Showing posts with label Curry Leaves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curry Leaves. Show all posts

Monday, October 12, 2009

Thick Poha Chivada


Chivada (Mixture) in general is weak point for all most everyone i guess :) This one is very common preparation we end up preparing. Even more than one with thin poha (though i like that one too).

Chivada
Ingredients
2 Cup Thick Poha
2.5 Spoon Red Chilli Powder
1/4 Spoon Sesame Seeds
1/4 Spoon Jeera
1/2 Cup Peanuts
1/4 Cup Pootane Daal(Chanaa Daal)
1.5 Spoon Sugar
7-8 Curry Leaves
4 Spoon Cashews
4 Spoon Raisins
1/4 Spoon Mustard
A pinch of Asafoetida
Salt to taste
Oil

Method
  • Roast jeera and sesame seeds over low flame for around 3-4 minutes
  • Dry grind jeera, sesame seeds and sugar to form fine powder
  • In a big pan, mix the above powder, 2 spoon of red chilli powder, cashews, raisins and salt to taste. Mix well
  • In a pan heat oil over medium flame
  • Fry pohas in small batches by adding them in another strainer (steel or aluminium one) which is dipped in the hot oil
  • Drain them on the kitchen towel and keep adding them to the above masala mixture when 2-3 batches are on towel. Mix well
  • When pohas are fried completely, strain out the remaining oil and heat it in a pan (around 2-3 spoon)
  • Fry groundnut till they turn reddish in it. Keep them aside.
  • In same oil, add mustard and let it splutter.
  • Add Asafoetida, curry leaves and futaane daal(chanaa daal) and roast it for around 2 minutes.
  • Add in fried groundnuts and remaining 1/2 spoon of red chilli powder and add this mixture to the chivada mixture prepared earlier. Mix well.

Notes
Use litte oil at a time and add some more oil when half way though. The oil turns black after frying poha, so it would help in reducing the remaining quantity that we need to throw away.
Using strainer helps in taking out pohas easily after they are fried.
I drained the fried pohas over kitchen towel so that it can soak out oil, but one must make sure to transfer them to masala mixture when it is warm and before it cools down

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Thursday, October 9, 2008

Katachi Aamati


This one is prepared using the remaining water from the daal that is used to cook the Puran and puran itself. The aamati is sweet and sour in taste and goes amazingly well with the puran poli.

Katachi Aamati
Ingredients
2 Cup Water from Cooked Chana Daal
1/2 Cup Puran
1/2 Cup Jaggery
2 Spoon Tamarind
1 Spoon Corriander Seeds
1 Spoon Jeera
1/2 Spoon Mustard
1 Spoon Red Chilli Powder
4 Spoon Grated Coconut
15 Curry Leaves
Salt to taste
Oil

Method
  • Soak tamarind in a cup of water and keep aside.
  • Heat a spoonfull of the oil and add corriander seeds and jeera.
  • Add grated coconut and fry the mixture till golden in colour.
  • In a mixie, add this coconut mixture along with tamarind. And grind to smooth paste. Keep aside
  • Heat another half spoon of oil and let mustard splutter in it.
  • Add curry leaves and fry for a minute
  • Add the tamarind - coconut paste and fry for another minute
  • Add the red chilli powder and saute for another minute.
  • Add daal water, puran and jaggery. If needed add more water if it lookss thick.
  • Add salt to taste and bring it to boil. Serve the sweet and sour curry with puran polis

Notes
You can use normal water if you do not have cooked daal water left over.
For preparing puran refer to Puran Poli recipe.

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