Monday, September 23, 2019

Those Four Happy Birthdays

2015 
When we were still courting

2016 
This is the cutest picture I have of him.

2017
 At Bombay Canteen to celebrate.

2018
I had decided to spoil him thoroughly.

Happy birthday darling!

Friday, September 20, 2019

Golden Fried Prawns

The serve-ware is a family heirloom. It has sections inside not too high like boxes but perfect to hold fried goodies.

Every time we passed Persian Darbar in Byculla, Arvi would disappear into the restaurant and come back with two hot package that would make it impossible to sit in the car. One of their biryani and the other his favorite snack the Golden fried prawns. He would be drooling all the way back home and would always sit down to enjoy while it was warm.

This is my recipe of making them.

Ingredients

2 tablespoons maida
2 tablespoons besan
a large pinch of salt or to taste
10 large tiger prawns 
Oil to fry

Preparation

The tiger prawns must be deshelled retaining the tails and then deveined. Retaining the tails gives structure to the prawn and aesthetics too.

Make a medium batter with maida, besan, salt and water. It should coat and hold up on the prawn when dipped.

Heat oil in a wok. Dip in batter and coat nicely. Fry to golden. The Prawns when I fried at home always curled a bit but the ones from Persian Darbar would be straight not sure if they put a stick in it while frying and then remove it. However home made tasted fresher and a little nutty with besan is what Arvi said.

He used to eat all and then eat only 2 small phulkas following it for dinner.

I used to make this occasionally unlike other prawn dishes as it depended on the size and the largest are the sweetest and best for Golden fried prawns.

To describe, they should be crunchy on the outside and tender inside with just the right amount of salt to make the sweetness of the prawn shine. For the Indian palate you might need a spicy chutney on the side. Arvi did not need any, he loved them just plain.

Go make some and enjoy


Thursday, September 12, 2019

Lobster Biryani


Lobsters long time ago were my favorite too.  This post is about a Lobster biryani I once made for Arvi. He enjoyed just the white meat from the lobster unlike me, I loved it more when cooked in its shell. Either a Shevndi cha kanji, the Koli style curry or as boiled or boiled and then roasted in the embers. Lobster needs delicate treatment so the simplest versions were my favorite. Arvi too liked the Tatraveli lobster where it is marinated in Jeeru lasan masala and then shallow fried in a pan. 

The main difference when I loved and ate lobsters I enjoyed the really big ones as my maternal uncle brought them for me. He was a supplier of seafood for Taj Mahal Palace Hotel back in those days. Whereas the lobsters that our Fishermonger, Dwarka brought for us were not very large. Arvi did not enjoy the head where as wasting the head was blasphemy for the Koli in me. So Just the white meat cleaned and deshelled look much like a very very large prawn though it wasn't.


Ingredients

10 -15 chunks of lobsters, cleaned
2 tablespoons  Jeeru Lasan Masala
10 onions
1/2 cup oil
2 cups Basmati rice 
1 teaspoon red chili powder
0.5 teaspoon turmeric
0.5 teaspoon ginger paste
3-4 pinches Kashmiri saffron 
1/2 cup milk
1 cup chopped cilantro
salt to taste

Whole garam masala
5-6 cloves
4 green cardamom
2 tej patta
2 black cardamom
10 peppercorns
2 nos X 2 inch sticks of cinnamon 

Preparation

Marinate the cleaned lobsters in Jeeru lasan masala.

3-4 pinches Kashmiri saffron soak in 1/2 cup milk. Let it rest till needed.

2 cups Basmati rice washed and soaked for 30 mins. 

Boil 3 liters of water in a large vessel. Add soaked Basmati rice to it. In a diffuser or tie in a muslin cloth all the whole garam masalas then add it to the cooking pot of rice. Add 1 teaspoon salt. Cook rice al dente. Drain it into a colander. Remove the garam masala diffuser/ pouch.

Peel and chop 10 onions length-wise. Crush them with fingers to separate the segments.

Procedure

Heat oil in a deep pan. Add all the chopped and separated segments of onions into the pan. Keep the flame on high and keep frying onions for 5 mins. Then add 0.5 teaspoon of salt. The salt will help the onions to sweat and help in frying to crisp golden on slow flame. Keep mixing continuously so onions don't char. It will take about 30-40 mins to give you golden fried onions. Remove them on a sieve.

