Wednesday 12 December 2012

Badami Chicken (Curried Chicken in Almond Sauce)





Us, being a family who loves chicken, some sort of chicken dish has to be made very often. So, sticking to just a couple of curries can be very boring and hence I am always in look out for new curries. Thankfully, chicken is very versatile, can be prepared in umpteen number of ways. Creamy, spicy, dry, herby, rich - you name it, you make them with chicken.


Both my son and husband love the Malabar chicken curry and that’s one that I make on regular basis to go with neichor or chappathi. I decided to learn few more curries to be a part of our regular meals. And hence this curry was introduced into my kitchen, from ecurry.


The curry has a Korma appeal and feel. It is mildy flavoured with spices and the curry has a clean and fresh taste. You can add more or less green chillies depending on your tolerance level, but living in Britain for a while and cooking for the toddler, our spice intake has changed drastically and tolerance has decreased to bare minimum. 



The curry turned out well, rich,cream and delicious and was well accepted by my family and this definitely is going to be appearing on our dinner table often. 

Badami Chicken (Curried Chicken in Almond Sauce)
Adapted from : eCurry
Serves: 3-5

Ingredients:
750 g chicken cut into 2 inch pieces
1 tsp red chilli powder
1 ½ tbs lemon juice
salt to taste
2 tbsp yogurt
1 tsp garam masala
5 cloves
5 cardamoms
2 inch piece cinnamon sticks
2 bay leaves, put all the spics above in  afreezer bag and whack it to pound them
3-4 tbsp ghee plus oil
1/3 cup almonds , 55g, soaked and peeled and ground to paste
2 medium size onions, 250g, finely chopped, 2 cups
6 cloves of garlic chopped fine (1 tbsp)
1 ½ tbsp chopped ginger (*place roughly chopped ones in bag and whack with rolling pin to mince it)
1/4 peace nutmeg grated
¼ cup chopped coriander leaves
½ cup coconut milk

Preparations:
1. Pound the whole spices (cardamom, bay leaves and cloves) except cinnamon using a pestle and mortar, or just place it in a freezer bag and whack using a rolling in to gently crush the spices. Marinate the chicken with red chilli powder, garam masala, yogurt, lemon juice and salt and leave it aside for a minimum of half and hour or overnight if time allows.

2. In a pan, heat the pound spices along with cinnamon sticks until it releases aroma. Add oil/ghee and throw in the chopped onions and sauté until they start turning to golden.

3. Add in the chopped ginger and garlic and green chillies and cook for 2 minutes on medium heat until the raw smell goes off.

4. Add in the marinated chicken without the liquid and cook them turning them occasionally until all sides are coloured and the mixture is dry. Take care not to burn the spices and not to overly brown the chicken as we need light coloured gravy.

5. While the chicken is cooking, peel the almonds and grind them along with the leftover marinade from chicken and a touch of water if necessary. Pour this mixture into the chicken along with green chillies and  stir. Add ¾ - 1 cup water  or more if more sauce is needed and cook till done.

6. Add ½ cup of single cream or coconut milk,grated nutmeg and chopped coriander and just heat through simmering on low heat for about couple of minutes.

Serve hot with pilau rice or naan bread.

Wednesday 5 December 2012

Chemmeen Pathiri/ Chemmeen Pathal (Curried Prawns in Rice Pockets)



We are having first snow of the season and it's snowing real thick today. Whole place is covered in snow, it looks beautiful and serene and it's so Christmassy. I like the slow build up of the Christmas mood in here and the snow just makes it perfect. Here is a warm recipe for the cold winter season.


Have you joined my Facebook page yet? It is the places that I hold my foodie discussions, interact with the readers, post recipes and updates. It’s a formal page to hold informal discussions and foodie talks and to get to know the readers suggestions, opinions and more. Couple of weeks back we had a discussion about what the readers would like to see on the blog and most of them came with the option of Malabar Food. In spite of dishing out Malabar food regularly at home, I rarely post them in here or even draft the recipe down. 


Most Malabar recipes are time consuming, very elaborated, and lot of typing as well which probably would be the reason I really don’t include the food that I grew up devouring every day. I almost feel lethargic when it comes to typing very long recipes and that is one reason you tend to see fewer Malabar posts. Some of the recipes would want to have pictorial representation as well as the method would be a bit too complicated for the novice cooks to grasp. But, I will try to include and post as many Malabar recipes as possible in the future.


Today I am going to share one such elaborated recipe that takes time, but well worth the efforts. These kind of recipes are usually made in the Malabar Muslim households usually as an evening snack and is a popular party dish. Malabar is known for its variety of pathiri/pathal which are usually rice based pancakes, some stuffed, some seasoned, some fried and then some just steamed. Really, the amount of recipes that could be made of out rice is just not a handful or two; but several of them, some of them which you would come across my blog too.



