Showing posts with label tomato free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomato free. Show all posts

Sunday, July 08, 2012

Colourful Carrot soup


My nephew is a fussy vegetable eater, but loves soups. Amma made colourful carrot soup which was instantly  attacked by my nephew. Here is a recipe adapted from Amma's basic recipe.

You will need 

2 Medium sized carrots
5 pepper corns
1/8 inch piece of ginger
¼ tsp cumin seeds
2 cups water
Salt to taste
Seasoning:
¼ tsp butter or oil (optional)
Cilantro chopped fine
Finely chopped red capsicum (optional)


Method 

Clean and chop carrots into big pieces and pressure cook without adding water into the carrots till cooked (3 whistles).
Let cool.
Dry roast pepper and cumin seeds.
Blend cooked carrot, roasted spices and ginger to a fine paste.
Take  2 cups of water in a vessel, add the carrot-spice puree, salt bring to a boil.
Saute finely chopped red capsicum and cilantro with ¼ tsp oil or butter and add it to the boiling mixture.
Serve hot.





Note:

Made the same soup richer and tastier by the addition of 1 marathi moggu when roasting pepper and cumin.
Also added about 1/2 cup first pressed coconut milk. I first boiled water with salt and then added the carrot puree, coconut milk, and finally the sauted capsicum and cilantro.

I kept aside a little bit of the carrot spice (minus the ginger, salt) puree, coconut milk mixture for my 11 month old son. He happily finished his 'new' spiced baby food!

Saturday, July 07, 2012

Capsicum chutney or Capsicum dip


My sister gave me this simple tasty recipe which looks very spicy but is not. My chutney loving husband could not stop eating it.

You will need

1 red capsicum chopped
1 medium sized onion chopped
1 clove garlic (medium sized)
½ tsp oil

1 Tablespoon grated coconut
5 almonds
1 tsp groundnut  or cashew nut (optional)
5 peppercorns
Salt, tamarind to taste
Seasoning: oil, mustard, black gram, curry leaves

Saute capsicum, onion and garlic  with ½ tsp oil till wilted.
Mix all the ingredients (except those for seasoning) add a little water and blend to a fine paste.
Seasoning: Heat ½ tsp oil, add black gram, mustard seeds. Let splutter. Add curry leaf, mix with the prepared paste and enjoy with hot crepe/ dosa.




Upma/Uppittu step by step

The first time I made Upma/Uppittu was in the initial months after my marriage and when my Atte( mother-in- law) and sister-in-law were away. I had only watched Amma cooking Upma but since I had always heard from people that Upma was one of the easiest dishes to make, that morning I decided to make it. I chopped onions, vegetables and found the rawa, but I was confused about the quantity of water to be added. So as usual, called Amma. Since Amma was in the garden, my brother picked the phone and when I told him about the confusion, he immediately told me, 'Ansu, I just made Upma the day before, add double water' I asked him if he was sure and he was positive it was double. Having got this info I rushed to cook as it was already late and my Maava( father-in-law) had to leave in half an hour for his college. So into the pan went oil, seasoning, rava/sooji, double water, vegetables- oops! I remembered, I had to boil vegetables, water separately and add it to roasted rava:( too late, so decided to cook covered till done. Then realised I had used Bombay rava(fine rava) and Amma uses thicker unrefined rava called special or Bansi rava! I prayed and hoped everything would somehow be okey and cursed myself for having laughed loud at the messed up Kichidi made by Maava the previous day. The final product of my cooking was a hard sticky mass. Maava was waiting at the table, ready to eat. I brought the Upma to the table and served him a spoonful. He looked at the plate with amusement, looked at me( by then I wished I had some place to hide my face), laughed out loud till he had tears in his eyes and said ' Yes! my Kichdi was far better than this!'.He then silently finished eating and left. My husband who hated Upma refused to eat my version of it. For a long time after this incident, the thought of Upma stressed me out and when I told Amma, she began the usual, 'I told you to learn cooking before marriage........' but lovingly taught me her wonderful recipe of making Uppittu and I proudly say that today when asked the menu for breakfast, my husband says 'Uppittu!'. I have mastered Uppittu thanks to Amma's recipe, the patience of my husband and Maava.
As usual this recipe makes use of very little oil and does not make use of chillies and tomato.



