Monday, March 21, 2011

Paneer-Mango Masala


Come summer and I get reminded of the great Indian Mango. This year will be the second summer in a row that I will have missed a yummy bite of the Alphonso. I will make do with the mongo pulp from the Indian store or other fresh Mangoes that come from other parts of the world. For those of you who have a wider choice pick your favourite mango and add a special flavour to this Paneer Mango Masala!

You need:
Grated paneer
Rings of 1 onion
1 tablespoon of ripe Mango slices
Brocolli
2 tsps of Sambhar masala
Turmeric
1 Garam masala
Slices of ginger
Powdered garlic
1 ½ cup whey/ water
1 tablespoon Tomato puree

Refer to my blog on "Homemade Paneer-Indian Cheese" to learn how to make Paneer at home. If you are in a hurry then you could buy Paneer from a store.

Get your ingredients ready and get started. Heat oil in a nonstick pan. Saute the onions well till soft.

Add in turmeric, ginger, garlic, sambhar and garam masalas and tomato puree. Mix well and add in the brocolli. Cook covered on medium flame with a little water so the brocolli is soft.

After about 3 to 4 minutes add the mango slices and paneer. Saute well and cook for few more minutes. If you like the masala to be a little wet then add in water. You might need to cook for about 5 more minutes before you turn off the flame.

You could serve this with dosa, roti or use it as a stuffing for puffs.

Homemade Paneer - Indian Cheese


1.9 litres whole milk
1/4 cup lemon juice
Sieve
Thin cotton cloth/handkerchief
Salt to taste
1 tsp Dried mint - powdered
1 tsp Paprika powder

Bring the milk to a boil. Add the lemon juice slowly while stirring the milk in a circular motion. The milk will start curdling at this point. Turn the stove off. Take a sieve and cover it with a cotton handkerchief. Place this over a deep vessel. Pour the curdled milk over the sieve to collect the paneer. Tightly knot the ends of the cloth so that all the water oozes out. You could also place a heavy vessel on the paneer (which is on the sieve).

Do not discard the whey (the water that remains). It can be used as stock for cooking rice, gravies, soups, etc.

Once most of the whey oozes out add the spices, knead the paneer well. You could use this grated paneer as a stuffing. If you want cubes of paneer then put it back into the cloth, place some weight over it till all the whey is gone and you get a soft but firm block of paneer. Cut into cubes and use.

I haven't tried refrigerating it so far. Once I do that I will post some tips. Till then enjoy this freshly made paneer!! :)

Friday, March 11, 2011

Wat-A-Melon!!! More than just water...

Plot: One of our usual 'arguments' (my husband likes to call them 'fights' to make them sound dramatic!) at home.
Cause: The juicy, beautiful, delicious Waaaterrrrrmelon!!
Question: Why not just drink water instead of taking the trouble to cut a watermelon and play kabaddi with the seeds which ultimately tastes like flavoured water???

For those of you who have had the same question, you might want to give it a rethink.
Here's why:
http://home.howstuffworks.com/watermelon3.htm
http://www.watermelon.org/
 
And now with summer around the corner, Watermelon's might be safely rated "hu-man's best friend"!

Have you ever tried pickling the rind of watermelons or finding a way to turn them into a tasty main course? Do you know how to turn the seeds into tasty chai-time snacks? Please do share them.




Thursday, March 3, 2011

Maahshi


Two of my friends from my German language class and I meet once a week to cook and eat together, to better our German speaking skills, to learn about each others cultures and to simply have fun! One comes from Afghanistan, one from Kurdistan (from North Iraq) and one from India. Maahshi is a speciality from Kurdistan and for this recipe a big thank you to Ashena. She also says that every Kurdish dish has meat in it. And I say its has loads of love and fat! ;)

For the meat and vegetables:
2 Zucchinis
1 Brinjal
2 + 2 Tomatoes
2 Capsicum/ Bell peppers
2 + 2 Onions
2/3 dried whole lemons
3 tablespoons Tomato Puree
Raisins - handful
Minced meat

1. Remove the flesh from the vegetables (Zucchini, 2 Tomatoes, Bellpeppers and Brinjal) and keep aside.
2. In a pan, shallow fry raisins, minced meat, flesh from the vegetables and 2 finely chopped onions in oil for 5 minutes.
3. Fill the mixture from step 2 into the vegetables in step 1.
4. In a mixing bowl take tomato puree, 2 cups of water, salt and pepper and mix well.
5. Take a deep large size cooking pot. Slice 2 tomatoes and 2 onions and place them at the bottom of the pot. Over the slices place the stuffed vegetables. Then pout the tomato puree mixture over the vegetables and cook for approximately 30 minutes over medium flame.
DO NOT mix the contents of the pot at any time since it will break the vegetables.

For the rice:
3 cups Jasmine rice (or of your choice)
Oil
Salt
Water
1- 2 cups Pasta of different shapes and colours
Raisins

1. Wash and cook the rice with some oil, salt and water.
2. In another pan cook the pasta with some oil, salt and water.
3. Garnish the rice by arranging the pasta roughly over rice.

Serve the stuffed vegetables from the first recipe with the rice and pasta preparation with some freshly cut salad.