In this post I am going to share you one of my favourite dishes, chemmeen pathal/chemmen pathiri. These are rice pancakes stuffed with a spiced mixture of shrimps or prawns and steamed usually in banana leaf placed in a steamer. This is like roti and curry amalgamated into one single dish, just by stuffing the curry into the pancakes and then steaming it. I had the similar version of this stuffed pathiri several years back during one of the grand parties I attended back home and it is actually prepared using fish rather than prawns. But prawns work very well here and I suppose squid or mussels should work great as well if you can get hold of them.


Chemmeen Pathiri/Pathal (Makes 12-14 medium size ones)
 
Ingredients:
For the pathiri:
(Please refer to the Neypathal dough and options given there. You can prepare the dough in any of the method mentioned there).

This is prepared in the same manner as my Fish pathiri, so check out that for a step by step pictorial illustration.Here is the link.

1 ½  cups Parboiled rice (Puzhukkalari (Ponni rice))
1 Tbsp fennel seeds/saunf (Perumjeerakam)
1 cup freshly grated coconut or frozen
water, just enough to grind the rice to a coarse paste
rice flour, just enough to bind the whole mixture to a soft dough.
Salt – As reqd

For the prawn masala:;
300g cleaned shrimps (cleaned weight)
2 tsp Kashmiri chilli powder
½ tsp turmeric powder
½ tsp salt
6 Tbs oil

For the masala:
3 Large onion (400 gm, 3 cups chopped)
5 large cloves of garlic, grated- (1 heaped Tbsp)
1 tbsp finely chopped ginger
2 green chilli, finely chopped
½ tsp turmeric powder
½ tsp fennel/saunf powder
¼ tsp garam masala
½ tsp pepper powder
¼ cup chopped coriander leaves
¼ cup grated coconut

Preparation:

1. Marinate shrimps with chilli powder, turmeric powder and salt for about ½ hour -1 hour.

2. Heat about 3 tbsp in a wide pan and fry the shrimps for about 8-10 minutes until thoroughly cooked. Take the cooked shrimps out and reserve.

3. In the same pan, heat remaining oil and add onions and salt. Add less salt as the shrimps are fried with salt. Sauté until it becomes soft and translucent.

4. Add ginger, garlic, green chilli and sauté for few minutes until the onion is reduced and raw smell of ginger and garlic has disappeared.

5. Add ground pepper, ground fennel and turmeric powder and sauté for few seconds.

6. Add the chopped coriander leaves, cooked prawns, coconut, garam masala and stir well, cook for a 8-10 minutes until all the flavours are well blended. Add the fish pieces, cover and cook on very low flame until all the flavour is infused well for about 8-10 minutes. Add more salt if needed and turn of the heat.

For the making pathiris and assembling:
1. Soak the rice in warm water for 3-4 hours or overnight.

2. Grind it along with minimal water until you get a coarse and grainy mixture.

3. Add coconut, fennel seeds and roughly chopped onions to this and grind for few seconds until everything coarsely ground and not smooth.

4. Tip the whole mixture in to a large bowl, add salt and mix well.

5. Add the rice powder and mix well using hands until you get dough that can be shaped into balls.

6. Divide the dough into 20 -24 portions and roll it into smooth spheres. Take a portion of the rice dough  and flatten it on a sheet (I use baking paper or a clear shopper bag cut into square shape, u can use banana leaf instead) using the heel and fingers of your palm. Add some masala in the centre leaving 2 centimeters around the edge.

7. Make another pathiri on another sheet the same way and flip it over to the pan cake with the prawn filling, covering the masala completely. Gently press the edges using the fingers to seal all the masala in or use a fork to press the edges and to give it a patterned egde. Carefully lift the sheet/banana leaf and place it in a steamer. Steam cook for about 10-12 minutes or until the pathiri is firm to touch. Wearing an oven mitt, hold all the edges of the banana leaf/baking paper and lift out the Pathiris. (Be careful here as the steam can burn your hands).

8. Make pathiris with rest of the dough and steam couple of them at a time.

Tips:

1.To make soft Pathiris, soak the rice in hot water instead of cold/tap water. Use good quality rice.

2. For reheating, its always best to re-steam it to bring back the softness.

Thursday 22 November 2012

Blackberry and Peach Trifle


A very happy thanksgiving to all of you. Here is something simple if you want to try for this occasion. It’s a bit of a summery treat using peaches and berries, but you can always substitute the fruits with anything of your choice or use canned ones or frozen ones as I did. After all the berry picking that I did few weeks back and making the fresh blackberry ice cream, I was left with thought of what to make with the leftover juicy blackberries. I still had loads of them which I had to freeze later to prevent them from rotting. Blackberries are my favourite berries for baking and desserts and I had a whirlwind of ideas as of what to make with blackberries.


