Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Eggless Chocolate Chip Cookies


Eggless Chocolate Chip Cookies




I felt like baking cookies. But I had never baked them before! Hence, just like any other beginner, cautious yet curious, I looked up for a hassle-free recipe online. I found one which was simple and yielded less number of cookies. I chose it and played with the ingredients as mentioned in it. The result was simply lip-smacking!





Eggless Chocolate Chip Cookies



Why egg-less? 

It was due to a frighteningly terrible memory of having tasted some ghastly cookies with too much egg and very little sugar in them. They were baked by my spouse for the first time! He loves cookies. It was disheartening to see him loose his confidence at baking after that. And so I felt like giving it a shot myself to help him bake his favorites at home by avoiding over-ambitious elements like eggs!






Eggless Chocolate Chip Cookies



Recipe?

This amazingly simple recipe is by Kanan who has it on her blog "Spice Up The Curry" . It's accurate! It did not need any meddling with the quantity of ingredients or time of cooking. I followed all her advice like - flatten the cookies before baking, refrigerate the dough for 30 minutes if soft. 






Eggless Chocolate Chip Cookies



Deviations?

I did deviate from the recipe a bit. I added granulated sugar instead of brown sugar as I did not have it.

Result?

15 crisp & delicious cookies, my increased confidence levels on the baking front and a happy husband! Thanks Kanan!




Sunday, November 9, 2014

Quinoa Potato Cutlets







In an attempt to finish extra boiled quinoa, I began rummaging around in the refrigerator. On finding spinach and boiled potatoes in there, I thought of sticking them all into cutlets! The golden green discs coming off from the pan were too appetizing to be forgotten! 





Ingredients used:

  • 2 Potatoes (boil'em, mash'em!)
  • 2 cups raw Spinach leaves
  • Boiled Quinoa (as per needed or left!)
  • 1/2 finely chopped Onion
  • 2-3 finely chopped Thai chillies
  • Butter/ Olive oil/ Clarified butter
  • Spices
    • Salt as per needed
    • Thyme or Rosemary (as preferred!)
    • Red chili powder (for preferred inferno levels!)
Steps:
  1. Mix all the above mentioned things together.
  2. Taste the mixture and make amends, if necessary.
  3. Shape cutlets and keep them aside.Dip them in cornflour water for the crispy outer layer.
  4. Heat any of the desired oils or butter in a pan and fry/roast these cutlets. Alternatively, brush them with any of the desired oils or butter on both sides and grill them in an oven like normal potatoes are grilled!
  5. They should be crispy golden brown in appearance so as to be fit for serving. Sprinkle lemon juice over them if preferred.
  6. Crunch'em along with a favorite sauce.
Enjoy! 



Saturday, September 6, 2014

Pink Pulao/Pilaf - Tomato Rice




This recipe is my mother-specific. I do not know anyone else who cooks it like she does! Except now for me. I have been calling it Pink Pulao since childhood, simply because of its beautiful pale pink color. And now my whole family calls it so!


Childhood story

There is a short memorable story attached to it. When I was very young, my mother dropped me at one of my aunt's home as she was going out for shopping. My aunt asked my preference for lunch. I requested her to cook pink pulao. She had obviously heard the name for the first time and did not know the recipe! She asked me what all went into it. I told her that it was pink in color and had rice and potatoes in it. This was all that I could recognize in the pulao at that little age! For the rest of the ingredients, she had to depend solely on her imagination. For the pink color, she added red chilly flakes. It did not help much. I asked her to make it more pink. And so she added more chilly! It now looked more pink but did not taste like it should have been. I asked my aunt again, 'Its chilly! And it doesn't taste like it should, please make it like mamma does'! I was hoping that she would be able to make it with the ingredients that I had told her. But I did not know how difficult it would be for her to actually cook something that she had never done before based on pure guesswork!! Tired and confused but still wanting to make it good enough for me, she went into the kitchen for the third time. Luckily, my mother arrived just then! My aunt asked her immediately 'How on earth do you make a pulao pink?' and she narrated the whole 'make it like mamma does' story. 'Oh its the tomatoes!!' told my mother. My aunt just sighed!


Ingredients (Serves 2) :

  • 1 cup(milk mug in this case) white and long grain rice - Basmati preferably.
  • 1 big potato - chopped in chunks.
  • 1 and half vine tomatoes OR 2 roma tomatoes - chopped in chunks.
  • 1/2 an onion - chopped in chunks.
  • 2 green chilies - finely chopped.
  • Fresh coriander leaves - for garnishing.
  • Any other chopped vegetables as preferred - Mushrooms, Cauliflower, Peas.
  • 4 cardamoms - grounded.
  • 4 whole cloves - not grounded.
  • 2 medium sized bay leaves.
  • 1 teaspoon whole fenugreek seeds.
  • 2-3 tablespoon cooking oil.
  • Salt to taste.

Steps:

  1. Wash rice thoroughly and keep it aside soaked in water. Soak it only when you are ready to start cooking and not before that.
  2. Heat cooking oil in a pressure cooker on a medium flame.
  3. When the oil has heated, put fenugreek seeds and bay leaves into it. Wait for them to turn light brown.
  4. Add grounded cardamom and cloves to it. Wait for the cloves to bloat or pop.
  5. Add onions. Saute them until they turn transparent. Do not saute them as much as they are sauted for curries. They should be stiff while turning transparent.
  6. Add chopped chillies and saute them for a few seconds.
  7. Add tomatoes now. Saute until they are little bit tender but not as much tender as for curries.
  8. Now add potatoes.
  9. Remove rice from the water they were soaked in. Either keep the water for cooking or throw it away. Add rice to the cooker.
  10. Pour water 1 & 1/2 times the amount of rice into the cooker. So if the quantity of rice was 1 cup, quantity of water should be 1 and 1/2 cups. Either reuse the water used for soaking or use new.
  11. Add salt to taste.
  12. Stir the mixture and cover the pressure cooker. Bring to pressure over high heat. Heat till one whistle in traditional stainless steel pressure cookers OR for 5 minutes using the PIP method.
  13. Let the pressure come down naturally.
  14. Garnish with coriander and serve it hot with curd, pickles or butter.
Enjoy!

Monday, December 2, 2013

The Evergreen Palak Paneer




I wanted to try my new Cuisinart food processor and see it chop, grind, puree for the first time. This was the actual inspiration behind making palak paneer!


I tried Tarla Dalal's palak paneer recipe yesterday and found the resulting dish to be tasting as one of the best I have ever cooked! Click here to quickly jump over to Tarla Dalal's recipe.

Deviations?

As I did not have any cream, I added a quarter cup of milk instead in the last step by heating it first before adding, and it still tasted great!

Margin notes

I usually saute ginger-garlic before onions. But this recipe required me to put them after sauteing onions a bit(till they become translucent). I was reluctant before doing so because I was afraid that garlic-ginger may not be fully sauteed! But I stuck to the recipe and they did not trouble me at all!

Results?

Dear Mr. Food Processor, you rock! You are powerful yet silent! You did some fine chopping of onions, making puree of tomatoes and spinach, all within seconds! The puree of spinach was brilliant green in color and soft in texture, which enhanced the taste of palak paneer further. Whats more? My husband was licking his fingers and praising me for my cooking skills before my parents-in-law. Yay!