Neer Dosa (Rice Pancakes)

This is a very special Manglorean dosa. It is my favorite among all dosas, and it is such a pity that even most South Indians have no clue what it is. Very very few restaurants serve it. In Bangalore, you can probably find neer dosas on the menu in restaurants that serve Mangalorean cusine.

The name is ‘neer’ dosa, which literally translates to water dosa. The batter is so, so thin, it is like cooking with water, hence the name. This is a recipe that can be very very hard if you don’t get the basics right, and very easy once you’re set. As I taught myself how to make it, it took me a few months to get everything right, but I pass on all my lessons here, and I’ve been told that many people have gotten it right thanks to the instructions. I hope you do too!

Serves 4

Ingredients:

3 cups rice
½ coconut, freshly grated
Salt, Water

Equipment:

Wet grinder/ food processor/ mixer
A flat iron skillet is the perfect skillet to make neer dosas in.
In its absence, you may use flat non-stick pans.

Method:

Soak the rice overnight in enough water. Drain.

Grind the coconut and rice along with a little water, until very smooth.

Add plenty of water to make a really thin batter.

Smear oil on a hot skillet and place it on high heat.

When it smokes, pour the batter onto the skillet. The batter should be thin enough to bubble, and holes should appear the moment it is poured on the skillet.

Reduce the heat to low, cover and let cook.

When done, fold and serve. (Since the dosa is so thin, it is not cooked on the reverse side.)

It is typically served with coconut chutney and a mixture of jaggery and grated coconut.

Spaghetti w Tuna Marinara Sauce

spaghetti with tuna sauce

This meal is for those days when you want a fairly nutritious meal but don’t want to work too hard. If you’re really lazy, you could even heat up ready-made pasta sauce, throw in canned pasta, and your sauce is ready in 2 minutes.

The time to cook might look a bit long here, but it’s really about some initial work, and then letting it cook by itself.

Time taken: 20 min
Serves 4

Ingredients

350 gms/ 15 oz spaghetti
1 150gm/ 5oz can tuna in brine, drained
6 big or 8 medium tomatoes
1 onion
4-5 cloves of garlic
2 tsp dried parsley
½ cup fresh Italian basil leaves
½ cup dry white wine (optional)
2½ tbsp olive oil
salt and pepper

Method

Bring a large pot of water to boil.

Meanwhile, chop up the tomatoes and onion finely. (I like my sauce chunky. If you like it smooth, puree the tomatoes and onion separately)

Heat the oil in a skillet and add the garlic, and the onion after the garlic turns light brown.

Once the onions are light brown, add the tomatoes. Add the salt.

Cover and cook for 5-7 minutes, checking occasionally.

Once the water starts boiling, add the spaghetti and cook as per the directions on the pack. Drain.

Once the tomatoes are cooked and mushy, add the wine and allow it to simmer till the sauce is at the desired consistency.

Add the crumbled tuna. Stir and add the basil and parsley.

Remove from heat, serve on top of the spaghetti.

Roasted Bananas

roasted bananas

Summers bring with them a much lower appetite. And also plenty of yummy fruits! The Kerala banana, or nenthra-pazham (നേന്ത്രപഴം), is very high in carbs, therefore very filling. And high carbs is exactly what you are looking for, in the perfect breakfast. Pair it up with a glass of milk, and you’re good to go!

This can also be made with the regular big bananas, although the texture and taste will be completely different.

Time Taken: 10 min
Serves: 1

Ingredients:

2 bananas, halved and sliced vertically
2 tbsp honey
2 tbsp crushed nuts – almonds, cashews, walnuts
1 tbsp raisins
2 tbsp salted butter

Method:

Spread the butter on a hot skillet and gently place the banana slices on the pan. Cover and let cook.

Turn when it has browned a bit, and cook on the other side.

Place them in a heap on a plate, sprinkle the nuts and raisins.

