Onion Bhajjea


A hot cup of Tea and some crispy Onion Bhajjea is something that very few can resist. This recipe is simple, quick and yummy……. this is guaranteed.

Come along…check out the recipe.

Ingredients :
4 large onions sliced
4 green chillies cut fine
2 sprigs of curry leaves
A small bunch of coriander leaves
1 Cup gram flour/besan
2 tablespoons rice powder/flour
Baking Soda -1/2 teaspoon
Hing – ¼ teaspoon
½ teaspoon red chillie powder
¼ teaspoon turmeric
¾ – 1 cup water
Salt to taste
Oil for frying

Sift the flours into a large bowl. Add baking soda, salt, hing, chillie powder, turmeric powder and salt. Mix all together and add water ½ cup first and mix to make a paste. Add the remaining water a spoonful at a time till a thick paste is formed. Depending on the flour, you may just about need ¾ cup water only. The mixture should be pasty but not runny. Add the sliced onions, curry leaves, coriander leaves, green chillies and mix.

Heat oil in a deep frying pan and when it is hot enough, put blobs of the onion and flour mixture. Do not over crowd the pan. Fry on both sides till crispy. Drain on paper towels and then serve hot with a steaming cup of tea or coffee.

Murg Do Pyaza


Hi folks.   Got this recipe from ‘Masala TV’,  a Pakistani food channel.   This dish turned out very tasty and we had it with hot Parotas from a Pakistani restaurant close by.  I made a fried-rice as well to go with this.

1 Kg. Chicken (preferably boneless)

5 Big onions sliced

Ginger Garlic paste ( 1 tablespoon)

(Powdered garam masala – 2-3 cardamoms, 3-4 cloves,  2 sticks of cinnamon,  pepper corns few, ½ tsp cumin seeds) – 1 teaspoon

1 Bay leaf

½ teaspoon turmeric powder

Chilly powder 1 tablespoon

Coriander powder 1 tablespoon

Black pepper powder -1/2 teaspoon

Tomatoes -  5 big (chopped fine)

2 green chillies

Oil

Salt to taste

In a big nonstick pan, add oil and saute the bay leaf, then add chopped onions and fry till onions begin to just start getting golden.  Add ginger garlic paste and fry for sometime.  Then add chicken pieces and fry for some time.  Add turmeric, red chilly powder, coriander powder, garam masala powder,  pepper powder and keep frying for 10-15 minutes or till the oil and masala separates.  Then add green chillies, salt, and tomatoes.  Keep frying on a slow fire till the tomatoes get incorporated into the masala paste and a very thickish paste is formed which clings to the chicken pieces.

 Garnish with spring onions and coriander leaves and serve piping hot.

Street Food – Pav Bhaji


Mumbai – my home-town,  a city that never sleeps;  and a city that loves eating, come rain or shine.  At any point of time,  thousands of people crowd at little restaurants and roadside stalls to tuck into spicy Chaat+ Paani Puri,  Crispy Dosas,  creamy fruit-flavored Kulfis and above all,  Pav Bhaji.

Pav Bhaji  is a spicy vegetable stew that you sop up with pillowy bread.  In Mumbai, you usually see the  Pav Bhaji Vendor at the door of the restaurant with a huge cast-iron pan in front of him. He is surrounded by bowls of chopped veggies and several packets of butter.  He will then start sauteeing the veggies together with boiled potatoes, spices and enormous dollops of butter and mash the whole mixture into a sizzling vegetable dish. He will then serve this Bhaji with rolls of bread called Pav that have been likewise drowned in butter. The final touch: the dish is topped with raw onion slices and lemon wedges.

I made Pav Bhaji at home recently with “Pav Bhaji Masala”,  which is available from any Asian Grocery Store.   You don’t have to go to “Mumbai” to have this now,  try it at home,  courtesy  “Bring On The Chef In You”.

6 Pavs (bread), 4 medium potatoes boiled and grated, 4 medium tomatoes finely chopped, 1 medium green capsicum, chopped, ¼ cup green peas boiled, ¼ small cauliflower cut into very tiny florets, 3 tablespoons oil, 3 medium onions chopped, 3-4 green chillies finely chopped, 2 teaspoons ginger paste, 2 teaspoons garlic paste, 1.5 tablespoons Pav Bhaji Masala, salt to taste, 3-4 tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons finely chopped coriander leaves, 1 big lemon.

Heat oil in a pan, add 3/4th of the onions and sauté till light brown.  Add the green chillies, ginger paste and garlic paste.  Stir fry for sometime.  And half the tomato and cook over medium heat, stirring continuously till the oil separates.  Add the capsicums, peas, cauliflower, potatoes and one and half cups of water. Bring to  a boil, lower the heat and simmer for 10 minutes, mashing the vegetables with the back of the ladle.  Add the Pav Bhaji Masala, salt and the remaining tomatoes.  Cook over medium heat for two minutes.  Heat half the butter in a thick bottomed pan or tawa .  Split the Pav horizontally into two and fry in butter, till the pav is crisp and brown.   Brush a little butter on the top side of the bread..not needed to fry both sides of the bread.  Garnish the Bhaji with coriander leaves and remaining butter, and the remaining onions and sprinkle lemon juice all over the Bhaji.   Serve piping hot.