Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Street Food & Improvised Oven


Design Sense: India's pride, the world's envy

Oven design

The “nankathaiwalas” of Delhi are pretty well known, and popular. On their carts, using their  improvised ovens,  generally they bake fresh, crisp “nankathais”—cookies if you will—on the spot. If you happen to bump into one of them before 2 pm, you can see them make the cookies, using no more than a broken end  of a serving spoon (karhchi) as a mould, and the mix that they have prepared and brought in tins that would have held 16 litres of  oil or vanaspati. The 16-litres tins themselves are called “pipa” !

The rest of the day, they sell the kathais that are ready and kept. One of the boys selling them told me that people rarely have the patience or time to see them being made. They are content to hurriedly buy the quantity they want, and move on. But yes, they want to taste and see if the kathais are warm and crisp from the outside, and soft inside. So, the oven is “on” all day.

I was surprised to discover that there is nothing uniform about these kathaiwalas’ ovens. Before I began this blog, and started clicking pictures, I had seen one wherein he used two tawas, a frying pan that had seen better days, and two thirds of the cylindrical part of tin cans in which Dalda, a popular brand of vegetable fat, used to be sold.

But I "borrowed " a picture of one guy using a tin, but not of Dalda :(  .
Tin-based "oven"


  The above picture is thanks to Chowder Singh


Then I noticed one nankathaiwala, whose “oven” was made of an old tyre  and hubcup, and I posted  some pictures .
Tyre-based "oven"


Yesterday, my husband saw one nankathaiwala, whose oven design left us totally impressed.  It looks like a chimney…and it looks like the old copper bath water heater, a hamaam. It also looks a bit like the “sigris” of Himachal. And possibly like an unpainted  post box, the kind used in India, but chopped off from the bottom.

Take a look… starting from the one right on top.. if only for the design sense that has gone into it.







Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Tandoori Soyachops, dry or in gravy


Rich in protein, the vegetarian  chicken

Soyachops, the vegetarian "tandoori chicken" !


Ask  any old resident of Chandigarh the name of a veg dhaba that serves the best food, and most you are most likely to hear the name of Swaran Dhaba in Sector 30.

It  was exactly the way my Balu Uncle and Radhu Aunty described it. Your uncle would rather eat there everyday if he could, she would say. My stomach is aching because I haven’t eaten there all these days, he would say. 

On my first visit, I learnt what was special about a tiny place operating from two booths in a lowly market. The food. Fresh as fresh can be, and unmatched taste. The menu was limited then, 35 years ago. It is unchanged even now !

It was always a bit pricey for  the dhaba food. But those who ate once did not mind that and returned and returned and returned. They also recommended the place. So much so that even 30 years ago, if one did not reach latest by 1 in the afternoon, there would be no food left. And always one has to wait for a while to get a seat ! Bournville is not the only edible thing that has to be earned.

Uncooked Soyachops
What reminded me about Swarn dhaba as I write this post, is the fact that on Tuesdays when many places , this one included, don’t cook non-veg, they make what is known as Soyachops, spelt by many as Soyachaps. 

The idea of protein rich soya wound around the stick of a stick ice-cream, and shaped to look like the leg of a chicken/broiler, must have had its origins in Punjab. But Swaran Dhaba cooked it real rich, full of cashew nutes and raisins, apart from a whole lot of other masalas, obviously the “karchi “ (long ladle) had been “chalaoed”—moved around—quite a bit to make the gravy that delectable. If one wants that once in a week dish, one has to reach there in very good time!


Last week I saw the soyachaps  soaked in water, and kept next to the huge chunks of cottage cheese at  the Haryana Paneer Bhandar in Chandni Chowk. I bought it, and decided to make it tasty without making it as rich as what Swaran Dhaba did.

Soyachops in marinade
In a quarter kilo, there were seven pieces, that I marinated  together, but cooked in two different ways. One was a plain tawa-fried soyachops, and the other tandoori soyachops in tomato-onion gravy.

Here goes the list of ingredients and the process:
For the marinade:
Yoghurt-1 cup
Ginger-1 inch piece
Garlic-4 pods
Pepper corns- a few
Salt-to taste



A foil bit gives it a handle

Grind the above fine in a blender, dip each soyachop into this sauce, till they are coated fully, and arrange in a container. 

Pour the leftover marinade over the chops and refrigerate overnight.

Before cooking, wrap the “ice-cream stick” portion not covered with soya, with aluminium foil so that it does not burn. Do that will all the soyachaps.