Pour the honey on top, and serve hot. Can also add a sprinkling of nutmeg for flavor.

Rava Idly

Instant Rava Idly
Instant Rava Idly

I am an idly lover. On those mornings when I wake up craving idly and there isn’t an ounce of batter in the fridge, guess what comes to the rescue? Rava idly! This quick recipe makes a very yummy breakfast.

You can buy rava idly mixes in the market. I used to. Until I turned the packet over and read the ingredients. These rava idly packets are charging you for pouring some oil and spices over rava! It’s crazy! That was absolutely the last day I bought a ready-to-make rava idly pack.

Ingredients:

1 cup semolina/ suji
1 cup sour curds, or ½  cup thick yogurt
½  cup grated carrot
1 tsp grated ginger
1-2 green chilies
½ tsp cooking soda

For the tempering:
2 tsp oil
¼ tsp mustard seeds/ rai
¼ tsp cumin seeds/ jeera
1 tsp black gram/ urad dal
1 tsp bengal gram/ chana dal
a pinch of asafetida
1 dried red chili, broken
a sprig of curry leaves
2 tsp broken cashewnuts

water, oil, salt as needed

Equipment:

Idly molds
Steamer

Recipe:

Heat oil and add all the tempering ingredients.

Add the suji and roast until fragrant.

Let it cool a bit, and then mix it with curds, chopped green chili, ginger and grated carrot. Add water if needed, to make a thick batter.

Let it sit for 20-30 minutes.

Add salt and cooking soda and mix the batter well.

Prepare the steamer. If you are using a pressure cooker, remember to remove the vent, pour about an inch of water inside, and bring to a boil.

Pour the batter into greased molds and steam for 10 min. Let cool for 5 minutes before you take them out of the molds.

Serve hot with chutney and sagu.

Puttu

Puttu made with chemba puttu podi
Puttu made with chemba puttu podi

If you ever meet a mallu away from home, just mention puttu kadala and you will be friends immediately. I am yet to meet a mallu who doesn’t sigh dreamily at it’s mention. Or for that matter, anyone who’s eaten it. This is something special. Beware though, for it is also deceptively filling!

What’s more, the kadala is one of the healthiest vegetarian forms of protien to have. Pairing these two along with coconut makes it a nearly perfect breakfast.

Ingredients:

2 cups coarse rice flour or chemba puttu podi (red rice flour)
1 cup freshly grated coconut
½ cup water
Salt

puttu-vesselSpecial Equipment:

The puttu vessel is traditionally used to prepare puttu

Substitutions: A coconut shell with one eye pierced and placed over the valve of a pressure cooker might be used as a substitute.
A steamer could also be used.

Method:

Mix half of the grated coconut and salt into the rice flour.

Mix water into it in small quantities. The water is mixed in by rubbing it into the flour, so that the flour becomes granular. It should not be too dry or too wet.

Place a layer of 2-3 tbsp of coconut at the bottom of the puttu vessel and then put the rice flour mixture, followed by another layer of coconut.

Steam for 5 minutes.

Remove the puttu from the vessel and serve hot with kadala or payar curry, plaintains or just sugar and ghee.

Bananas in Coconut Milk

Bananas in coconut milk

When I spent a few days with a Chinese friend, I was shocked when he told me that they don’t have any desserts in Chinese cuisine. Maybe they do, just not in his town, who knows. But it makes me wonder if one of my favorite Chinese desserts – sesame honey noodles, is also an Indian invention like much of our ‘Chinese’ food.

I don’t know why I’m talking about China in a Thai recipe post.

I was looking to make dessert along with Thai curry rice one day many years ago, which is when I discovered this dish. I know it looks a bit boring, but if you are a coconut milk lover like me, then it is beyond divine.