In the remaining oil add two handfuls of golden fried onions and ginger paste. Saute. Follow in with marinated lobsters. Add the red chili powder, turmeric and the chopped cilantro. Splash a couple of handfuls of water on it to avoid burning. Stir fry a bit. Cover and cook for 2-3 mins. Then remove the cooked lobsters in masala on a plate.

Now do the layers. Add half the cooked basmati rice to the pot. In the middle layer the losters in masala. Sprinkle some golden fried onions which we kept aside. Put another layer of cooked basmati rice. Now macerate the saffron soaking the the milk a bit. Distribute the saffron milk over the pot of rice. Again sprinkle the remaining fried onions. Put the lid on and cook for 2 mins on medium flame, reduce the flame to sim and let the pot sit for 10 mins or till you see steam coming out showing that the whole rice is warmed and the flavors are melded.



Served with love and enjoyed with double the amount.

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Prawn Patio

Dhandar and Kolmi No Patio, soul food for a Parsi

Home coming meals are always Dhandar Patio. The ubiquitous combo that features compulsorily on the weekly menu of any Parsi household. A pile of rice covered with yellow dal this in itself  a combo, is called Dhandar. While the vegetarian me enjoy it with papad and pickle my non vegetarian  loving Parsi husband demanded a patio. 

With this post I start a series of meals which my husband enjoyed but I did not post on the blog. Some are very simple and some elaborate. This is to record all the little things that made Arvi happy.

A patio is a sort of a quick pickle made with onion and tomato and any fish. The Prawn patio or Kolmi no Patio being the most favorite among all. So here is the recipe. 

Ingredients

1 cup de-shelled and de-veined prawns
1 onion chopped very fine
1 tomato pureed
1 green chili pounded
2 tablespoon Jeeru Lasan Masala
2 tablespoon oil
optional finely chopped cilantro for garnish.

Preparation

Marinate the cleaned prawns with Jeeru Lasan Masala. Leave it to rest for 10-15 mins. The masala already has salt so no need to add extra. Keeping salt right will help the sweetness of the prawns shine in this dish.

Procedure

Heat oil in a pan. Add the finely chopped onions to the hot oil, follow in with the pounded green chili. Fry until soft. Add tomato puree, let it meld into a paste with the onions. After this add the marinated prawns. Cook till prawns are done but still tender. 

Garnish if you like with finely chopped cilantro. My husband never enjoyed cilantro on his non veg so I skipped it most times.

Note: You will find cookbooks mention the use of vinegar in patio but in homes like ours vinegar did not have much of a presence in cooking except for pickling told my husband. So when vinegar is used, jaggery is added to balance the sourness. my recipe does not need vinegar so eliminates jaggery automatically.

Make this simple lip-smacking recipe and let me know how you like it.

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

Food As Culture

picture credit: Candida Remedios

Darya cha Raja! The King of the sea! Ofcourse the Koli. That's my community, that does fishing. I represented  our food at this conference on Food As Culture. Its the first time ever such a concept is being presented on the academic platform. A brainchild of  Kurush Dalal, son of the legendary Katy Dalal, archaeologist and Parsi caterer, both of which Kurush has inherited in his genes. So you understand his restless at not having a full course at the Mumbai University in this subject.

A phone call from him and I had to agree, in solidarity to his cause. Also how can I refuse a Parsi, I am married to one after all plus our Koli - Parsi association dates back to the early days when Mumbai was built as a city. We the native and they the immigrants that did a lot of good and the way blending into Indian-ness over the 1200 years. He explained to me we were going to discover just that in this conference through what they term as Archaeology, Sociology, History and Ethnography of Food in India.Wow!

So there I was over the weekend of 5th and 6th May at the Kalina Campus of Mumbai University my Alma mater. It looked denser green than I remember from 24yrs ago. The conference hall was quite good with push back chairs and A/c. The conditioning after student life demands a few comforts in this terribly hot and humid summer of Mumbai.

