Bisi bele bath

Posted by admin | South Indian Recipes | Thursday 22 October 2009 12:43 am

Bisi bele bath is ready-to-eat cooked rice. Tasty and nutritious, it can in fact be consumed without any accompaniments, since it has, within itself, all the ingredients that go into making sambar plus an assortment of vegetables, rice and spices.
bisi-bele-bath
Items required
Tamarind (the size of a small lemon)
12 red chillies
A pinch of asafoetida powder
1 teaspoon fenugreek seeds
1 tablespoon coriander seeds
3 tablespoons grated coconut
20gm cashewnut
3 tablespoons ghee
10french beans
4 carrots
1 knolkhol (small)
10 madras onions
2 tomatoes
1 teaspoon poppy seeds
4 cloves
A small piece cinnamon
4 cardamom
1/2 teaspoon aniseeds
1 cup (200ml) rice
1/2 cup (100ml) thoor dal
A pinch of turmeric powder
2 teaspoons mustard
A few curry leaves
A few coriander leaves
4 green chillies
Salt to taste
Oil for frying and seasoning
Preparation method
1.Soak tamarind in a little (say 100ml) of water and keep aside.
2.Fry 6 red chillies, asafoetida powder, fenugreek seeds, coriander seeds and grated coconut in a little oil until the fenugreek seeds turn golden brown in colour. Take out this fried mixture, grind into fine powder and keep aside.
3.Fry cashewnuts in 1 tablespoon of ghee until they turn golden brown in colour and keep aside.
4.Cut french beans and carrots into bite-sized pieces; as for knolkhol, peel it before cutting it. Madras onions being small, need only to be peeled. Quarter the tomatoes; keep all these vegetables aside.
5.Fry poppy seeds, clove, cinnamon, cardamom and aniseeds in a little oil, grind into a fine powder and keep aside.
6.Squeeze out the tamarind, retaining the tamarind and water solution.
7.Take rice and thoor dal in a vessel (ensure that the vessel fits into the cooker properly) with a capacity of atleast 3 litres; wash the rice and dal thoroughly and strain off the water.
8.Add the tamarind and water solution , the ground powder, turmeric powder and chopped vegetables to the rice and dal, mixture and mix well by hand to eliminate lumps.
9.Pour appropriate quantity of water into the cooker and bring the water to a boil; place the vessel in the cooker and pour 1 1/4 litre of water into the vessel. Close the lid of the cooker correctly.
10When steam issues steadily from the vent tube of the cooker, press down the weight valve reduce the flame to the minimum.
11.Shut off the flame when the first whistle issues from the cooker; it will take between 30 and 45 minutes, assuming that cooker is kepton ‘low’ flame as suggested above; putting the cooker straight onto a “high” heat may result in more whistles in a shorter time but it need not mean that the contents of the cooker have cooked properly; it is recommended that the cooker be put on a steady ‘low’ flame for 30 or 40 minutes for the first whistle to issue and the contents to cook well.
12.After the cooker cools,remove the weight valve, open the cooker and take out the vessel. If the cooked food, calledbisi bele bath, is too thick to your liking, thin it down to the required consistency by adding a little water.
13.Heat a little oil in a frying pan and add mustard, curry leaves, green chillies and the remaining 6 red chillies. Remove from fire when the mustard crackles and add to the bisi bele bath.
14.Add the fried cashewnuts, the powdered poppy seeds, etc. and salt (to taste) to the bisi bele bath, and mix well.
15.Add the remaining ghee, garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot.
Serves 4.

Spiced brinjal rice

Posted by admin | Veg Recipes | Sunday 18 October 2009 11:14 pm

This “Spiced brinjal rice” recipe is a delightful mish-mash of spices and rice with nutritive.If u cut the brinjals too fine, they will get mashed up and will lose their taste.
spicedbrinjal_rice
Items required
1 1/2 cup rice
Oil for frying and sprinkling
200gm onion, large
200gm brinjal, tender
3 teaspoon bangal gram dal(chenna dal)
6 red chillies
2 lemon
1 teaspoon poppy seeds
1/2 teaspoon anise seeds
4 cloves
4 cardamom
3cm length cinnamon
1 1/2 teaspoon mustard
6 green chillies
Salt to taste
1/4 teaspoon turmeric powder
15 curry leaves
Preparation method
1.Reduce the quantity of water used slightly and cook the rice to ensure that the rice does not become mushy and the grains remain separate.
2.Spread the cooked rice evenly on a large tray to let it cool; sprinkle a teaspoon of oil over it.
3.Peel the onions, chop them fine and keep aside.
4.Chop the brinjals fine and keep aside.
5.Soak the bengal gram dal (chenna dal) in a little water and keep aside.
6.Halve the red chillies and keep aside.
7.Squeeze the lemons into a sleve and collect the juice in a cup.
8.Heat oil in a frying pan and fry poppy seeds, anise seeds, cloves, cardamom and the cinnamon bit; grind into a fine powder and keep aside.
9.Drain the bengal gram (chenna) dal.
10.Heat oil in a frying pan and add mustard, halved chillies, bengal gram dal (vide 9) and saute until the water content in the dal evaporates; add the chopped onions (vide 3) ,chopped brinjals (vide 4) and a little salt and saute until the onion turns brown; now, add the lemon juice and turmeric powder, mix well and saute for a few more minutes and remove from fire.
11.Empty the contents of the frying pan into the tray with the rice, add the powdered poppy seeds etc. (vide 8), curry leaves and salt (to taste); mix well and serve.
Serve 4.