Traditionally, they use small bananas, or pumpkin, sweet potato or taro in this dish. I like to make it with Kerala banana (of the banana chips fame) called nenthra-pazham (നേന്ത്രപഴം)

Time Taken: 10 min
Serves: 4

Ingredients:

2 cups bananas, chopped into bite-sized pieces
½ cup grated palm sugar (can substitute with jaggery or molasses)
2 cups thick coconut milk
2 pandanus leaves – optional
a pinch of salt

Method:


Place the banana in a cup of water and bring to a boil. Cook until almost done, usually 2-3 minutes.


Add the palm sugar and the pandanus leaves


And finally, add the coconut milk.

If you want a thicker consistency, add a teaspoon of tapioca flour or cornflour to it. Make a paste of the flour with a little water before you pour it in.

Mix, bring to a boil and take off the heat.

Serve hot or cold.

Akki Roti (Rice Flat Bread)

Soft, soft akki rotis
Soft, soft akki rotis

Akki roti is typically eaten in various parts of South Karnataka. I remember enjoying them the most at a friend’s place in my early days in Bangalore. We used to go together to office, and I’d be at her place most nights, letting her mother happily indulge me in her awesome akki rotis and cucumber gojju.

Those akki rotis were different, though. There are 2 different types of akki rotis. The ingredients are the same, but while one uses a banana leaf to smear the dough on, the other, bāndlay akki roti is made in a kadhai (wok) and is smeared on a hot wok by hand. Not my favourite process. It is then covered and allowed to cook. It is not turned over (obviously. The shape doesn’t allow it) The result is very different in both cases. The former is soft, and the latter is a combination of very soft and very crispy, if you get it right.

Makes 3 akki rotis

Ingredients:

½ cup very fine rice flour (Appam flour usually works well)
½ onion, chopped
2 tbsp chopped coriander leaves
½ cup grated coconut
1 green chili minced
Salt to taste

Equipment:

Banana leaves or plastic sheets
Skillet (tava)

Method:

Mix all ingredients with boiling water to make the dough thick enough to hold in your hands.

Smear oil on a banana leaf and flatten some dough on it. You could either flatten the dough with your hands – in this case, wet your fingers with water periodically to prevent the dough from sticking to them. Or, you could place the dough between two well-oiled banana leaves and use a rolling pin to spread it. Take off the upper banana leaf before cooking, in this case.

Heat some oil on a tava and place the banana leaf on it, dough-side down.

Carefully peel the leaf off. If you are using a plastic sheet, make sure it doesn’t touch the tava.

Cook on a medium flame on both sides. Serve with coconut chutney or vegetable curry

Nuchchina Unde (Lentil Dumplings)

nu

This is one of my favourite snacks. The ginger and chili gives it a lovely flavour and it is also is sooo healthy. The best part is, for those who find steamed foods boring, it also gives you the option to make them a fried version. Satisfies the health-conscious as well as the,… well, the rest of them 😀

Traditionally nuchchina unde is made purely with toor dal. I found these to be quite dry. I experimented until I was satisfied. Mixing in urad dal and letting it sit, even overnight if possible, makes them much more moist and soft. Adding some mung and chana dal enhances the taste.

Drop the left overs in majige huli or sambar.

Ingredients:

1  cup toor dal
½  cup bengal gram/ chana dal
¼  cup black gram/ urad dal, split, without skin
¼  cup mung dal
3-4 tbsp chopped coriander leaves
2-3 tbsp chopped dill leaves (optional)
2 tsp grated ginger
1 tsp chopped green chili
½ cup chopped onion (optional: This is usually skipped during festivals)
A pinch of asafetida
Salt

Equipment:

Food processor/ Wet grinder/ Mixer
Steamer

Recipe:

Soak the dals together for 2-3 hours.

Drain and grind with minimum water into a very thick consistency, almost between a dough and a batter.

(For an instant version, I grind the dals into a powder first, and then soak in just enough warm water for about half an hour. )

I’ve found that if I let it sit for about half an hour or more, the result is softer nuchchina unde, so this is an optional step if you have the time.

