THE RECIPE LARDER

  • Home
  • Nuts and Bolts, Sauces and Pans
  • Recipes
  • Contact

Beetroot Carpaccio with Tamarind Redution Vinaigrette.

March 19, 2020 By appu Leave a Comment

Beetroot Carpaccio with reduced Tamarind Redution.
Print Recipe
Thin veils of roasted beetroot, a fusion tamarind reduction and goats cheese. A salad made for cosy afternoons.
  • CourseSalad
  • CuisineFusion
Servings Prep Time
3 pax 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour - plus 30 minutes
Servings Prep Time
3 pax 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour - plus 30 minutes
Beetroot Carpaccio with reduced Tamarind Redution.
Print Recipe
Thin veils of roasted beetroot, a fusion tamarind reduction and goats cheese. A salad made for cosy afternoons.
  • CourseSalad
  • CuisineFusion
Servings Prep Time
3 pax 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour - plus 30 minutes
Servings Prep Time
3 pax 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
1 hour - plus 30 minutes
Ingredients
  • 2 Beetroots
  • 2 Tbspn Tamarind
  • 2 Kashmiri Chillies
  • 1 Chipotle Chilly
  • 1 Tspn Corriander seeds
  • 1 Tspn Fenel Seeds
  • 1 Tspn Cumin Seeds
  • 1 Tspn Black Pepper
  • 2 Tbspn Water for cooking the tamarind reduction.
  • 1/2 Tspn salt
  • 1/1 Tspn soya sauce
  • 100 gms goat's cheese
  • 10 Salad Leaves preferably - rocket, aurugula, baby spinach.
Servings: pax
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 200 Deg F.
  2. Wash the beetroots well and scrub it.
  3. Enclose the wet beetroots in foil and place in the middle rack of the oven. This should take appx 1 hour.
  4. Soak the tamarind in hot water and leave aside for appx 30 minutes. Use only as much water to soak the tamarind. Do not use excess water.
  5. Soak the chillies and seeds and black pepper together in a bowl, with hot water. Keep aside for appx 30 minutes
  6. After appx 30 minutes, mash the tamarind and strain the juices with a strainer. Throw away the pulp (or use for marination) and keep the juices.
  7. In a grinder, grind to paste the strained tamarind, chillies, seeds and black pepper.
  8. Heat some oil in a pan and saute the tamarind and red chilly paste.
  9. Add salt and the 2 tbspn water and let it cook for appx a minute.
  10. Set aside to cool in a bowl.
  11. ASSEMBLY: (see video) 1) Place the leaves on the plate. 2) Arrange the beets in a circle on the leaves. 3) Smear scantily, the reduced tamarind vinaigrette. 4) Place blogs of goats cheese on the smeared beets. 5) Repeat again with the beets, then tamarind reduction and goats cheese, till all the beets are over.
  12. Garnish with piped cheese cream and more salad leaves.
  13. Serve totally chilled.
Recipe Notes

I have been a wee bit obsessed with all things carpaccio for a bit. Those thin, almost translucent slices of veggies fascinate me. These thin veils, with their dressing or sauce, melting in the mouth – the whole experience just makes me feel so good. I mean how can something so thin leave behind an explosion of flavors?

 

Goat’s cheese is my all time favourite cheese, snack, and go to for balance in taste. Tamarind is one of my favourite sour sides, and a very underrated variety. When have you heard of tamarind being used as a salad vinaigrette and yet it’s a kin of the oft used balsamic (sort off!!)

 

I don’t want to gabber too much, because you really need to go check out the recipe and make it. Now is a good time to experiment huh?

 

Please do tag us on #therecipelarder on insta and facebook, with pictures if you make this recipe.

 

Cheers!

Check out the video here

 

http://therecipelarder.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Beetroot-carpaccio-with-reduced-tamarind-reduction-edited.mp4

 

 

 

Share this Recipe

Filed Under: Dinner, Healthy, Lunch Tagged With: tamarind, vinaigrette

Masaledar Aloo (A family recipe)

March 7, 2018 By appu Leave a Comment

Rich blend of spices – sookhi aloo ki sabji

Lot of good things happen in Mahabaleshwar. One of the finest things is – something about that place makes people want to cook.

The kitchen is airy and has huge windows opening out to our kitchen garden. The fact that it’s a biggish sized kitchen also makes it easier to have people milling around and experimenting with various home grown and organic ingredients.

I had my cousin uncle and aunt over. The fact that he is my age does not deter me from calling him uncle. Some childhood habits just don’t get out of your system….

Read More »

Filed Under: Dinner, Lunch, Vegetable Tagged With: alpp, food fad, garam masala, happy meal, home cooked food, indian cooking, indian meals, indian spices, organic, potatoe, recipes from the dad, sabji, sesame seeds, spices, taught by dad, vegetarian, veggies

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….

Read More »

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

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

Subscribe to Blog via Email

RECIPE BY CATEGORY

Copyright © 2021 THE RECIPE LARDER