30.3.17

Eggless Mango Cheesecake


Cheesecake is not really a favorite, but I wanted to try a recipe of cheesecake; just for knowing if I can make it! Strange, isn't it? But when the 'cooking-bug' bites, then there is no logic!!

All the cheesecake recipes had upto 4 eggs or gelatine.
Since we are moving from being eggatarian to complete vegetarian, it was a no-no.

And cream cheese. What was that?! Mostly unavailable in the stores of India; very expensive at gourmet stores.

Good Food Magazine, January 2015 issue had a recipe of 'salted caramel swirl cheesecake' using paneer / Indian cottage cheese and had no eggs or gelatine. PERFECT!! And the recipe was very easy.

I substitued the carmel with mango jam and fresh mango.

Oven temperature : 160 C

Ingredients:
Marie Biscuit - 100 gms
Butter - 25 gms, melted + extra
Powdered Sugar - 80 + 20 gms
Paneer - 400 gms
Fresh Cream - 100 gms
Vanilla essence - 3 drops
Corn flour - 2 tbsp
Mango Jam - 5 tbsp
Freshly cut mango for garnish

Method:
Preheat oven for 10 minutes.

Powder the marie biscuit and add the 20 gms sugar. Mix well.
Add the melted butter to the powdered biscuit and mix well.
Grease a 18 cm loose bottomed round cake tin with the extra butter.
Press the biscuit mixture at the bottom of the tin and level it.
Bake for 5 minutes and remove. Cool to room temperature.


Blend together the paneer, corn flour, vanilla essence and fresh cream with 80 gms of sugar until smooth and well combined.

Once the base cools, pour 3/4 of the paneer mixture into the cake tin over the biscuit layer. Spread evenly.
Top with the mango jam and spread this also evenly over the paneer.
Top with rest of the paneer and level again.


Cover with an aluminium foil and bake for 35 minutes.
Place a small oven proof vessel filled with water next to the cake tin to prevent the surface of the cheesecake from cracking.
After 35 minutes, remove aluminium foil and bake for a further 15-20 minutes. The middle will be slightly wobbly.
Remove from oven and cool to room temperature.
Refrigerate covered and before serving, top with freshly cut mangoes.







Ela Ada / Banana leaf stuffed and steamed


Ela ada. Ela = leaf, typically banana leaf. Ada - Steamed ground rice.

Banana leaf is stuffed with a variety of sweet fillings which can be either coconut + jaggery, or Coconut + Jaggery + Poha / Avil. But the classic filling is Chakka Varatti or Jackfruit jam.

This recipe is how we make ela ada at home. Many of my friends use rice flour kneaded with water, salt and til seeds. But I find the end result has more covering than filling. I prefer this style.

Recipe is very simple and there are just 3 ingredients other than Banana leaf:
White Rice / Pacharissi / Pachari 
Chakka varatti
Coconut oil / ghee

For making 15 ela ada, soak nearly 1 small cup rice and you would need 13 tbsp of chakka varatti and 2 tbsp ghee

Method:
Wash and soak the rice in ample water for 2 hours.
Grind into a smooth paste and add a pinch of salt, if you want.
The batter must not be very runny.
Heat the banana leaf over open fire to make it very pliable.
2 seconds at a particular point over direct flame will deepen it's colour and it gets a shine.
Wash it now and it will not tear easily. Clean each leaf and cut into 6 inch width segments.



Spread a little ghee or coconut oil on top and spread the rice batter over this.
Place a tbsp of your filling on one side and cover it over with the other side.
Seal as best by folding the other 2 sides.


Steam for 5 minutes on high flame and you are done. (Make you have ample water in the steamer.)
Once it cools and you open , it looks like this.
Serve at room temperature.


28.3.17

Filter Coffee / Traditional South Indian Coffee


This is more like a blog than a recipe. There are several nuances you need to know before you can succeed in making that perfect cuppa! Almost like an instruction manual with many do's and dont's!

Every Tamil Brahmin household swears by coffee. Making filter coffee is an art and it has to be mastered or you will end up with a 'sora vellam' (watery mess) which is a blasphemy. Meaning your coffee will not be thick and thus it will become 'inedible'!

Coffee, boiling water, sugar (optional) and freshly boiled milk* are the only ingredients required to perk your day. (*If the milk is reboiled, the coffee does not taste the same.)

Coffee beans used to be roasted to the right degree of brownish black and ground at homes. My cousin sister's (Leena Balsubramaniam) mother-in-law, (late) Mrs. Jayalakshmi used to do it until recently! But now, we use coffee powders from various brands like Coffee day, Cotha's and even Bru 'roast and ground'.

Please do not use instant coffee to put decoction.

Coffee grinder
Image source: Google images

There are two heroes while making filter coffee. One is the obvious - coffee powder. Coffee powder can be either pure or can have Chicory. The amount of chicory in your coffee powder affects the taste. Here in India, we use either Plantation coffee or Peabury coffee. This is roasted and ground and a certain percentage of chicory is added to it. The ratio starts from 60:40 (60% coffee to 40% chicory) to 90:10. The more chicory, the thicker the decoction and also lesser cost. At home, we prefer pure Plantation coffee without any Chicory.