You will need (serves about 2)


For the seasoning
Oil or butter or ghee: 1/2tsp
1/2 tsp split black gram
1/2 tsp channa dhal 
Cashew nuts 4-5 crushed into pieces (Optional)
1/2 tsp mustard seeds
Curry leaf 1 twig
Turmeric 1/4 tsp
1 big onion finely chopped( optional)
1/2 a green capsicum (washed, chopped fine)
1/2 red capsicum (washed and finely chopped)
Small bunch of cilantro finely chopped
1.5 cup Unpolished/unrefined Sooji or semolina 

Water 3 cups
1 medium sized carrot (washed, peeled and minced/chopped fine)
1 cup of fresh peas
1/4 inch piece ginger (crushed)
Salt to taste
Peppercorns 5-6 crushed and powdered
Jaggary to taste
Grated coconut to garnish.

Method

Take a heavy bottomed pan, add 1/2 tsp oil, (cashew nut), black gram, channa dhal, mustard seeds and wait till mustard seeds pop and the dhals and nut brown evenly. Add turmeric, curry leaf, (onion), green, red capsicum, chopped cilantro and stir till all water is lost. 




In a separate pan boil water, add ginger, pepper, carrot, peas, salt, Jaggary, adjust taste and cook covered till vegetables are tender.







Add unrefined rava/sooji to the seasoning-capsicum mixture and roast with constant stirring, take care to see that the rava doesn't burn/stick to the bottom of the pan. when evenly roasted (colour of Rava changes from a shade of yellow to whitish yellow and you can smell the nice aroma of roasted sooji) it is time to add water and cooked veggies.








Add boiling water with the vegetables to roasted Rava mixture, mix well, turn down the flame and cook covered for 3-5 minutes.



Garnish with grated coconut and serve hot with coconut chutney or yogurt.




Note:

You may include your choice of vegetables.

Amma also makes tasty Uppittu by adding pieces of organic Nendra banana with the skin to the boiling water, cooking it till soft and adding it to roasted rava.

When visiting Egypt, my sister's Atte made a ready to cook version of Uppittu by seasoning and roasting the rava. All we had to do was, boil veggies in an electric rice cooker and add the mix to get delicious Upma!

   

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Beans sambar (step by step) Chilli tomato free

Amma is our inspiration for cooking healthy. Here is a healthy and tasty recipe of Sambar which is one of the first recipes I learnt from Amma. It is different from the normal Sambar as the recipe does not use green chilly/red chilly and tomato which is normally a part of any Sambar.

You will need:

Beans about 250 gm or more
1 cup of toor dhal or any lentil (preferably unpolished) washed, soaked overnight and washed  before use.
Water sufficient quantity
Salt to taste
Jaggary to taste


For the masala

1 tablespoon coriander seeds
1 teaspoon cumin seeds or Jeera
3-4 fenugreek seeds
1/4 tsp peppercorns 
a pinch of hing or Asafoetida
1 teaspoon tamarind pulp
Half a coconut grated or cut into small pieces

Seasoning

Musatrd seeds 1/4 tsp
Unrefined oil 1/2 tsp (I use coconut oil)
Turmeric 2-3 pinches
Curry leaves 5-6


Method

Wash beans and cut its ends. Cut each into 2-3 pieces (or to your liking)
Pressure cook soaked and washed toor dhal with beans and water (approximately double) up to 3 whistles.


In a small cast iron skillet, dry roast (low flame) the spices for masala. Add in the following order- pepper, fenugreek, cumin, coriander. Stir gently till the sweet aroma of toasted spices hits your nose. Now add a drop or two of coconut oil and a pinch of hing or asafoetida. Turn off the flame, stir well.

 Blend coconut, roasted spices, tamarind with a little water till you obtain a fine paste.





