Monday, 14 May 2012

Applesauce ( with pancakes)

Radhika sent this versatile recipe to go pancakes. I love it. Apples and cinnamon are sweet and don't need much sugar. If I have nothing in the house and am craving dessert ( a little more than curd and sugar) then stewed apples or apple sauce are a great option. It makes a wonderful accompaniment with pancake, toast, waffles and plain vanilla cake. Slurp.

It's ridiculously simple to make, keeps well in the fridge and can be eaten with either pancakes and waffles or on toast, ice cream, pakoras....anything that needs a dash of tarty sweetness. Once again my recipe is a mix of recipes from the internet (www.allrecipes.com) and what I have at home... here is what I usually go with:

2 sweet apples (I prefer apple sauce that's more sweet than tart)
A little sugar
Cinnamon powder (or cinnamon sticks)
A little lemon if you want the applesauce to be tart

Boil/stew/bake the apples. If lightly stewing then add the sugar and cinnamon powder while stewing it, else you can add it later....remove skin, seeds and core, mash up using a fork or in a grinder...add the sugar, cinnamon power and lemon juice to taste.
 
Some variations: nutmeg, chilies (for spiciness)
 
If you want an easy home substitute for apple pie, then crush some marie biscuits, make a crust at the bottom of a flat vessel, cool the apple sauce and put it on top. Eat it soon, otherwise it can get soggy.
 
Make your own variation and write to me.


It's my own invention! ( Grilled/ Sauteed/Baked Fish)

Mondays can only be good if you are on vacation or have just won the Oscar. Otherwise, however optimistic you may be, you just wait for the day to get over. Somehow.

I saved these recipes all of last week to put up on the blog as 'weekend specials'. But well, like all weekends- this one came and went and before I knew it, we were getting into bed grumbling about Monday morning. So I thought I'd make your Monday a little more exciting. Go home, put on your favourite music, pour out a nice cup of tea ( or wine or whatever works for you) and enjoy cooking!

These are some of Baba's original recipes-  'It's my own invention', as the White Knight puts it in Alice in Wonderland. Baba says cooking is like magic or painting. The ingredients separately smell and taste like nothing, but when they are put together in the right proportion, something beautiful gets created. Beauty is all about the right things in the right amount, isn't it?

Monday Fish ( Baba's special 1). Easy option if you are craving some light, yummy summery continental food.

Grilled/ Sauteed fish


Buy a white fleshed fish Rock fish, Surmai etc type. Get the flesh cut into 4 or 5cm cubes approx. without skin. Take 250 gms for this.

Wash and marinate with freshly crushed garlic, salt,vinegar and an oil of your choice (I most prefer olive oil, reasonable alternative is gingelly oil). Keep aside for 30mts. ( 2 or 3 cloves of garlic, 2 tsbp vinegar, 1 tbsp oil and salt to taste)

Drop half to one tsp of oil into a non stick flat saucepan, let it heat.

Once hot,place the fish pieces and let all sides get sizzled, by turning them over. This has to be done gently lest they break. I like to do them in a sequence piece by piece. Fish requires at most about 3 to 4 mts to cook this way.

Alternative:

Preheat the oven at around 150 degree Celsius for 15- 20 min.

(Make sure your cooking tray is OUTSIDE. If the dish gets too hot, it is difficult to grease and use.)

Grease the oven tray- glass or metal with olive oil ( or regular vegetable oil).

Place the marinated fish pieces on a tray and bung it into the preheated oven. I use only a regular electric OTG ( I have a deep mental bias against Microwave).

Put a little oil on your fingers and braise the fish ( gently cover the fish with a little oil)

Cook it at 200 degree Celsius. The fish will become white and start sizzling.

Take it out when it turns light brown. Fish cooks very fast. Two easy ways of knowing that it’s done: if it’s white and if you can slice through it and it doesn’t stick to your knife.

Serve hot with cut lemon. Garnish the fish with olives and pomegranate seeds.

Total prep time 45mts.
Good quantity for one or two persons.

To make a meal out of this dish, it can be eaten with steamed spinach and a greek salad – largish pieces of tomato and cucumber tossed with broken pepper,crushed garlic and tulsi/ fresh basil leaves .




Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Better Butter

There are a few things as perfect as melted golden butter on a hot crisp toast (specially with tea). It is yummy and indulgent. But then, as the cliche goes, most things that tastes good are bad for health. How else would it be a sinful?

