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Matar Ka Nimona

December 28, 2017 By appu Leave a Comment

Green peas, warian from Amritsar, and gentle spices make this an amazing winter dish.

Hare Matar ka Nimona

We were in Amritsar recently, and the fresh vegetables caught my friends eyes and she really wished to take some back home.

Fresh Peas

Fresh Peas

Alas! We had all shopped so much (and hey! it was cold, we had heavy jackets as well!), that our bags were collectively over weight. My poor bereft friend had to let go of the farm fresh vegetables. But to make things a wee better we had true Punjabi Warian with us.

Warian made with lentils and spices and dried in the heat of Amritsar

Warian

Many years back I had Matar Ka Nimona at my cousins place. I remember eating bowl fulls much to her delight and finally to her dismay. She was worried I would get an upset stomach!!

Farm Fresh green peas, spiced Warian from Amritsar and gentle spices

Hare Matar Ka Nimona

This is actually a dish famous in Uttar Pradesh. It is mostly made during the winters when the peas are fresh and juicy. Wadi (Warian is Punjabi) in Uttar Pradesh, is made with fresh white pumpkin, urad dal, and garam masala. It’s dried in the heat of summer and remains intact for the year round.

I made this recipe many times last year. It’s very suitable to the Indian palate. Too alien for foreigners. It goes well with any kind of Indian Roti. Even tastes good with rice.

fresh green peas, spiced warian and a curry , just right for winters

Hare Matar Ka Nimona

You can easily avoid the onion and garlic and reduce the spice quotient. But some amount of spice is definitely needed, don’t do away with it totally. I prefer to make this without the onion and garlic.

There is something about this dish, which appeals to me greatly. The mouth feel of the pea paste and  a subtle hint of flavour left behind by the cooking  wadi, and then of course the wadi itself, along with a soft pillowy taste of potatoes cooked in the simmering gravy. The gravy tends to thicken as it goes, and thickens even more when it’s left till it is consumed. So, adding enough water is essential, and just before serving (if made a little ahead of time) add a little salted water and cook till boiling and serve immediately.

Try and get small fresh peas. That will lend to the dish an inherent sweetness, which when combined with the garam masala of the wadi makes it resonate in your mouth.

 

 

Matar Ka Nimona
Print Recipe
Farm fresh winter peas, potatoes, warian and gentle spices, make this a festive yet comforting winter dish.
  • CourseMain Dish, Snack
  • CuisineIndian
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 - 20 minutes
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 - 20 minutes
Matar Ka Nimona
Print Recipe
Farm fresh winter peas, potatoes, warian and gentle spices, make this a festive yet comforting winter dish.
  • CourseMain Dish, Snack
  • CuisineIndian
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 - 20 minutes
Servings Prep Time
4 pax 10 minutes
Cook Time
15 - 20 minutes
Ingredients
  • 2 1/2 Cup Peas shelled
  • 3/4 Cup Warian lightly packed
  • 1 Potato cubed into 8 -10 pcs
  • 1/2 Inch Ginger
  • 2 Green Chillies
  • 1 Bay Leaf
  • 4 Tspn Ghee
  • 1/2 Tspn Jeera (cumin)
  • Pinch Hing (asafoetida)
  • 1 Tspn red chilly powder
  • 2 Cloves garlic optional
  • 1 onion optional
  • 3 Cups Water
Servings: pax
Instructions
  1. Make a coarse paste of the peas, onion, garlic, green chilly, ginger and keep aside.
  2. Break the warian into small pieces. The warian should be broken into pieces which would fill appx half a tablespoon. We don't want powder here.
  3. Chop the potato into 10 large pieces and keep aside in water.
  4. On medium flame, add the ghee. When hot but not smoking, add the cumin and bay leaf and lastly the hing.
  5. Now add the warian and fry for appx 2 minutes.
  6. Then add the pea paste and fry till it becomes a bit dry.
  7. Now add the potatoes and fry again for a minute.
  8. Add the red chilly powder.
  9. Keep stirring as the pea paste will get caught at the bottom.
  10. Scrape all the brown parts stuck at the bottom and now add the water.
  11. Cover and let it simmer till the potato has cooked.
  12. As soon as the potatoes are done turn off the fire.
  13. Please make this dish as close to serving as possible, because the peas, potato and warian all soak up the water, and your dish will start drying out and becoming thick. Good gravy is the key to this dish.
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Filed Under: Dinner, Lunch Tagged With: Amritsar, Dish from uttarpradesh, garam masala, Green peas, Green PEas Nimona, Kulcha, Matar Ka Nimona, Nimona, Papad, The Golden Temple, Uttar pradesh, Warian

One Pot Chole Chawal

December 7, 2017 By appu Leave a Comment

one pot chole rice.

My grand mom made the best Chole in the world. It was a hand me down recipe from her mother who was according to me was an un hailed, un acclaimed legendary cook worth atleast a couple of Michelin Stars. Not only did she cook like her hands were blessed by the gods, but she also remembered amongst the dozens of grand and great grand children, who thronged at her home each summer, what each of us loved to eat. Our stomachs and souls were in heaven when at her home. Every morning, no matter how early we woke up, we would find her tinkering in the kitchen, singing bhajans to her beloved Krishna. I asked her one day if she has any recipes written down – and she looked at me like I was asking her if Krishna liked dance music. Every single recipe, and there were thousands in her repertoire, was stored in her head. And not once was there a variation in what we ate. Each and every time over the years the dishes tasted the same – tasty, heartwarming and soul stirring.

