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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

 

 

 

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

Red Chilli Chutney – From Bangalore.

May 23, 2016 By appu 4 Comments

In the din and pollution of Bangalore, exists a quiet retreat. The garden is lush, and in the centre of it all stands my favourite tree – The Parijat. There is something about the small white flower with the orange stems. It has a hard grip on my list of all time favourites. In the days of the old, my grandmother and her sisters in law, would break the orange stem, and make a dye with it. They used it to colour their sarees and wore them for auspicious occasions.

The parijat flower

The parijat flower

In that serene atmosphere, lives Rekha with her husband and daughter. When she got married, her very foodie husband was appalled at her cooking skills, so he took her to his mother’s home for some training. Rekha being Rekha, understood that way to her husband’s heart is through his stomach (as it is with mine!) She dedicated her self to traditional cooking training. I say “well done” husband, because otherwise, we would have lost out on eating out of the hands of one of the best cooks I have ever met.

Rekha is clean, neat and extremely efficient. Her recipes have been so well measured, that nothing goes waste.

In the next few weeks, I will be adding a few of her recipes. The food you must have eaten, but her’s are worth trying out once.

red chutneu feature

Here is a simple Red Chilli Chutney. I asked her the traditional name for it, she just shrugged and said – Red Chilli Chutney. Well then. So be it!!

Since the time I made it, I’ve had it with everything – toast, pooran poli, in a salad. I even layered the base of Lasagna sheets with it, before putting in the fillings. It is not as spicy as it looks.

Red Chutney with anything

Red Chutney with anything

The taste of the jaggery and imli (tamarind), blend with the chillies, giving it the right tang and a hint of spiciness. For the palate that does not mind experimenting with a little spice, this recipe is a must try. And it’s adorably simple.

Red Chilli Chutney

Red Chilli Chutney

Ingredients for the chutney. Sans the red chillies

Ingredients for the chutney. Sans the red chillies


Red Chilli Chutney - From Bangalore
Print Recipe
For the complex tastes that hit your palate, this is a very simple, easy and quick recipe to make. Phenomenally versatile....
  • CourseSauces and Jams, Side Dish
  • CuisineSouth Indian
Servings Prep Time
150 grams appx 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
5 minutes 5 minutes
Servings Prep Time
150 grams appx 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
5 minutes 5 minutes
Red Chilli Chutney - From Bangalore
Print Recipe
For the complex tastes that hit your palate, this is a very simple, easy and quick recipe to make. Phenomenally versatile....
  • CourseSauces and Jams, Side Dish
  • CuisineSouth Indian
Servings Prep Time
150 grams appx 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
5 minutes 5 minutes
Servings Prep Time
150 grams appx 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
5 minutes 5 minutes
Ingredients
  • 75 gms Kashmiri Red Chillies
  • 1 tspn Jeera (Cumin) seeds
  • 1 small Ball of Tamarind
  • 1 small Ball of Jaggery
  • 1/2 tspn salt
  • 1 Stem Curry Leaves
  • 4 pods garlic peeled.
  • 1/4 Cup Drinking water To blend.
  • 1/4 tspn Methi (fenugreek) seeds
Servings: grams appx
Instructions
  1. Take off the stems of the red chillies and soak them whole, in room temperature water.
  2. While the chillies soak, dry roast the methi, jeera and curry leaves, on a non stick pan. Roast till the jeera gives off fragrance and the curry leaves look just a bit wilted.
  3. After 15 minutes drain the chillies and throw away the water.
  4. Blend together, soaked red chillies, dry roasted methi, jeera and curry leaves, tamarind, jaggery, garlic and salt in a blender. Use a little water to blend.
  5. Make a coarse paste. Don't blend till its too fine.
  6. Stores well in refrigerator for a week.
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Filed Under: Chutneys Tagged With: garlic, jaggery, no oil, red chilliy chutney, spicy, tamarind, vegetarian, versatile, yum

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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