While my husband is averse to anything that remotely borders on 'health food', I don't necessarily think that healthy stuff tastes bad. In fact, depending on how creative you can get, health food can actually taste great. Coming back to butter. What is a good alternative? I have to say that there is no replacement but there are some smooth spreads that do taste good on bread.

Option 1-
Curd. Yoghurt is my favourite healthy alternative. Slightly thick yoghurt ( regular ones available in boxes or hommade) or hung curd if you have the time.
1. Mix the curd in a bowl with a little salt as per your taste
2. Add crushed pepper and crushed garlic ( 2-3 cloves for 150 ml curd)
3.Add herbs if you wish

Spread it on toast, eat it as a dip or use it inside a sandwich instead of mayo!

Option 2-
Extra Virgin Olive oil on toast
I like this when I make toast on a tawa (flat pan).
Place the bread on a hot tawa
spread small amounts of olive oil on both sides of the bread
Finely chop garlic and put it on the bread ( 1-2 cloves for 2 slices)
Add salt and pepper(optional)
Turn the bread around, as you flatten it the garlic will get stuck to the bread and get a little roasted
Add oregano or any other dried herbs if you wish

( you can add all the ingredients on the bread and place the bread inside a sandwich toaster if you wish)

Option 2- F-23 Hummus

There are several recipes of hummus available on the net. What we make at home is actually babaganoush and is a mix of chic pea and roast brinjal. Baba went to Jordan and came back with a fridge full of olives and this recipe. It has now become a staple breakfast food at home.

1. Soak a bowl of chic peas overnight
2. Boil the chic peas and drain out the water( keep it aside and add it in the blender if the paste becomes too dry)
3. Slice half an onion and take a pinch of cumin seeds
4. Heat a table spoon of olive oil in a karhai (or a wok)
5. Once the oil is hot put the cumin seeds and then the onion. Don't do it the other way round. The moisture from the onions doesn't allow the cumin seeds to fry.
6. Put the chic peas into the pan, turn it for a few minutes
7. Take the pan off and cool the chic peas
8. Take a medium sized baingan (aubergine) put a little olive oil on the skin and roast it on the gas ( as you would for baingan bharta)
9. Once the skin starts peeling off and the baingan is soft, take it off the gas and let it cool
10. Take out the peel of the baingan
11. Put the baingan and chic peas in a blender, add salt and make into a smooth mix
12. Add olive oil on top ( and crushed garlic)

You can store it in the fridge for 3-4 days. Keep mixing some olive oil in just before consumption otherwise it can get dry and go bad faster.

Eat as a dip or a spread. Goes well with bread and grilled vegetables. Top it with chopped olives and freshly chopped parsley for some fanciness. You can also add tahini paste, which is used in usual hummus preparation.

Enjoy the Mediterranean touch in your kitchen.





Friday, 4 May 2012

Weekend Special! Bub Special Golden Pancakes

Betty bought a bit of batter. A real treat for the weekend. I asked my close friend Radhika ( fellow foodie and an intelligent Delhi Yellow Pages) for her pancake recipe. Her pancakes have been legendary since the 1990s. In the days of yore when waffles, hot dogs and pancakes were only available in Archie comics.

Here goes (text by Radhika Arora)
I usually use allrecipes.com for my pancake recipe...the ingredients I use are given below. I think the reason my pancakes were so popular is because I used to make them in the 1990s - when they weren't available anywhere, and we were young and could eat four or five pancakes at a time!!! Some personal variations are today on the accompaniments:

--- Lots of butter and Dabur honey (since it has that slightly commercial taste) or marmalade or maple syrup. I usually stay away from commercial pancake syrup!  Nutella & other chocolates work well
--- If you skip the soda it turns into crepes... you can wrap pieces of chocolate in the crepes
--- add some fruit to the pancake mix - canned blueberries.... or packaged chopped prunes..
--- some people use very diluted buttermilk in their pancakes to give it a tangy flavor!

My usual recipe:
baking soda
eggs
maida
milk
and a little regular vegetable oil

Here is the Allrecipes version for 4 pancakes

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons white sugar
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1 cup milk
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  1. In a large bowl, mix flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Make a well in the center, and pour in milk, egg and oil. Mix until smooth.
  2. Heat a lightly oiled griddle or frying pan over medium high heat. Pour or scoop the batter onto the griddle, using approximately 1/4 cup for each pancake. Brown on both sides and serve hot.