Vegetable pilau

Posted by admin | Veg Recipes | Monday 21 September 2009 12:18 am

Vegetable dishes usually tend to be served with its own water (the cooking water).Because that is very healthy to us.This “Vegetable pilau” is one of the tasteful recipies among the vegetable recipies.
vegetablepilau
Item required
185 g ghee
2 medium onions, sliced
60 g cauliflower, broken into small florets
60 g potatoes, finely diced
60 g green beans, cut into 2 cm lengths
60 g shelled peas
60 g carrots, finely sliced
1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
1 bay leaf
4 cloves
2 teaspoons cracked pepper
11/2 cups (250 g) rice
4 cups (1 litre) boiling water
Preparation method
1 Heat the ghee in a large saucepan and saute the onions until golden brown. Remove and set aside.
2 Add cauliflower, potatoes, beans, peas and carrots to ghee in pan, saute until tender. Remove and set aside.
3 Saute turmeric, ginger, cardamom, bay leaf, cloves and pepper for 1 minute.
4 Add the rice and fry for 2 minutes, stirring all the time.
5 Add 4 cups boiling water and boil till the water is nearly gone. Turn into a heat-proof dish, add the fried vegetables, cover,
bake in a slow oven 140°C (275°F) for 15 to 20 minutes. Serve with the fried onions sprinkled on top.
SERVES 6 TO 8

Kuma pilau

Posted by admin | Mutton Recipes | Sunday 20 September 2009 11:08 pm

Kuma pilau is a special preparation of the dish which is again cooked with mutton and with the latter being the more popular variety.
kumapilau
Item required
1 onion, finely sliced
250 g ghee
500 g lean meat, minced
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon chilli powder
2 teaspoons ground coriander
2 tablespoons plain yoghurt
few strands saffron
3 cups (500 g) rice
8 cloves
1 stick cinnamon
Preparation method
1 Saute onion in the ghee until golden.
2 Add the mince, ginger, chilli and coriander. Saute until mince is browned, add yoghurt and fry until rich brown.
3 Soak the saffron in 1 tablespoon water and add to the mince.
4 Combine rice, cloves and cinnamon in a large pan. Add enough water to come 6 cm above the level of the rice. Bring to the boil, cover and simmer until the water has almost evaporated and the rice nearly cooked. Remove from the heat.
5 In a 2 litre heat-proof dish, arrange in a layer of rice then a layer of mince and so on until all the mince and rice are used up. The last layer must be rice. Cover, bake in a slow oven for 20 minutes until the rice is cooked. Before serving, mix the pilau very carefully so as not to break the rice grains.
SERVES 6 TO 8

Saffron kedgeree

Posted by admin | Festival Recipes | Saturday 12 September 2009 12:19 am

Spices it right in this fragrant and flavoursome take on a traditional kedgeree.Kedgeree flavoured with Saffron.
saffronkedgeree
Item required
1A teaspoon cumin seeds
10 cardamom seeds
180 g ghee
15 g slivered almonds
15 g currants
3 medium onions, thinly sliced
1′/4 cups (250 g rice), washed
3/4 cup (120 g) lentils
4 threads saffron
1′/4 cups (310 ml) coconut milk
8 green chillies, sliced and seeds removed
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
10 cloves
4 small sticks cinnamon
3 tablespoons sugar
Preparation method
1 Coarsely grind the cumin and cardamom seeds.
2 Heat the ghee and saute the almonds and currants till the almonds are medium brown. Remove and reserve.
3 Saute onions in the ghee, until crisp and brown. Set onions aside, reserve ghee.
4 In a medium saucepan, put Y3 cup water and the rice. Half cook the rice and put into a large saucepan.
5 In a medium saucepan put X cup water and lentils, cook for 20 minutes or till half done. Add this to the rice.
6 Add saffron, coconut milk, half the almonds and currants, fried onions, green chillies, ginger, cloves, cinnamon, sugar and the reserved ghee. Mix thoroughly and cover.
7 Bring to the boil and simmer till rice and lentils are cooked. Stir the kedgeree with a fork and leave on a very low heat for
5 minutes more. Serve sprinkled with remaining almonds and currants.
SERVES 4 TO 6

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