Mugdha Karnik, Director at India Study Centre (Instucen) and Centre for Extra Mural Studies opened the conference elaborating the need for such an event. She pointed out how our eating habits have been shaped by nature and by politics historically and as on today. That set the tone.

Ayurved and Food, the first lecture by Dr. Shailesh Nadkarni, he stressed on eating a meal with several components to give different tastes and get varied nutrients from them. He said Ayurved gives lot of importance to a clean bowels and excreta. Well that is why I never feel bad when some one says, "You know your shit well". We all ought too, it tells you a lot about your health. If you ate fibrous foods like leafy greens they would leave you feeling light. Sticky foods would put a toll on the system, so no curds after 7pm. Desserts after a meal is the colonial influence, not good for health. If the have to be eaten, then eat them as a separate small meal is his recommendation. I have come back to implement some of his teachings, I hope to sustain.

The only PhD in Food History in Mumbai University, that's the recognition that Mohsina Mukadam gets. In this conference she elaborated on the point that politics affects food and enumerated example of World war, Government policies. How food has evolved from being the basic need to cultural significance. She shared some interesting menu boards to the effect. In her second lecture on the tKokani Muslim food she enthralled the audience without a slide deck, sharing her heritage. She talked about food and associated beliefs, like how a mother always sent her daughter with Karanji moulded by hand so that her daughter would return soon again signified by the twisted frill. It was hilarious at the same time to know that a steamed Karanji was made for "Mudya chi Id" or Id for remembrance. Another anecdote that an overstaying Son in law was signaled to leave by serving "Parat ni che ghavavane". There was an uproar of laughter when she taunted at a previous speaker who mentioned that their masala was made with 24-30 ingredients, saying Kokani masala was very simple with very few ingredients still made their curies flavorful and tasty.

Its her dream to see a museum of food related artifacts, utensils and history where food was cooked and served as per timelines in history. Hope we see that happen. She pointed out that we lack a lot in our archival systems and that has to change to make her dream possible.

Next Kurush Dalal took stage and he was in his element. Going back into analysising remnants of history that archaeologists discovered and that decipher information about what people ate and how they lived in the past. He pointed out that in the Indian heat everything decomposes completely so for an archaeogist what is priceless is charred grains and skeletal remains. He talked about how dental structures found in some human remains narates stories of what they ate. How meat tearing affected front teeth and kept them in good condition while grain eating which meant sugar decayed the teeth. How the reconstruction of skeletons proved which bones were developed well and which were not. How squatting was common and the differences in the cranium of a hunter and a gatherer. Such a fun session.

Saee Khandekar talked about grains. She spanned the history of grains, how we ate more millets that were hardy and later the revolution of wheat. It was interesting to know that Barley exsisted in the times of Rug veda and it extolled its goodness for igniting the appetite. Talking about her favorite subject of leavened breads she didn't forget to tell us about the commercial breads that are ridden with unnecessary additives and preservatives making them unworthy of consumption.

Rushina M G mesmerized us with a subject that we love to shun as ordinary and yet no Indian can live without for long, the Dal. But actually I personally don't think of pulses as dals but she did say Lentils so that it is, agree. Lentils whoever thinks is ordinary should listen to this lecture and see what various communities do with these. In all its color, size and shape. The reference of Panchamel dal fed by Jodha rani to Shah Jahan added a starry quotient to the history. Based on it I declare that all modern day mothers whether they teach their sons household duties and cooking or not they must feed Panchamel dal to their sons. Who knows they might not build Taj Mahal for the wife but might love her well and appreciate everything that she does for her.

She later also talked about the Garhwali cuisine which she is married into. The dominance of lentils in their cooking and how varied ways of cooking has inspired her to study dals.

Dietary fats, a much debated topic in modern day. This was the subject of Sid Khullar's presentation. He talked about how in our culture showing love is related to a dollop of ghee served. Some of the images her shared I am sure churned the stomach of people who don't get a peek into kitchen where 'tasty' food is made swimming in butter. The alarming high quantities of Palm oil that is used commercially shook me. I love farsan and my fried munchies, need to correct that. Make your own or get made from controlled sources where better oils are used. He did reco using variety of oils depending on the use. Something I follow myself.

The star of ArchaeoBroma was Raamesh Gowri Raghavan!

On Trail