I have already tried few recipes using blackberries including jam, macarons and a crumble cake which are all great. So I wanted to try something different this time. Crumble sounded like a great idea but crumbles and I don’t go well together. I somehow don’t like crumbles and that too after having it from a restaurant recently, I went totally against it. I had lots of egg yolks sitting in the fridge from my macaron baking and some sponge cake that I tried. It had to be something with custard, berries and cake and this trifle was born in my kitchen.

I always wanted to give trifle a go, but I dint plan to make a custard from scratch. As I had lot of egg yolks, I decided to use them up than throwing them away. I have tried making custard before as I always get few egg yolks after baking macarons. If you have good vanilla and use full fat cream and milk, you will get rich tasting, silky smooth custard.


I put them all together just under 40 minutes of which 25 minutes was taken for making custard! It has to be cooked slowly, with much attention and constant stirring. As you are dealing with eggs, too much of heat cooks the eggs and scramble them if you don’t pay enough attention. You really don’t have to make authentic custard here for this recipe. You can use custard powder and make the simplest of custard which is what I wanted to do and would have made it really easy. But I had to save the yolks from binning, so made the custard from scratch.


Anyhow, the recipe is very versatile; you can just play around with any combination of good fruits like grapes, canned pineapple, apples, and berries. You can substitute strawberries for blackberries and you don’t even have to cook it. You can use fruit cocktail that comes in can and use ready-made custard instead of the fresh ones. You can also use dry fruits like figs and dates along with nuts. If you are pressed for time, get a shop bought cake, canned fruits, pre-packed custard and assemble it all together. You can wet your cake with syrup that comes in the can. Nothing can get simpler. But here is a more elaborated version of trifle, with home-made custard for you to try. Peaches and blackberries are one of the best to use together.


Blackberry and Peach trifle
Serves about 10

Ingredients:
300g blackberries (You could use about ½ kilo if you want more berries in your trifle), plus extra for garnishing
1/3 cup of water
¼ - 1/3 cup caster sugar
2 tins of 420g can of canned peaches in syrup
500g pound cake, butter cake or Madeira cake, cut into 1-2 inch cubes

For whipped cream:
300 mls whipping cream/double cream
2 tbsp icing sugar
a splash of vanilla essence

For custard:
5-6 large egg yolks
400mls whole milk
300mls double cream
1 vanilla pod
100g caster sugar
2 tbs corn flour or use 1 tbsp of custard powder for depth of flavour

Preparation:
1.Cut cake into 2 inch pieces.

2. Add blackberries, water and sugar in to a pan and bring to boil, reduce and simmer for 5 minutes-7 minutes until the fruits go soft. Strain and reserve the juice which will be about a cup.

3. Drain the peaches and discard the liquid. Slice the peaches into smaller size if need be.

Make custard:
1. In a sauce pan, heat milk and cream. Split open the vanilla pod, scrape out the seeds and add them to the milk along with the pod. Simmer them to scalding point, i.e. simmer it until the mixture is hot and starts steaming and small bubbles. Do not boil. Remove from heat and then pass this through sieve and leave aside for about 5 -10 minutes to cool it down. Discard the vanilla pod.

2. Meanwhile, using an electric whisk beat together the egg yolks and sugar until it is pale yellow and thick; for about 6-8 minutes. Add in corn flour and whisk again.

3. Pour the milk into the egg mixture in thin stream whisking simultaneously to avoid scrambling the egg from the hot milk.

4. Strain the egg-milk and pour the mixture in a heavy base saucepan and heat it on a very low heat stirring constantly for about 20 minutes to avoid cooking and scrambling the egg. Once the custard gets thick and coats the back of the spoon, take off the heat.  Transfer to another bowl, cover it using cling film to prevent from skin forming. Let it cool completely before layering the trifle.

In another bowl, add icing sugar to whipping cream and using an electric beater, whip until it forms soft peaks. Add in vanilla essence and mix.

To assemble:
1. You can arrange this in a large 2 litre clear glass bowl or small individual serving bowl.

2. Place few pieces of cake as the first layer. Dribble the strained juice of blackberry all over to wet the cake.

3. Scatter some blackberries and peaches over the wet cake

4. Scoop in some custard and level with spoon and repeat the layer once more.

5. Top it up with softly whipped cream and chill for several hours until everything is set.

6. Garnish with peaches, berries and nuts.

Notes: 

I have used warm custard while layering the custard, which was still unset. So the beautiful layers of trifle have not been formed as the custard seeped down through the layers of fruits and cake. If you use custard that is completely cooled, you will be able to see more prominent layers of fruits, custard and cake.

You could also use more fruits. I have used just minimal amount of berries here (300g).

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