24.3.14

Sweet 1-2-3-4


What a great sweet! The name says it all. 1-2-3-4! We had this sweet at a family friend's place and my hubby fell in love with it. So I made as a post run treat. Calories -yes, but taste -


Recipe courtesy - Lalitha Venugopal aka Lalli akka

The measurement is in the name.
1 part ghee or clarified butter
2 part coconut
3 part sugar
4 part milk
I used 1 cup ghee, 2 cups tightly packed coconut, 3 cups sugar and 4 cups milk.
Cardamom essence - 1 tsp (optional)
Don't forget you need -

And 

The mixture splutters like a volcano.

And keep 2 large plates lightly greased ready.

Now the process of making:
Take the 2 cups of grated coconut and grind it into a coarse paste with 2 cups of milk.
Take a heavy bottomed pan and pour in the ground coconut, rest of the milk, sugar and ghee.
Stir well and turn on the flame.
Boil. Stir. Boil. Stir. Boil. Stir. Use those mittens. 


Till you reach this colour.

You are done with the exercise when you can draw a line in the middle of the vessel and the sweet only makes it way slowly to the middle. You can double check by reducing the flame and spreading 1tsp of the mixture on the greased plate. If it sets when cool, it is done.
If you are using cardamom essence, pour it now and stir well.

Pour the prepared sweet on the greased plates and try to make the top smooth.

Cut when cool into desired shape. 
This sweet stays well for more than a week at a room temperature. 







23.3.14

Mint leaf chammandi

Chammandi. This is just chutney which has a greater shelf life - 2 or 3 days as the coconut and other ingredients are fried and usually this is ground into a paste on the traditional 'ammikal' -

using  no or very less water. I had to use water as I use a modern gadget - a mixer grinder.

Do try out this recipe with other varieties of leaf - coriander , curry leaf or even a mix of leaves.


Small onion - 4 or 5
Red chilli - 10 to 12
Garlic - 2 pods (optional)
Mint leaf - 2 handful 
Coconut - 1 cup
Tamarind - gooseberry size ball
Salt
Oil - 2 tbsp

Heat oil and start frying the cut onions and garlic. Once they become translucent add the red chillies.
 
Use a slotted spoon to remove the onion, garlic and red chillies to another vessel.
Into the left over oil, tip in the coconut.
Once the coconut changes colour, remove this too into the vessel containing the red chillies.

There will be no oil left in the vessel. Add the cleaned mint into the hot pan.
Stir till it wilts.


Add the coconut - red chilli mix to this and turn off flame.

Once cooled it is ready for grinding. Don't forget the tamarind and salt.

Start grinding in small instalments. Try not  to add water, as adding water decreases the shelf life.

 This chammandi stays for 2 days in room temperature. Tastes best with rice and dosa.













12.3.14

Khandvi


Gujarati snack or farsaan.
The first time I had it at Shefali Arvind's house and I was hooked. Yummy.
Then I saw Madhur Jaffrey visiting Gujarat and a cook making it for her.
Recipe was easy but the task seemed hard. Continuous stirring until the batter thickens. The cooked batter when spread on a greased tray must be come of easily as a thin sheet. The saving grace was that the batter could be reheated if the described consistency was not achieved. Thus I tried and tried and then I succeeded!! 
Note: use a non stick thick bottomed vessel to cook batter in.


Ingredients:

Garnish:
Oil - 2 tbsp 
Mustard - 1 tbsp
Jeera - 1 tbsp
Asafoetida - 1 tsp
Green chilli - 2,  finely chopped
Coriander leaf - 2 tbsp
Grated coconut - 4 tbsp

Main Ingredients:
Mix the following into a thin batter without any lumps.
Besan / kadala mav / channa dal powder - 1 cup
Curd - 1 cup ( slightly sour curd is better)
Water - 1 1/2 cup
Turmeric powder - 1 tsp
Salt 
Green chilli - 2 or 3,  ground / pounded
Ginger - 1 inch piece, ground / pounded


Pour the batter in a thick bottomed non stick vessel and start heating.

Grease 3 large plates and keep aside. Keep another one stand by, just in case!!

Keep stirring the mixture and once it starts to thicken, every 2 minutes spread 1/2 tsp on the greased plate.
The goal is the batter when cooled completely must be peel off easily from plate.

Attempt 1:


Attempt 2:

Attempt 3:

And success!


See it peels off!

Turn off flame and spread the batter evenly over the greased plates.


Once cooled, start rolling from one end like a carpet / Swiss roll.




Cut into 2 inch pieces and move to serving plate.

Time for Garnish.

Heat the oil and splutter the mustard. Then add the jeera. After that add the asafoetida and green chilli.

 Turn off flame and allow to cool for 1 minute. Add 2 tbsp water to this. 

Pour garnish using a spoon over the prepared khandvi. 

Top with chopped coriander leaf and grated coconut.