with water and strain, discard pulp. Pound or grind spice mixture until fine. Fry spice mixture in hot oil till fragrant. Add tamarind liquid and remaining ingredients. Boil for 15 minutes, stir well. Cool for 30 minutes before serving.

satay6Satay Chicken
Dry fry coriander seeds, cumin seeds and fennel seeds till fragrant and grind till fine. Pound or grind candlenuts, shallots, garlic, lemongrass and ginger till fine. Mix the tamarind pulp with quarter cup of water, then knead and sieve. Mix the jaggery/sugar with quarter cup of water and dissolve over low heat.

satay5 Mix the shallot mixture with the ground seeds, turmeric powder, tamarind water, sugar/jaggery syrup and salt. Marinade meat in this mixture for 6 hours. To grill, skewer 3 or 4 pieces of meat on each skewer, bush with oil and BBQ till golden brown on both sides.

Satay1Serve with Satay Sauce and steamed rice/fried rice.

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Sago Pudding


sago1“All you need is Love;  but a little Dessert  now and then does’nt hurt”.

Valentines Day is here again.   And I’ve made nothing fancy this year;   though I had in mind a plan to have a Valentines Day Special Menu on the blog.   Sorry folks,  been neck deep in things that have kept me very busy.

sago3For this year be content with this simple  ‘Sago Pudding’.  But remember that  it is the simple things in life that are the most extraordinary.

Happy Valentines Day to all our well wishers.

Recipe for Sago Pudding :

Serves: 10

10 cups water

200g pearl sago, soaked,  rinsed and drained

200g palm sugar (also known as gulamelaka),  or jaggery melted in 1/2 cup water over medium heat.

2-1/2  cups coconut milk

sago4Directions

Soak the sago pearls in water for 30 minutes. Drain over a sieve.  Bring 10 cups of water to a boil in a large pot.  Gradually stir in the sago so that it does not clump. Return to a boil, then reduce the heat to low.  Cook until the sago turns translucent, stirring occasionally for about 10 minutes.  Pour over a sieve, wash the pearls in cold running water till cold and drain again.

Warm the coconut milk and  gulamelaka syrup and when thickish add the sago and simmer on low heat. Refrigerate in individual containers.

Garnish with nuts.

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Rice Pancakes and Coriander Chutney (Dosa N Chutney)


ds1There are various types of Dosas/Rice Pancakes; crisp, fluffy, spongy, wafer thin, thick, large, small, These are not your crisp and wafer thin type of Dosa; but a spongy and holey one variation. My son loves these and calls them “Holey Dosas”; as you see a large number of holes in them. You can have your ‘Dosa’ with any side dish. Most popular are coconut chutney, coriander chutney, tomato chutney, potato bhaji, sambar etc. I made ours with a Coriander Chutney.  Do try them.

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Recipe :
5 cups of rice (I used the ‘Rozana’ Basmati rice).
1 cup urid dal
1 teaspoon yeast
Sugar – 3-4 tablespoons
Salt to taste.

DS2Wash and soak the Rice and Dal separately for at least 4/5 hours or overnight. Grind to a fine batter adding water as required. Transfer the batter in a deep vessel, add sugar, salt and yeast. (Dissolve the yeast in ½ cup luke warm water and wait till it bubbles. Then add to batter. This to ensure that yeast is good).

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Take an onion and peel it. Flatten it at the bottom and just make 5/6 cuts on the surface of the outer layer. Put this onion on the surface of the batter and cover with a lid. After 2 hours the batter will have risen and the onion floating on the surface will have disappeared into the batter. (This is an indication that your batter has risen. If not wait for sometime more time till this happens).

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Remove the onion from the batter and wash it. Take a cupful of oil and keep aside. Pierce a fork into the top surface of the onion and soak it into the oil. (You are going to use the onion to lighly coat the Tawa/skillet with oil).

DS3Heat a tawa/skillet. Rub the tawa/skillet with the soaked onion so that a thin film of oil coats it. Drop a large ladle full of batter on the tawa/skillet and immediately cover it with a lid and let the dosa cook on medium heat till done and you see no raw batter on the surface.
Between dosas, grease the tawa or skillet lightly with oil/onion and then pour the batter.

ds6Best had directly from pan to plate with side-dish of your choice.

ds4So there you are, a ‘Holey Dosa’, which leaves no hole in your wallet ;) ;).