For the gravy:



Vegetables for gravy


Onion-1 large, chopped
Tomato-1,chopped
Capsicum-1,chopped
Green chillies-1 chopped fine
Ginger- Half inch, chopped fine
Salt to taste
Red chilli powder-1 teaspoon
Vegetable oil-3 teaspoons






Tawa fried soyachops
METHOD:

FOR DRY  TAWA-FRIED CHOPS

Heat a  tawa, add oil all around. When it smokes, place three chops in the centre of the tawa, and drizzle oil over. Gently turn the chops around after every three minutes, till they are golden and crisp.
Take them off on to a serving plate, and have with green chutney and slices of onions.





Gravy in the making
FOR THE CHOPS IN GRAVY



Heat some oil in a frying pan, and add the onions, ginger, green chillies, capsicum and tomatos in that order.

 Add salt and red chilly powder. Stir well. 

When the tomatoes look cooked and musy, pour the marinade in the container, into the pan, stir well. 


Tandoori soyachops



Meanwhile, grill the marinated chops with the foil handles, in an electric oven or over a gas /charcoal tandoor or BBQ . 

Take care to turn them around, so that they are uniformly cooked.

When the gravy is almost ready, gently place the  grilled chops into this gravy. 




Tandoori Soyachops  simmering in a light gravy

Stir once, so that all the chops are coated. Let them simmer for a few minutes, till the gravy has thickened such that the chops are all coated with it.

Serve by itself, as a snack. Or with rotis, as a side.

My husband looked at them very reluctantly, because they looked like kalami kababs or chicken legs. But when he ate one, he asked for more. “ I wish they had shaped it differently” was his comment.
But I know many like it because they are shaped like chicken legs !


A protein rich wholesome meal. Totally vegetarian


Sunday, October 28, 2012

Almond Biscotti. Simple, the Donna Hay way


Biscotti dipped in coffee tastes out of this world

Almond Biscotti, home made

The first time  I ate an almond  biscotti dipped in a lovely, steaming cup of coffee was at a café in an  airport. I loved the experience.

A few days ago, a friend made the biscotti, and it turned out almost like the one at the airports. I could not wait to try my hand at it, but there was a bit of a delay. I decided to go with the general thing of not using eggs during the Navaratras !

Today, I made it for the first time…and it was not bad for the first time. More so given that I was in a hurry, impatient, and had many things…but nothing would make me defer the biscotti. I followed the Donna  Hay recipe that seemed simple.

The result was not bad, given that….yes, the electricity failed 15 minutes after the “log” had gone into the oven preheated to 160 degrees C ! I quickly moved it on my old faithful…the gas tandoor, and took it off when the  air in the kitchen suggested that something was  on the verge of burning !

But the electricity was back by the time I had to put the slices into the oven—biscotti, I read, means twice baked. The second time, I said my prayers and kept my fingers crossed, hoping that the power would not let me and my biscotti down. The prayer actually worked .

Ingredients, and first lot of steps

The ingredients were just what the recipe mentioned, but I probably speeded up some of the processes. It was difficult to slice the “log” into 5 mm slices. I forgot to do it diagonally ! The bottom of the log was a bit burnt. But it tasted good, and the texture was great.

Try it..if nothing else, because it is simple. Show the patience that I did not.

Ingredients:
Plain flour (maida) –2 cups
Eggs 3
Sugar-3/4 cup
Almond slivers(I used bits) ¾ cup
Vanilla extract-1 and a half spoon
Baking powder-1 and a half spoon

Process

Mix the flour, baking powder, sugar,almonds and vanilla , add the eggs and blend with your hand into a nice dough. It gets sticky very easily. Just bear with it. On a dusted board , shape it like a log. I used some of the flour to dust the top too.


Bake,cool, and slice to bake again

Bake in a preheated oven (160 degrees C) for 35 minutes, switch off, and cool outside the oven. Before it gets cold, slice it , and bake the slices, for 3 to 5 mins, reducing the temperature from 160 to 100 degrees C, after two minutes.

Biscotti is "twice baked"



The biscottis are ready. Cool, and store. Serve with coffee.

Home made Almond Biscotti



Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Sarson ka Sag/Cream of Mustard


Seasonal delicacy & King of winter food

Sarson da sag with paranthas and pickles


It is that  time of the year when the countryside in Punjab, as indeed many states of North India, are lush green with the big leaves of mustard, that will transform the place into brilliant yellow when the flowers bloom in a month or so. Remember that scene of Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, where Kajol and Shah Rukh Khan romace in mustard fields? The signature scene of DDLJ is a hit not just with those who love films and romance, but also food.

Mustard leaves

The characteristic, aromatic and pungent taste and flavor of the mustard leaves, is a cultivated taste.A colleague often uses just a touch of the crisp leaves, shredded real tiny, in salads and raitas, with fantastic result.