Mix in the leaves, asafetida, onion, grated ginger, chilies and salt.

Make into little balls and steam for 10 minutes.

Serve with a dollop of ghee and curds, or drop into majige huli.

Note: You could also flatten the balls and deep fry them for a crispier version.

The Importance of Cooking

In the age of ready-to-eat foods and ever expanding super markets, cooking has become more of a hobby than a necessity. TV programs like Masterchef make it seem even more like an exotic way to pass time, and so many people I know enjoy cooking, but find it terribly boring to do the daily, mundane cooking. Special weekend dishes anytime!

Bring in the Love

As an energy healer, I know the importance of ‘clean’ food. Ever wondered why temple meals are so tasty, even when they are so simple? Or why, even if you frequently indulge in fine dining, your mother’s rustic dish still satisfies more? It is is the love. And that, really, makes all the difference.

It doesn’t matter how fancy it is. It doesn’t matter how you plate it up. It’s not good enough if it wasn’t made with love. And no matter how cool the 5 star chef is, to him you are just another customer. He cannot love your kids like you do. The food will therefore, never really compare, although your children will probably realize that only decades later.

Of course, health is another factor, but we’ll talk about that another day.

Watch your Feelings

For most mothers, it is not possible to avoid cooking when you are feeling low. Food cooked in anger or depression has very low energies and can even create illness in the family. If you are feeling low while cooking, be deeply aware of your feelings and surrender to them – do not resist. I know this sounds counter-intuitive, but it is the only way the vibration doesn’t affect the food.

Chant

One of the most wonderful things to do while cooking, is chanting. It could be anything that means something to you. If you aren’t religious, simply sing a soothing song that you like. The Gayatri mantra is a very powerful chant, if you are up for it.

Keep it Fresh

Foods are best eaten fresh, warm. Refrigerating it brings down the energy. Freezing even more. Not like many of us have much of an option there, but just saying, in case you do. The fresher, the better. Even better if it is eaten raw!

Be Judicious

My friends tell me I sound like their mother when I say this – please, please, PLEASE don’t waste your food. Give it away to a maid, to a beggar, do anything. So many are dying because they have nothing to eat. Wasting cannot be an option.

The Perfect Boiled Egg

The perfect boiled egg is easy!

Those who aren’t into cooking find it appalling when they find a couple of cooks discussing the basics – like boiling an egg. But cooking is like that. One can be pretty good, and yet be struggling with some basic methods.

Boiling an egg can be tricky.

Are the Eggs Fresh?

Aged eggs usually peel better. To check whether the eggs are fresh, put them in a glass of water. If the egg sinks and lays on its side, it is fresh. If it floats on the surface, it is too old to consume. If it stands on one end, then it is a few weeks old and perfect for boiling.

The Foolproof Method

The best boiled eggs take a bit of effort. With this method, you can even use fresh eggs, it should be fine. If the eggs are cracked too, this technique is a saving grace.

The eggs turn out beautiful with this method, almost translucent, soft and yet cooked through.

  • Place the eggs in a steamer. If you don’t have a steamer, place them in a colander and place the colander inside a pot. Don’t use a plastic colander or it will melt. Make sure the colander isn’t touching the water, and that there is enough water so it doesn’t dry up.
  • Steam the eggs for 20 minutes.
  • If the eggs were farm fresh, dunk the eggs in cold water for a few minutes after steaming, and they should be easy to peel.

The Lazy Method

This has worked for me almost all the time, but if the eggs are very fresh, that could be a bit problematic.

  • Add 1 tsp salt and 1 tbsp vinegar to a pot of water.
  • Place the eggs gently into the water.
  • NOW place the pot on the heat and bring to a boil. Do not heat the water before adding the eggs, as the eggs will crack.
  • Boil for 5 minutes.
  • Turn off the heat and let it sit for 10 minutes.
  • They are now ready to peel.