The other hero of filter coffee is a special apparatus - the coffee filter. Typically made with brass, now it is available in stainless steel. It comes in various sizes - from holding 1 tbsp to much more. Mine can hold 3 tbsp of Coffee powder and that makes around 2 1/2 cups of coffee.

If you notice that the holes through which the coffee decoction falls is getting clogged, hold this vessel over fire with tongs. This will expand the metal and you can easily remove the coffee grains embedded. You might have to use a pin to poke out the more persistent ones! But usually a mild thumping of the heated vessel, does the trick.


The top container having perforations is placed on top of the other container which will hold the decoction. Into the top perforated container, you must add your Coffee powder and then water. Decoction will collect in the bottom container and we use that decoction to make coffee. More on that later.


Always keep the container having coffee powder tightly closed to prevent it from losing it's aroma.

Roasted Coffee can be ground in two ways - either coarsely or finely. Once you buy your coffee powder - feel it, to see if it is very powdery or has slightly bigger granules.

Finely ground

Coarsely ground

After placing the coffee powder on the top container, it must be pressed down.
If your coffee powder is too finely ground and you press down hard, the water will not be able to seep down.
If your coffee powder is coarsely ground and you don't press down enough, the water will just flow down without extracting the full coffee flavor.
So it is a balancing act. You will know the force to be applied to press down the powder only through trial and error.

Use a spoon like the one shown below to press down the powder in the top container. Usually when you buy coffee filters, an apparatus which looks like 'an umbrella hit hard by the wind' is available. But I find it useless. I prefer this bent spoon!






The water to be used has to be rolling boiling. Use filter water.

Now pour the BOILING water over the pressed coffee powder.....not from a height, but from a minimum height...pour slowly...along the edges and try to not pour at the same point; or else a small 'kuzhi' (depression) will form and then the coffee decoction will not fall evenly.



If your coffee is coarsely ground, and the decoction falls quickly and has almost no flavor, then you can try this trick. Use a wide spatula to ease the flow of the boiling water over the coffee powder.

Now cover the top container with the lid and wait for the decoction to accumulate in the bottom one. Typically this takes around 7 - 10 minutes.


Do not attempt to open the lid or the top compartment without tongs or a thick cloth.

Once the decoction falls, use this to make the most aromatic coffee; either with milk (yes!) or with hot water (why??). Do not keep the decoction open, as it will lose it's aroma. Keep it covered always. And never heat the decoction.

This picture explains very well, what I have tried to explain with one mistake. We NEVER add coffee to boiling milk, but the other way round. Always add boiling milk to decoction.
And NEVER BOIL prepared coffee. Place in a vessel having hot water, if you must.. but don't boil!

#7 is WRONG

We have special vessels for our coffee - tumblers and davarai.
We never drink from glass containers / mugs / paper cups. Always from a pair of tumbler and davarai!



Preparation of coffee:
Boil milk.
Add sugar to Tumbler (glass).
Pour required decoction on top of sugar. (Cover the extra decoction in the filter.)
Pour the boiling milk over the sugar + decoction.
Make a froth by pouring the coffee simultaneously between the davarai and tumbler. This also helps in mixing the sugar. The more the distance between the tumbler and davarai, the more the froth.


Now find a nice place to sit. Relax...
And enjoy the best coffee of the world!




12.3.17

Sabudana Khichdi / Javvarisi upma for ekadeshi


Sabudana or Sago are small white balls which turn translucent / transparent on cooking. It is used in making varieties of poppadom and also to make my brother's favorite 'muthu payasam'.

Sabudana is very starchy and are made completely from Tapioca. If you which to see the the process involved in making Tapioca into sago, watch this youtube video.

On fasting days, Sabudana is allowed to be eaten. No onion and no garlic is used and meals are generally restricted to one time a day.

This helps in healing the digestive tract and other organs in disposing existing waste. This year's Noble Prize winner for Medicine, Dr.Yoshinori Ohsumi, has done research on auto-phagy...or self-eating cells. Looks like our ancestors knew about the benefits of fasting and wanted us to include this in our day-to day habits...thus ekadesi was born!

Ingredients:
Sabudana / Javvarisi / Sago - 1 cup
Ghee - 1 tbsp
Jeera - 1 tsp
Asafoetida powder / kayam - 1/2 tsp
Green chilli - 2, chopped
Ground nuts - 2 tbsp
Curry leaf - 1 sprig
Potato boiled - 1 large ( 3/4 cup, cubed)
Carrot - 1/2 cup, grated
Coriander leaf - 3 tbsp
Lemon juice - 2 tbsp
Salt to taste
Turmeric powder - 1/2 tsp
Coconut grated - 1/2 cup (optional)

Method:
Wash the sago twice and remove all water. 
Add 3/4 cup of water and soak for 4 hours or overnight.
The sago would have puffed up and begun soft to touch.
Heat ghee in a heavy bottomed vessel with a tight lid.
Splutter jeera, add asafoetida, green chilly, curry leaf and ground nuts.
Fry for 1 minute.
Next add the boiled potato, salt and turmeric powder.
Mix well, reduce flame and cook covered for 1 minute.
Add the soaked sabudana, grated carrot and mix well.
Cook covered, stirring in between on a low flame for 10 minutes till it becomes transparent.
Turn off flame, add the lemon juice and garnish with coconut (optional) and coriander leaf.
Serve at room temperature.