     (the images are not mine and are from various sources on the internet, I will soon start putting up my own)

Thursday, 3 May 2012

The Sideys ( grilled tomato, caramelised onion)

We tend to ignore the side dishes in a meal. The main course is the super star and the side orders are just like accesories. Like a hairclip. The colour doesn't matter, but if it's out then the hair on your face will annoy you all evening.
I like good side dishes. They come together and make a great meal. A good steak with bad mashed potatoes is  sad.
Here are some ridiculously easy and great tasting side dishes. Use olive oil instead of butter if you are feeling particularly calorie conscious!

Grilled Tomato (it tastes better if you actually grill it in an oven, but takes longer)

1. Half the tomato or cut into slices ( round and not very thin)
2. Heat butter in a non- stick pan
3. Put the tomato in
4. While it sizzles, add salt, freshly ground pepper and sprinkle some ready made dried mixed herbs
5. Take it out when it turns slightly brown
6. Garnish with fresh parsley (optional)
( herbs are optional, though they are very easily availalable and taste good)

The sliced version tastes good on toasted garlic bread with a little bit of cheese sprinkled on top.

Variation:
1. Cut tomato into halves, remove the pulp and seeds with a spoon
2. Put in on a hot non-stick with melted butter
3. Grate a little cheese into the half (regular processed cheese)
4. Cover it for a couple of minutes
5. Add a drop of mustard sauce or Kasundi (Bengali mustard sauce) into the half
6. Eat it :)

Caramelised Onions:
This is the easiest of the lot and tastes surprisingly good.

1. Slice onion into rings
2. Melt butter in a non- stick pan
3. Put onions on the pan, spreading the rings out
4. Add Maggi Hot and Sweet Sauce ( or tomato ketchup) on the pan- around 3 tablespoons for one onion
5. Add salt and pepper
6. Watch the onions turn brown (slightly burnt)
7. It's ready!

It's a great accompaniment for fried egg and sausages. Also goes well with a frankfurter in a hot dog bun.

Happy cooking! (and eating)




An ode to breakfast

I love breakfasts. Especially on Sundays. I tend to eat oats on weekdays because it's quick. It fits into my morning pre-work rush. On weekends, I wrap up the packet of oats and keep it on the farthest shelf simply because it's weekend. Two glorious holidays and no need to wear your sandals while eating your apple while packing your bag while locating keys and finally waiting impatiently for red lights to turn green. Weekends are. And weekends let you be. My favourite weekend breakfasts are:

1. Scrambled eggs, mushrooms in soya sauce (Baba special) or sauteed mushroom, grilled tomato, toast.
2. Idly/ dosa at Shri Krishna Cafe in Kormangala ( I've come a long way from running away from idlis in school)
3. Fried egg with sausages, caramelised onion and grilled tomato
4.Chila/ Pooda- pancake or dosa like things made with dal (lentils) or besan (gram flour)
5. Grilled/ Sauteed vegetables, boiled egg and hummus
6. Bedmi Aloo followed by Nagori and halwa (and lots of walking on a winter morning) in Old Delhi
7.Pancakes
8. Waffles

Accompaniment: Good company, laughter

Tell me your favourite breakfast and breakfast place!

Recipes coming soon.

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Spoonful of Sugar

Sugar and spice and all things nice.

I am a huge fan of desserts. I firmly believe that life is better with a spoonful of sugar. Then there are issues- calories, a craving late at night when all shops are closed, no ingredients etc etc.



 Here are some easy (healthy) substitutes for the evil white stuff:

- Add some cinnamon to oats. Gives a slight sweetness and a lovely flavour
- Apple juice concentrate (HPMC one) has no added sugar and is sweet. Can be used for baking, milk shakes, cereal and smoothies
- Fresh fruit and fruit juice make a yummy substitute for sugar in a cake
- Hung curd works very well as a whipped cream replacement
- Add instant oats and some wheat flour (atta) to your cake. If you need 1 cup of flour, use half atta half maida(regular flour). I like my cakes with wheat flour. They feel a little courser than usual, but I enjoy it.
- Apple stewed with cinnamon topped with a spoonful of thick yoghurt and honey makes a great instant and healthy dessert.
- If you are wondering what to do with overripe bananas, then take out a nonstick pan put a bit of butter, a banana peeled and sliced at the centre, add a little sugar to caramelize. Be careful not to burn it, add a little milk and you have an instant dessert.
- Fresh fruit frozen yoghurt is easy to make and a much healthier option than ice cream

 Recipes coming up! Write in with your healthy dessert options!