An all-time favourite dish in North India is sarson ka sag—mustard greens cooked with a few things, and pressed and crushed with a “math”—a large-sized pestle—until  the moss green puree acquires a creamy texture. 

It is eaten with dollops of white  home made butter as a side with makki ki roti—rotis made of  golden coloured , a bit coarse corn flour. This flour is yet to be seen this season, but I could not wait for that to buy the mustard leaves and make sarson ka sag, and eat it with some plain paranthas, and pickles.

Spinach

Every family in Punjab has its own little tricks when making this sag—which is often made in huge quantities, partly because it keeps well—for a week in the fridge, and much longer in the freezer, unless it is polished off  at once—and largely because it is a bit labourious. Instead of making small quantities often, it makes more sense for women to  labour one full day, and make lots, sometimes for extended family, friends, neighbours et all. The dish after all, is the celebration of winter, no less.




Chopped Mustard leaves

The labour involved is largely cleaning and chopping, though if one is lucky, now a days, the man or woman selling the sag, will also chop them for you, using either an “dantri”, or a mini-version of a fodder chopper.

In the old days when it used to be cooked in a terracotta gadvi—urn—on a wood fired chulla, it would take all day…slowly get done. Now a days, an hour in the pressure cooker, followed by some fine mashing, some more cooking, and it is ready. But even this is more laborious than  most other dishes.


Malvinder Kaur, mother of  auto-expert and friend Kishie Singh, who lived to be almost a hundred, would ensure I got a carrybag of the cooked sarson ka sag,  that she grew in her garden in Kansal. She shared her love’s labour with others she was fond of too. I was the daughter she adopted very late in her life. Many times she told me that the iron content and fibre content in the sag, along with the peg of whisky she downed after sunset, was the secret to her healthy “almost a 100, darling”.

I follow a recipe that I learnt from Beejee, my friend Nirupama Dutt’s mother—though I have always got my  fair share of  mother’s love from her. Before she passed away, she ensured I would be given her Grandma’s chair, a comfortable and exquisite piece of furniture, though she had seven children who were also eyeing it. It was delivered at my place almost five years after she left us, and now occupies a pride of place at my home in Chandigarh. Beejee’s name was  Kusum Dutt. One of her many talents was her excellent food—a touch of  imagination and innovation thrown into the traditional. I remember her often. Every time I make the sarson ka sag, I wonder whether she would approve of the way I’d made it. Of course, like most home cooks, and good ones at that, she never counted the bunches of this or that, and went with what was available…

Ginger,green chillies & garlic are cooked with the greens
Ingredients:

Mustard leaves – 3 bunches
Spinach-1 bunch
Bathua-1 bunch( was not available the day I made this first sag of the season)
Methi-1 bunch
Ginger—4 inch piece
Green chillies-10 or 12
Garlic-10-12 pods
Dhania seeds-1 teaspoon
Salt-to taste

Mustard oil—1 tablespoon
Makki ka atta—2 heaped tablespoons
Sugar or jiggery —one teaspoon equivalent

Chopped onions/tomatoes-- for added "tadka" is altogether  optional.

Method: Clean and chop the greens , giner, green chillies,and garlic pods, dhania seeds mix them well, and put them in a large pressure cooker, with about one tall glass (250 ml) of water, and pressure cook for an hour – bring the flame to sim when you hear the first whistle.

Switch off, let the pressure come down. This will take almost 20 minutes. Open the lid, put the dry makki ka atta, and using a math or madani, press and mash the greens with the atta, nicely. It is quite an exercise !


Now drizzle the mustard oil, and mix well. Take the cooker back on to the flame, and without the lid, cook for about 10-15 minutes, so that the atta is not raw, the sag is well blended. Now add salt according to taste, and then the sugar or jiggery, stir well.

Sag with a drizzle of ghee on top
The sag is ready. A generous pouring of ghee on top will suffice, but you can jazz this up with onions and tomatoes sauted in ghee, or even simple jeera and hing (asofeatida) , tempered in ghee.

The butter/ghee in this will never be “too much” for the figure conscious/health conscious. The greens are so, so rich in fibre, among other things, that the richness of butter and ghee will be taken care of .






Serve with plain roti/paranthas/makki ki roti/missi roti… or even one or the other variety of  puries. Enjoy !

PS : Many families now do a partial cooking of the sag, cool it, put it in the blender, add the dry makki ki atta, and blend it fine. I however like the texture that comes only when it is mashed with a madani, the traditional way. A mixer/blender does it too fine, however briefly we may use it.

The sarson ka sag is enough to lift this spartan meal