#Matarkachori

I am a south Indian however have grown up eating kachoris , thanks to Dad 🙂 . I have relished so many kachori’s that I was averse to it from over years now. I basically had decided I know how that tastes and had passed the verdict and it never featured on my wish list . One day we colleagues were getting back from a meeting and stopped at a kachori joint . I didn’t order for one as usual but was amazed by the varieties and decided to take a bite , what harm eh? There I bit into this piece of heaven and I devoured it . Later I learnt about the matar kachori and decided to try my hands on them one day .

IMG_6470Let me set the ambience , imagine crispy yummy piping hot kachori in a Bangalore weather . Heaven isnt it? Below is the recipe

Ingredients

For The Dough 

2 cups Maida / plain flour

1/4 cup melted Ghee or oil ,(ghee gives an amazing flavor J)

Salt as per taste

Oil for frying

For The Green Pea/Matar stuffing

2 cups Green Peas/Matar

1 tsp chopped Green Chillies

1 tsp grated Ginger

2 tbsp Oil

1/2 tsp Nigella Seeds /Kalonji

2 tsp Fennel seeds /Saunf

2 Bay Leaves /Tejpatta

1 tsp chilli powder

1 tsp garam masala

3 to 4 tbsp finely chopped coriander/Dhaniya leaves

salt to taste

How to make the Dough :

 Combine all the ingredients for the Dough in a bowl along with enough water and knead for about 5 minutes into a soft dough. Once done keep it aside for 15 minutes covered in a wet muslin cloth.

How to make the Green Peas Stuffing :

Combine the peas, chillies and ginger in a mixer and blend to a coarse mixture without using any water. Keep aside.

Now heat the oil in a deep pan(I use non stick) , add the nigella seeds, fennel seeds, bayleaves and green peas mixture, mix well and cook on a slow flame for 6 to 7 minutes, while stirring occasionally.

Once its about 7 minutes add the chilli powder, garam masala, coriander leaves and salt, mix well and cook on a medium flame for another minute, while stirring occasionally. The bay leaves can be discarded as it has already imparted the flavour and is not a good idea to use as stuffing J .

Its time to roll the dough now! Here our creativity is key while the standard kachori is circle and about 2.5 to 3 dia circle , I advise you can stuff it the way you want and play with it . The regular way is to keep the dough in the centre , seal it tightly (imagine the modak shape) , remove the excess dough and roll the kachori carefully so that the peas masala does not spill out. This can be tedious for beginners but trust me after making 2 or 3 we get into the rhythm. The kachori is now ready to be fried, heat oil in a deep frying pan and fry the kachori for approximately 6 to 7 minutes and remove it into a tissue so that it absorbs the excess oil. The next step is my favourite just eat and feed the others.

This is one of the simplest and tasty recipe I follow. Alternatively the peas stuffing can be mixed with the atta/Wheat Flour to make rotis too and that is the healthy alternative . It tastes equally good minus the guilt factor of eating oily snack if you know what I mean 😉

#HappyEating

 

#nankhatai #indiancookies

Its a cloudy Sunday and all I wanted to do today was laze . All set to do exactly nothing I started whiling away time and something struck me and decided to bake. I didn’t want to bake a cake as I didn’t have all the necessary ingredients and nay! I ain’t going out to shop so decided to make something with all the the ingredients at home  . Nankhatai told my brain , a recipe I have been wanting to try from the time the baking bug bit me . By the way this is my first attempt at blogging a baking recipe , so am nervous …

FullSizeRender-5Nankhatai is nothing but Indian cookies that are mostly served as tea time snacks and available in most shops. Kids love them too.. Well! I wanted to make them on my own and then the experiment started .

Recipe:

Ingredients :

  • 1 cup maida or all purpose flour
  • ¼ cup besan/gram flour
  • ½ tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tbsp sooji/fine rava
  • ½ tsp cardamom/Elaichi powder
  • ½ cup icing sugar / powdered sugar, this can be increased/decreased as per taste
  • ½ tbsp dahi or yogurt
  • ½ cup ghee
  • 1 to 2 tbsp milk
  • few cashews

Method:

Sift the dry ingredients : Maida, Besan, baking powder ,baking soda and keep them aside. I mixed them well using a spoon however only sifting is good too.

Whisk sugar and ghee using a blender(I use a hand blender) until it is creamy . Add dahi to the mixture and blend again. Once that is done add the dry ingredients that is ready along with rava, cardamom powder , milk and mix well and make it a dough . I used the blender and kneading is not needed for this mixture. Once it is ready ,  we can roll them into the shapes we want (I chose the circular ones) and put a cashew each on the cookies (See below)

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For baking preheat the oven at 180 c and bake the cookies for over 20 minutes. Remove them once they are turning golden in colour. I let the first round bake to golden however wanted it more brown so the second round kept it for longer 🙂 . Choice is entirely yours. Now all you have to do is store them in an air tight container and savour with chai especially when it is raining ..Enjoy I say 🙂

Please note : 20 to 25 mins is good for an oven , if you are using a convection microwave , the time will vary which will be over 30 minutes, it is advisable to keep an eye post 20 minutes .

 

#kallepori #Bhel

After my regular Sunday Cubbon park time I was stepping out of the park when I saw an old lady unpacking a huge sack near the gate. Very curious I peeped to see what was she trying to unwrap and realised she was preparing to sell kalle pori as she referred them to(Bhel ). I was stumped as I love bhel and i had never seen anything like this before , she read my expression and jumped in to clarify that this was “wheat Bhel” . My happiness knew no bounds 🙂 (Oh!yes , these small things do make me very happy) . She had this north karnataka accent, was very humble and she was talking to the right person as I cant stop myself from trying anything new . Before I realised I asked her how much and bought one litre of it and parted with the cash and walked away…

Once I reached home I inspected the treasure I had with me , this thing was three times the size of the regular Bhel and the puffs were cream in colour  . She had told me “madam you can do oggarane with it “, she meant to say that I can temper(tadka) it and savour . I stored  it carefully in an airtight container .  I woke up this morning to a raining Bangalore and I had this urge to munch on something healthy during the day .. Something which is guilt free . So I prepared this .

Recipe: I added a spoon of olive oil into the wok and when it heated added mustard , dry red chillies , peanuts , turmeric powder , asafoetida and sautéed .. Once I felt it was ready I put the stove off and added red chilly powder and mixed it . Finally added the puffed wheat corns into the mixture and voila you get to see the result and it tasted yummy too . I didn’t add salt to this as I didn’t feed the need to … What better way to enjoy the Bangalore weather? 🙂

PS: you can make this with the regular bhel and corn flakes too 🙂 image1.JPG