Fish Curry With Coconut


FC9This hot and tangy Fish Curry makes for a perfect lunch on a weekend;     light enough not to knock you out,   but spiced enough to prompt a  hearty appetite.   And trust me it is so very easy to make.

FC10Ingredients :

Fish -  750 grams to 1 Kg.

¼ coconut grated or ½ cup of desiccated coconut

10 dry chillies

1.5 tablespoons of coriander seeds

3 garlic seeds

8 pepper corns

¼ teaspoon of turmeric powder

1 onion

Ball sized tamarind

FC4Grind above extra fine and keep aside.

FC2For slicing : 1 or 2 green chillies slit,  1” ginger sliced thin,  1 small tomato, 1 small onion.

fc5Clean and wash the fish.  Apply  salt and turmeric and wash after 10-15 minutes and keep aside.

FC1Take a pan, add 2 – 3 tablespoons of oil and put the sliced masala and fry for 2 minutes,  then add the ground masala and fry for sometime.

FC8 Add enough water to make a thick curry.  Add salt to taste.  Let the curry come to a rolling boil – say after 10-15 minutes.    Then add the fish and stir gently.  Let the fish boil in the curry for 10-12 minutes.   Keep down and garnish with cut coriander leaves.

FC6Serve with boiled rice and a vegetable side-dish.

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A Culinary Tour of Singapore in the UAE


Singapore Food Festival to bring taste of the Far East to the Middle East

SFF1Enjoy a taste of the Far East in the UAE next month when the Singapore Food Festival arrives at LuLu Hypermarkets across the country. Taking place from 20th February to 3rd March, the two-week festival will serve up a smorgasbord of Singapore taste sensations, cooking demonstrations as well as daily competitions.

SFF9At the Singapore Food Festival visitors can expect to widen their culinary horizons with Singapore’s fusion of Asian flavours. Famous for its cultural and culinary diversity – offering a mix of Chinese, Indian, Malay and British cuisines – Singapore flavours are as varied as they are unique.

SFF6More than 20 Singapore food and beverage companies will participate in the Singapore Food Festival, presenting a selection of authentic Singapore cuisine such as ready-to-cook sauces, oodles of noodles, traditional snacks and teas as well as signature dishes like Singapore Chilli Crab and Chicken Rice.

SFF3On hand to show just how easy it is to cook authentic Singapore cuisine at home will be celebrity Chef Violet Oon. A distinguished chef, trusted food consultant, researcher and author, Oon is considered the darling of Singapore’s food industry. Dubbed Singapore’s food ambassador, she regularly travels the globe promoting Singapore cuisine on the world stage.

TS9Dishing out a delicious and modern menu, inspired by iconic Singaporean foods, Chef Oon’s Singapore Food Festival repertoire will include the famous Chilli Crab – arguably one of the country’s greatest culinary inventions. This special dish has a sensuous, sweet yet savoury gravy created with a base of chilli and tomato sauces. Other dishes include: Singapore Satay, spiced meat skewers served with a velvety peanut-based sauce; Laksa, smooth rice noodles in a spicy coconut broth; and Chicken Rice, succulent bites of chicken served on fragrant rice.

SFF10Visitors to the Singapore Food Festival will also have a chance to win a host of daily prizes. Up for grabs in the main prize draw are three pairs of two-night holidays to Singapore, inclusive of return flights and a stay at Resorts World Sentosa.

SFF8With fabulous food, traditional Singapore entertainment, interactive cooking demonstrations and amazing prizes, the Singapore Food Festival promises to be a fun day out for foodies and families. Mark the calendar as this is one culinary destination not to be missed.

SFF7The Singapore Food Festival takes place from 20th February to 3rd March at various LuLu Hypermarkets across the UAE.

TS1Chef Violet Oon held a cooking demonstration for the media and food bloggers in Dubai and Abu Dhabi,  and  “Bring On the Chef In You”,  was one of the privileged invitees.

TS7In Abu Dhabi it was held in a quaint joint called “Partiperfect”,  located behind Abu Dhabi Marina Mall.   We joined Chef Violet Oon, as she taught us how to make ‘Singapore Satay” and “Chilli Crabs”.

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Please read the interview that we conducted with Chef Violet.

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Interview with Chef Violet Oon

1.            We look forward to seeing you again at the forthcoming Singapore Food Festival that will be held  from 20th February, 2013 at Lulu Supermarkets.  Please can you explain briefly your role and involvement with the Festival.

