Dum Aloo Bong Style when offered to deity as bhog during
puja/festival is cooked without onion and garlic but is one of the front
runners in taste and flavour amongst all the vegetarian dishes. The beauty of
the dish lies in the fact that it’s cooked sans onion and garlic which aids the
bursting of flavours of various spices like cumin seeds, cardamom, cinnamon,
bay leaf, asafoetida, whole red chillies, ginger etc in every mouthful. The
dish pairs brilliantly with luchi/puri, pulao, jeera rice, roti/parantha. Cook
this Bengali ‘Aloor Dum’ whether festival or no festival, occasion or no
occasion and see the beauty of simplicity in the dish. It’s a very easy and
quick dish, no hazards, no exotic ingredients but an amazing result in three simple steps. The cooking medium should essentially be mustard oil and nothing
else.
"Cookery is not chemistry. It is an art. It requires instinct and taste rather than exact measurements." ~ Marcel Boulestin
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Showing posts with label Vegan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vegan. Show all posts
Monday, 25 July 2016
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
Aloo Posto (Potatoes In Poppy Seeds/Khus Khus Paste)
Today I’m posting a dish which can be called the soul-food
of Bengal . 'Aloo Posto' or Potatoes in
Khuskhus/Poppy Seeds Paste is some thing with which I’m sure every Bong can
connect with. Whichever part of the world may a Bong live in, he/she is bound
to have a soft corner for ‘Aloo Posto’. A Bengali platter is never complete
without it. It’s one of the easiest and simplest of dishes that I know of but
the taste …can any vegetarian dish beat it in taste? It’s without onion and
garlic, requires the minimum of ingredients but those who haven’t tasted it must make it today to fall in love with the quintessentially Bong ‘Aloo Posto’.
ATypical Bong Platter of Aloo Posto, Masoor Dal(Lentils), Plain Rice |
Tuesday, 10 May 2016
#Summer Cooler Recipe 4 ~ Kancha Aamer Chutney/Kacche Aam ki Chutney (Raw Mango Chutney)
Summer Cooler Recipe 4:
‘Knacha Aamer Chutney’ or raw mango chutney is an all time
Bong favourite. A lunch or dinner accompanied with a fingerlickingly delicious
chutney specially on Sundays is what we call a Bong signature meal. Our family
is no exception to this. Whatever delicacies may I cook, a chutney/aumbol/tok and mishti doi must mark the end of our Bong
meal. I am sure most of you love raw mango chutney too. So here I am with the
recipe of raw mango chutney the Bong way…..
Friday, 15 April 2016
#Summer Cooler Recipe 3 ~ Melt-In-Mouth Lauki Muttar (Bottle Gourd With Green Peas)
Summer Cooler Recipe 3
This is the third in this series of summer cooler recipes
that is becoming quite regular in my kitchen nowadays. It is another healthy,
easy and fit for summer recipe yet extremely delicious to make you addicted to
it. It’s flavourful, melt-in-mouth, without onion and garlic and cooks so fast,
a perfect dish to provide you respite from this gruelling heat, at the same
time being easy on your stomach. Bottle gourd/Lauki and muttar/peas are
combined with some flavourful whole spices and pressure cooked to give a
brilliant result. Try it out today….
Monday, 11 April 2016
#Summer Cooler Recipe 2: Seem Baingan (Flat Beans With Brinjal/Aubergine)
Summer Cooler Recipe 2
This is the second in the series of summer cooler recipes that I have been posting. It is a very simple and easy-to-cook recipe ready in 7-10 minutes saving you the trouble of staying in the kitchen for long hours in this heat. This is a vegan recipe with the least number of ingredients and without onion and garlic. The dish is healthy as well as delicious slightly on the sweeter side and can be relished with either roti/ Indian bread or rice.
Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Tomato Khajur Aampaapad Chutney (Khejur Aamshottor Chutney)
During the winter months this is a must accompaniment with
lunch at home specially in the weekends. Though much loved for its perfect
combination of sweet and sour taste with an extra bit of tickle for your tongue
because of the addition of dry red chilli, it’s pretty easy to make and gets
ready in a jiffy. The zing attributed to the dish comes mainly from two
ingredients dates/ khajur and aam paapad or aamshotto, the Bong name given to
dried leather of mango pulp and sugar syrup. I always have a stock of aamshotto
handy in my fridge for this chutney and for those depressing times to eat just
like that. Often having just a slice of aamshotto uplifts my mood. So whenever
I chance to go to C.R.Park I pick up quite a few of them.
Monday, 30 November 2015
Vegetable Croquettes/Chops
Vegetable Croquette or Bhegitabil chop as we Bongs lovingly
call it is a recent request from a very dear friend. She wanted a very easy and
simple recipe. So Reshmi the simplest way to make this delectable, all time
favourite snack is here for you. Though I knew the main ingredients but always
have this habit of calling up Maa to ensure them. I followed the process she
told me over the phone. Beetroot, carrots and potatoes are the vegetables
generally used for the stuffing, but you can add other veggies like beans, peas
if you desire. These crispy, delish croquettes are a delightful nosh with a cup
of tea in the winter evenings with the obvious accompaniment of Bong Adda….
Vegetable Croquettes |
Sunday, 22 March 2015
Sukha Chatpata Aloo (Spicy Dry Potatoes Sans Onion And Garlic)
What do you do when you have nothing in the refrigerator to
treat a surprise guest at your place? Yes, if you have only a few potatoes
lying somewhere in the kitchen, you can serve a delightful meal with hot pooris
and sukha chatpata aloo. I thought this post would be all the more apt with
the Navaratras on because this delicious spicy potato is sans onion and garlic.
It requires minimum time and fewer ingredients, everything that is readily
available in the kitchen and is totally hassle free.
Sukha Chatpata Aloo |
Thursday, 19 March 2015
Rava Kesari (Golden Semolina)
Rava Kesari is a delicious South-Indian sweet dish mainly in
Tamil Nadu and Karnataka made usually on religious festivals or auspicious
occasions. This is the simplest of desserts that can be made and one of the
regulars in my kitchen. The addition of saffron or kesar, the most expensive
spice in the world makes the dish breathtakingly beautiful and gorgeous.
Naturally it conquered the hearts of Indians from other parts of the country as
well, gained fame and is now loved all over India . Though the golden semolina
is thought to be most befitting as an offering to the Almighty, you can treat
this vegetarian dessert to your guests too any time because it’s so easy
to make and is ready in a jiffy.
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