Take the cooked lentil and beans from the cooker, transfer into a bigger vessel add salt and jaggary to taste and bring to a boil. Turn down the flame and add the spice-coconut masala, mix well and  adjust taste

.It is time to turn off the flame when you see the Sambar begin to boil at the sides ( this is exactly what Amma showed me when I watched her cook). 



For seasoning heat oil in the skillet, add mustard seeds. when they pop, add curry leaf, turmeric powder, mix well.








 Add to the Sambar, stir well and serve hot with rice, chapati or bread.













Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Capsicum rice


One busy afternoon we were greeted by unexpected guests. I had to quickly make something tasty and that is how this recipe was born.
Though this recipe is simple and easy, it is extremely tasty.

You will need

1 red capsicum
1 green capsicum
1 yellow capsicum
1 tsp cumin seeds
2 teaspoon or less unrefined oil or butter or ghee.
2  cups cooked integral/unpolished rice  ( if possible,add salt when cooking )
Salt to taste.
Juice of half a lemon (optional)

Method

Clean and finely chop/mince capsicum.
Heat a skillet and add oil/ghee/butter.
Add cumin seeds and let it splutter.
Now add capsicum sauté till cooked. Add salt, mix well, add cooked rice, mix.
Turn off heat.
Now add lemon juice if needed. 
Mix and serve hot.
You could use a single coloured capsicum too.





Healthy Bhel puri- Tomato free, Chilli free


Last week my sister, her kids (aged 8 and 5), sister-in-law were all visiting us. In the evening I made this modified version of Bombay bhel. Though it didn't contain green/red chilly, tomato, deep fried sev, everyone thoroughly enjoyed it. My nephew enjoyed assembling the chat and passing it over to all of us to eat.
Here is how I made the chat.

You will need( for about 6 people)

Bhel or puffed rice about 250 g

For the sweet red chutney/ sweet sauce

1/2 tablespoon tamarind pulp/paste
1 fistful of deseeded dates
1 fistful of jaggary
Peppercorns 1/4 tsp (powdered)
Salt about a teaspoon/to taste
1/4 cup water

For the green chutney or green sauce

1 fistful coriander leaves/cilantro
1/2 fistful Pudina/mint leaves
A piece of green capsicum
A piece of ginger
6-10 peppercorns
2 cloves of garlic(if large)

For garnishing

1 medium sized onion finely chopped/minced
1 small green capsicum finely chopped/minced
1 small red capsicum (or a piece) finely chopped/minced
1 fistful coriander leaves and Pudina/mint leaves finely chopped/minced
Pinch of garam masala or chat masala made at home without chilly.
A cup of roasted peanuts or any nut of your choice
Khakra 


Method

Sweet red chutney
Grind all the ingredients for sweet red chutney and add to boiling water. Keep stirring and let the sauce thicken and turn translucent. Keep it aside and let it cool to room temperature.

Green Chutney

Blend all the ingredients mentioned under the green chutney to a paste without adding water and keep aside.






These go into the green chutney





 Bhel, vegetables, green chutney, red chutney, roasted  peanut ready to assemble



Assembling

In a plate sprinkle a tablespoon of  finely chopped vegetables, 1 crushed Khakra, 1 teaspoon peanuts, a teaspoon green chutney , a cup of puffed rice, 1 tsp or more of red chutney and top it with a pinch of chat/ garam masala. Serve immediately.

To eat
Carefully mix all the ingredients in the plate and enjoy a healthy snack!


Note: I didn't know there were two varieties of puffed rice. One is the thicker variety and the other a thinner variety which almost instantly absorbs the liquids and turns soggy. Out of the two packs I picked in a hurry from the supermarket, one turned out to be the second variety and I was surprised how one set of bhel turned soggy soon after assembling. Later my sister- in- law pointed the difference to me.

Though I have not added chillies, the chat tasted hot and spicy due to the raw onions.

You can alter the order and  proportions of the vegetables, chutney, nuts, Khakra, as per the persons liking.