I’m very excited about the upcoming Singapore Food Festival. My role during this two-week event is to introduce UAE consumers to the unique flavours of Singapore and show just how easy it is to prepare our cuisine at home using the authentic-tasting food products now stocked by LuLu Hypermarket.

Singapore is famous for its cultural and culinary diversity, offering a mix of Chinese, Indian, Malay and British food. I like to share stories of our modern history when I present Singapore’s food heritage. One ofthe “national dishes” I’ll be demonstrating is Singapore Chilli Crab. Considered a Singapore institution, this dish hasa sensuous, sweet yet savoury gravy created with a base of chili and tomato sauce. Other recipes include Laksa, smooth rice noodles in a spicy coconut broth;Singapore Satay, spiced meat skewers served with a velvety peanut-based sauce; and Chicken Rice, succulent bites of chicken served on fragrant rice.

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I find food broadens our worlds in so many ways and I’m really looking forward to playing a part in this cultural exchange between the UAE and Singapore.

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2.            What did you like about Abu Dhabi during your visit here?  How would you compare it to Singapore ?

 I loved Abu Dhabi – it shares so many similarities with Singapore, with such a vibrant blend of nationalities in one place. This cultural diversity means people are really open to exploring new cuisines and this is really great for chefs. It gives us the opportunity to craft dishes fused with different flavours from around the world. This also means that there is a lot of potential for Singapore’s F&B companies exporting to this market, as consumers start incorporating our flavours and food products into their daily cooking as well.

I was also really impressed by how many top international restaurants are present in the emirate. Abu Dhabi is really becoming a gastronomic capital. Maybe one day I will bring my restaurant here so I can share the flavours of Singapore with the UAE more permanently!

TS43.            Which is one Singapore delicacy that you would recommend that everyone tries?

I would recommend two delicacies in particular to foodies in the UAE – Singapore Chilli Crabs and Singapore Satay – both are delicious dishes to tuck into!

TS24.            What is your favourite cuisine to cook?  Why?

My favourite cuisine is Singapore and our country has evolved a showcase culinary tradition that embodies the texture and flavours that come from Malay, Chinese and Indian cultures in a unique Singapore style and this cuisine continues to fascinate me.

TS35.            What do you feel are the most important characteristics for an upcoming chef?

People speak of passion but that is not enough – an upcoming chef must be able to have physical and mental stamina and not only want to learn, but to be humble enough to know that practice makes perfect.There is no short cut to being a great chef and you have to earn your chops,  even if this means peeling many many potatoes to be the perfect potato peeler, for example. I have encountered many young aspiring chefs –andsome have come into my kitchen to work– who feel that they are ready to take on the serious cooking or that they are good enough to handle a station after just one week. It looks easy but it is not as skill is something that takes continuous practice. Developing a discerning palate also takes lots of practice.

6.            Which famous chef do you admire most?

I most admire not the famous chefs but that grandmother in your kitchen that cooks that perfect traditional home style dish with all its nuances of colour, texture, flavour and with her obsession with knowing just which ingredient to purchase and from which vendor. This is the chef I admire most, and now that I am a grandmother myself, I do hope that I have become the sort of culinary grandmother that I admire. I never cease to be amazed whenever I visit a home for a meal, to discover the depth of culinary nuance that I encounter at my first bite into a well-cooked family favourite dish. I have loved the food that I have eaten in restaurants in Dubai and Abu Dhabi and am always looking out for Middle Eastern food as I so much enjoy the flavours and nuances but I am waiting to be invited to a home to encounter these flavours in their true setting.

SFF107.            Can you name 3 ingredients that you always need to have in your kitchen?

For my Singapore kitchen, definitely garlic, chillies and lemongrass.

 8.            What do you see as today’s most exciting food trend?

Today’s most exciting food trend comes from the fact that people are moving across countries and continents in a manner never seen before. Through travel comes experience of other cultures and other cuisines and many of our food trends to  be found in restaurants and eateries reflect the chefs’ exposure to culinary styles and ingredients from other countries. Many of today’s exciting restaurants feature dishes that showcase experiences, ingredients and cooking styles from other cultures. Nowhere is this more evident than in Singapore and even our very traditional restaurants featuring traditional cuisines reflect this. The chefs are sticking to their original traditional dishes but each week or month, you can find new creations that have that “wow” factor. I never cease to be amazed by the creativity shown in every corner in Singapore when I go out to eat. The many cooking and eating shows on TV also influence the way we eat and cook. I am amazed by the breath and range of cooking and eating shows on TV for example.