Mustard oil and little tea cups

Food is food. Feel hungry, eat and go to sleep.

I don't feel that way. Aromas are filled with memories. Associations of laughter, togetherness- an eightieth birthday, the first meal cooked under desperation away from home, the comfort of 'home food', the warmth of a freshly baked cake in a round oven (decorated with gems), a special date or just a meal had alone while wishing for company.

One of my favourite memories is the hours that I spent watching my grandmother cook. Budia ( as all of us across generations called her) used to set up her boti and a bowl of water to dip vegetables in and a neatly folded old plastic sheet for the peels. On the right was a big aluminum plate on which vegetables were segregated and kept as per the preparations. When I was really young ( pre school days), I was given a small ball of atta to make into tiny rotis and a small cup for milky tea. I felt part of the adult world. My membership further strengthened by every perfect round roti.

So kitchen time was my time with Budia. Hours of stories of her childhood- wearing saris to school, how much she loved to climb trees and how she wished she had studied more. She would occasionally tell me to turn down the gas. It was a privilege. That was all the help she was willing to take. While the food would cook we would lie on her bed and she used to tell me stories. All of it with wafts of mustard oil flowing in.

With every season there used to be a special preparation. The first mango of the season was mixed with thickened milk and crunchy batasha, durga puja was followed by heaps of kachoris and ghugni, during basant panchami there was patishapta. In summer when I used to come back from school- there used be ghol (thin lassi like buttermilk with lemon) or water and batasha. I remember changing into a cotton chemise, dangling my legs and watching bubbles while I dipped the batasha.

Then there were Sunday breakfasts ( I still have a weakness for those). It was a luxury. No one was rushing to work/school. Baba is usually at his best with breakfasts. That needs another post.

I watched a film called 'A Touch of Spice' recently. The film is about the relationship of a young boy- Fanis, with his grandfather who owns a shop of spices. Fanis is told at a very young age that life and food both become better with a touch of spice. With the backdrop of rich sounds and smells, the film explores relationships and politics with a rare gentleness. Do watch it if you get the opportunity, it's one of the best films I've seen in recent times.

Do e mail me your stories of food associations, and cook with love. As Baba says it all the time, "Love is the most important ingredient of cooking".

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

The Simple Scramble

Why is there a post about a simple scrambled egg? Well, simply because it annoys the hell out of me when avataars of anda bhurji masquerade as scrambled eggs. Scores of restaurants (small, medium and large) claim to serve the perfect breakfast but get the scrambled eggs all wrong. If I ask for scramble, I want scramble. If I want bhurji, that's what I will ask for. I like it when these eggs are soft, white and have a slight buttery taste. ( Also, I love a good Sunday breakfast and have fond memories of Baba rustling up some awesome breakfasts)

The journey to my perfect scramble:
1. SCRAMBLE the eggs, don't beat them to death. Use a fork to lightly mix the yolk and the white
2. Add milk while you mix the eggs (half cup for 2 eggs)
3.Melt the butter on a non-stick pan on medium heat, spread it nicely so that the egg doesn't stick
4. Pour in the mixture into the pan and scramble it (mix it around with the spatula and break it up)
5.Make sure you don't turn up the heat. Burnt scramble doesn't taste good.
6. When it starts drying up, add half a cup of milk and turn it some more. It should be soft but not watery
7. Take it off the fire and enjoy it with a hot buttered toast.

The scramble should be on the gas for only a few minutes. The egg should be cooked, not over cooked. I don't add salt while cooking the scramble, I prefer to add it later since the butter is slightly salty.

Healthy option:
If you want a healthier version use olive oil and only egg whites. The volume is a little less with egg whites but it tastes just as good.

Some garnishing ideas:
- finely chopped fresh parsley
- dried mixed herbs
- grated Parmesan (or regular processed cheese)
- finely chopped tomatoes
- freshly ground pepper and salt

Accompaniment: sauteed mushrooms, sausages, grilled tomato

All American Diner in New Delhi serves a good scramble (or come home)