My nani, handed me this recipe of Chole, very casually over dinner one day. I scrambled up and wrote it down. Over the years, I have also perfected this recipe with trials and error. And while it still does not taste like how she or her mom made it, it stills holds good on it’s own….

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Filed Under: Dinner, Gluten Free, Healthy, Lunch Tagged With: childhood meals, chole, comfort food, glutenfree, grandmom's recipe, indian, memories, one pot recipe, onepot, punjabi, soul food, spices, spicy

Lasooni Palak

November 30, 2017 By appu 2 Comments

 

If you have been following my blog, you would have realised that my favourite flavour is garlic. I have grown up in a family that cooked without onion and garlic, for religious purposes. Garlic is said to have “tamsik” qualities. Tamsik food is considered unhealthy, and it brings out the negative in you, gives rise to anger and other repugnant emotions. During the Vedic times, everything that was considered not good, was given a religious decree of non consumption.

I have realised over the years that a lot of do’s and dont’s of the Vedic ages are now being proven scientifically true. Take for example the benefits of turmeric. The world over, turmeric is prescribed for it’s qualities. But there is also the other side of science, which has proven some foods that were earlier considered bad, are now proven to have health benefits. Garlic is very good for the heart.

As for me – I like to live dangerously and garlic is very good for my soul!

I can have garlic in every single meal, and not get tired of the taste. I think I am still making up for my lost childhood!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nishi enjoying the taste!

Lasooni Palak, or Saag as its called in some places, is my favourite version of consuming spinach. I like the smooth texture, but I also like the chopped version. So I came up with a recipe that was a mix of both. I like my food on the little spicier side (more Tamsik me!!) and somehow the taste of garlic, rough and smooth spinach with a hint of fire sets me in the absolutely perfect mood!

I experimented with this recipe in the green environs of Mahabaleshwar.  The spinach was not fresh off the farm, but it was still from the hills of Panchgani, and as fresh as one could possibly get. But the spinach I grow in our farm, is far superior, completely organic and I pluck it when still in baby stages. The result is a sweeter taste, with a hint of bitterness and then of course we add the ever loved garlic and fiery spices. In the near future, when the garlic grows green and fragrant in my farm, I will try this same recipe with new green garlic stalks. The taste will be a little different – more herby!

The recipe goes best with chappati, made with whole wheat or jowar.

 

 

Lasooni Palak or Lasooni Saag
Print Recipe
Greens flavoured with heady garlic, a perfect Indian veggie for any meal.
  • CourseMain Course
  • CuisineIndian
Servings Prep Time
2/3 people 15 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Servings Prep Time
2/3 people 15 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Lasooni Palak or Lasooni Saag
Print Recipe
Greens flavoured with heady garlic, a perfect Indian veggie for any meal.
  • CourseMain Course
  • CuisineIndian
Servings Prep Time
2/3 people 15 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Servings Prep Time
2/3 people 15 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes
Ingredients
  • 3 Bunch Spinach (each bunch has appx 25-30 leaves)
Tadka 1
  • 30 cloves garlic roughly chopped
  • 3 Green Chilly roughly chopped
  • 1 small onion roughly chopped
  • 1 Tspn Jeera (cumin)
  • 1 Red Kashmiri Chilly whole
  • 1 Tbspn oil
  • 1 tspn salt
Tadka 2
  • 1 Tbspn oil
  • 1 Bay Leaf whole
  • 1 tspn Jeera (cumin)
  • 1 Red Chilli Kashmiri whole
  • 1 tspn salt
  • 1/4 Cup Water
  • 1 Tbspn Yoghurt
Servings: people
Instructions
Spinach
  1. Blanch all three bunches of spinach in hot water. After 2/3 minutes, drain the hot water and dunk the spinach into ice cold water. This helps it to retain its colour.
  2. Finely chop appx one bunch of spinach and leave aside.
  3. Roughly chop the remaining two bunches of spinach and leave aside.
Tadka 1 with roughly chopped spinach
  1. In a pan, add and heat the oil. Add the jeera till it splutters. Now add the green chillies, red chilly and let these splutter.
  2. Now add the onion and garlic and cook till a bit brown.
  3. Add the roughly chopped spinach.
  4. Add salt and mix well.
  5. Leave aside to cool.
  6. Once its cool, run it in a mixer grinder till it becomes a fine paste. All the ingredients should be made into a paste, red chillies and all.
Tadka 2 with finely chopped spinach
  1. Heat oil in a pan. When hot add the jeera.
  2. When it splutters add the bay leaf and red chilly.
  3. Add the finely chopped spinach.
  4. Now add the salt and the water.
  5. Mix well and leave aside.
Finishing the dish.
  1. Add the spinach which has been ground to a paste, to the finely chopped spinach in the pan. The heat should be on.
  2. Add the yoghurt and mix well. Voila your dish is ready!
  3. Serve hot with any form of Indian Bread.
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Filed Under: Vegetable Tagged With: fibre, glutenfree, healthy, indian, indianmeal, ironrich, serve with indian bread, spinach, vegetable

Meet the Author

For the 21 years and some months that I have been alive, there has been this crazy, eccentric, always-charged-up woman with a full-time job of being a mother to 6 (2 children, 4 dogs).

In her spare time she blasts music on her DJ console, reads like a maniac, downloads shows (because God forbid she runs out of something to watch), runs an entire household, and to top it all off, manages a very successful catering business which makes the most delicious food in the entire world. Once you have her food, everything else will taste like stale socks.

This is what you call "Maa ke haath ka khana".

- Kanak

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