Diners want their taste buds to be excited and enthused by something new and unusual making an impact. That “wow” factor is so important to the diner today.  It is a real discovery time for people who cook and eat and this discovery comes down to the micro level – what type of vanilla to use for example, the discovery of aromatic leaves like kaffir and a Japanese ingredient like Kutzu. It is no more just potatoes and rice or parsley.

SFF159.            How important do you feel is the promotion side of the business to become a notable chef ?

I think that the promotion part comes last and first of all a notable chef has to do everything to make him or herself notable from the culinary point of view.  In other words, to cook really really well. From my experience, the fame comes on its own. I have never in all my years of eating professionally and cooking at home and in my restaurant kitchens, consciously promoted myself but I have fed many people my food – including other chefs and my journalist friends. I am after all, first and foremost, a professional journalist, having started out as a reporter for a Singapore newspaper in 1971. Perhaps it is unfair for me to say that promotion is not so crucial as I come from within the media and started off by cooking for my media friends. But generally if a restaurant or a street corner snack vendor cooks very good food, there is that best promotion of all which is “word  of mouth”. People will start talking and this is more valuable that just PR.

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10.          Can you share with as the recipe for “Sago Pudding” that you served us during                the cooking demonstration ?

Coconut Sago

Serves: 10

10 cups water

200g pearl sago, rinsed and drained

200g palm sugar (also known as gulamelaka), melted in 1/2 cup water over medium heat, strain

2 cups canned coconut milk

Directions

Soak the sago pearls in water for 30 minutes. Drain over a sieve.  Bring 10 cups of water to a boil in a large pot.  Gradually stir in the sago so that it does not clump. Return to a boil, then reduce the heat to low.  Cook until the sago turns translucent, stirring occasionally for about 10 minutes.  Pour over a sieve, wash the pearls in cold running water till cold and drain again.

Pour into a bowl and add 1 cup coconut milk and half of the gulamelaka syrup.  Stir well and add the sago into jelly moulds, and refrigerate overnight.

Unmould the puddings, and serve with the additional coconut milk and gulamelaka syrup separately for each person to pour over their serving.

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11.          What are your views on healthy eating, e.g. greens / organic food?  

In Singapore our traditional cuisines which incorporate Malay, Chinese and Indian culinary traditions, all embody centuries old food for health precepts. From our Malay heritage comes the Jamu food tradition of herbs, from our Chinese heritage comes the yin-yang philosophy of balancing foods to achieve a perfect balance in our bodies and from our Indian heritage comes the Ayurvedic way of living where everything we eat has a benefit or response in our bodies. Our culinary traditionbelieves in preventative health care. Food plays a very important role in this. When we are sick, the first thing we do is alter our diet to introduce more vitamins, less heat or spice, or to rehydrate the body.

SFF13A balanced diet is really important to ensure the body gets the fuel it needs and traditional Singapore cuisine always takes this into consideration. Every spice we use has some sort of health advantage, be it ginger for aiding digestion, coriander to reduce cholesterol or chilli to speed up the metabolism.

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12.          Can you give us a message for our readers and food bloggers in UAE?

I really wish that readers and food bloggers in the UAE will really get to enjoy Singapore food, first via the Singapore Food Festival,and via purchasing the Singapore food ingredients that are going to be available at LuLu Hypermarkets. This is because Singapore, though small, is considered a food lovers’ paradise by top chefs and food critics around the world who have visited Singapore and fallen in love with our food in hawker centres and our great seafood restaurants. From breakfast to supper you can find many corners in Singapore that offer a delectable meal.

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Liver Fry


liver9“There is no love sincerer than the love of food.” -George Bernard Shaw. I agree.

liver3Conventional dietary wisdom holds that the micronutrients (vitamins, minerals and trace elements) we need from foods are most highly concentrated in fruits and vegetables. While it’s true that fresh fruits and veggies are full of vitamins and minerals, their micronutrient content pales in comparison to what is found in meats and organ meats – especially liver.

liver11It is not uncommon to find people disliking liver, but after knowing about the nutrition facts of liver, you may have no option than to include it in your diet, just so you can reap the health benefits.

liver8 Liver is full with essential nutrients and is  a good source of protein, various vitamins and minerals. Protein from the liver strengthens your muscles and offers you strong nails, shiny hair and supple skin.

liver12Am not too fond of liver but hubby is;  so when he came home with a big smile and carrying a big chunk of “Liver”,  I knew that it was high-time  to dish out a special of his “ Liver Fry”.  You can make it as spicy as you like by increasing/decreasing the chillies.

liver2This is another special from the cook-book of Roseline;  so there you go.

liver5Recipe :

Liver – 750 grams

15 dry red chillies

1 teaspoon cumin seeds

¼ teaspoon turmeric

30 pepper corns

4 large onions (sliced)

6-7 garlic cloves (sliced fine)

3 green chilles (slit)

Bay leaf – 1 or 2

Cinnamon -  2”

Vinegar – 1 tablespoon

Sugar -1/2 teaspoon

Potatoes – 2or 3  -cubed

For garnish – coriander leaves and green chillies chopped fine.

Oil or Ghee

liver7Grind fine 15 dry chillies, turmeric, cumin seeds and pepper corns to a fine paste and keep aside.

liver10Cut liver into large chunks, wash thoroughly and boil for 10-15 minutes with 2 bay leaves and 2” cinnamon and a little water.  When done cut into square cubes and keep aside.  Dont discard the water in which it was boiled.

Liver1In a non-stick vessel,  add ghee or oil and fry the onions till brown  flecs appear.  Then add the ground masala and fry well till the oil brims to the surface.  Add the cubed liver,  sliced green chillies,  sliced garlic, vinegar, salt and ½ tea spoon of sugar and enough water + water in which the liver was boiled (discard the bay leaf and the cinnamon)  and let it simmer in the gravy for 15-20 minutes.  Then add the cubed potatoes and let it simmer till the potatoes are done.

liver4The gravy should be very thick and not runny by the time the potatoes are done.

liver6When serving garnish with finely cut coriander leaves and green chillies.

liver13Serve piping hot with Chappatis.    Goes well as a side dish for Peas Pulav as well.

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Fowl Vindaloo


vin1Vindaloo is a dish that needs no introduction.   A famous,  often fiery, red curry from Goa, Vindaloo has made a name for itself  and is even listed in the dictionary.  It looks serene and appealing on the surface but oozes with depths of flavor and spices.

vin9There are many variations of a Vindaloo paste,   though the original was mostly a mix of  chillies and red wine.   When wine was not available it was substituted with vinegar.

vin7Vindaloo is mostly made with Pork,  though Chicken and Lamb are also used.  This Vindaloo has a touch of ‘Mangalorean’ to it because it also has a bit of coconut in it.  I was apprehensive of using coconut;   but then the result  was a well balanced, spicy and tangy flavour;  and I was happy with it and thought of  sharing it with our readers.

vin4This is another special from the cook book of Roseline……. those who have tried her earlier recipes cant stop raving about them;   now its your turn.

So on your marks, get set…go…………..to the kitchen…………………. and experience it for yourself.

vin6Recipe :

Chicken – (full cut into 12-16 pieces  – I used 4 chicken breasts cut into cubes)

Grind extra fine the following and keep aside  :-
½ coconut grated
12 red dry chillies
1 teaspoon mustard seeds
8 garlic flakes
3 onions
1 teaspoon cumin
10 pepper corns
¼ teaspoon turmeric
1” stick of cinnamon

vin2Put  ghee in a large bottomed pan and add 2 bay leaves and then the chicken pieces and let all the pieces be coated with ghee.  Add garlic paste (1 tablespoon) and let the chicken brown well.  Remove and keep aside.
vin8In the same vessel add the ground masala and fry for a long time till the colour of the masala changes from a deep red to a reddish brown.  Add the browned chicken and 2 slit green chillies,  few slices of ginger and 4-6 garlic cloves cut into thin slices.  Fry on a slow fire till you note the ghee brimming to the surface.  Then add a little water, vinegar, salt and 1 tablespoon (or less) sugar.  The gravy should  be very thick and not runny.  Let it simmer on a slow fire for 15-20 minutes,  stirring now and then.

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Serve hot with chapattis or rice and have some fried potato wedges on the side.

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2012 in review


The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

19,000 people fit into the new Barclays Center to see Jay-Z perform. This blog was viewed about 120,000 times in 2012. If it were a concert at the Barclays Center, it would take about 6 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.