Have you ever had something that you knew was perfect your way? No matter what the textbooks, teachers, experts or even old aunties claimed? Well in my case, many things fall in this category including this Marinara sauce. Now this is not blind faith - it’s a belief system that has evolved over many painstaking trial and error sessions. It is also a result of the fact that international recipes sometimes call for ingredients that are not readily available here. Or plain and simple – you try to make the best of the ingredients that ARE available to you! If that means cutting open a packet of Dabur Tomato Puree in the final stages and finishing the sauce with some Maggi Hot and Sweet sauce – then so be it! The final results are a fantastically chunky sauce with a robust tomato and garlic flavor. Dress it with some good quality olive oil and you’ve beaten the store bought sauces 10-1. With odds like this, ‘my way’ seems a lot more comfortable than the highway no?
Showing posts with label Tomatoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tomatoes. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Friday, April 5, 2013
Baingan Bharta (Indian Spiced Aubergine/ Eggplant Mash)
Baingan Bharta is something that I was introduced to seven years ago. (Basically, ever since I started working and it was de rigueur to have lunch in the office cafeteria!). The cafeteria food sucked. And day after day it was pure torture to let the undercooked, over spiced, all-round-sad food enter our mouths. I could have opted to take a lunchbox from home, but it was just too much work in the morning. (Besides, in those days I thought I was too cool for a lunch box!). So it was almost a godsend when a little Dhaba (highway or roadside restaurant; very popular in the North of India) opened up next to office. This was run by a Punjabi family who served home style meals at a modest price. (Which suited our pockets just fine!). They had a fixed menu written on a black board everyday and fixed quantities that would run out if you reached later than 1:30 pm. So we religiously moved our lunch break to 12:30pm and ensured we got the pick of the loot. He made Baingan Bharta every Tuesday and every North Indian worth their salt would be queued up to order it. I thought it looked pedestrian really – bowl of red-yellow mash of aubergines. Give me my Matar Paneer anyday! Then it happened eventually…one day I was forced to order the Baigan Bharta because the Paneer ran out. And the rest as they say is history!
I love the smokey flavor of the aubergine and the tang of the tomato. Someone really worked on getting the ingredient combo right! Every region or house in India has their own secret recipe for Banigan Bharta so I can’t really claim that this is the best or the most authentic. But my dear cook Kumudh has churned this out atleast once every week for the past three years – so rest assured that it’s good. (I had to beg her for the recipe and only after telling her that it’s going to go on the ‘Computer’ did she allow it). So all credit to Kumudh for this one – she monitored me like a hawk when I made it!
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Masala Fried Fish with Salad Nicoise-ish
If there is a French person reading this, I apologize for turning a perfectly authentic salad on its head. If there is a person on a diet reading this, I apologize for luring you in here with a salad and then saying it’s topped with ‘fried’ fish. The original recipe calls for tuna, which I replace with fried sear fish. (Go ahead and grill yours, if you want to be on the safe side of the scales). I also omit boiled green beans and add fried croutons instead for crunch. (Blasphemy, I know). At this stage you might understand why I called it ‘Nicoise-ish’. Should I have just called it ‘fusion food’? Or should I have called it ‘things I like to eat’? Like Shakespeare said, ‘a rose by any other name would smell as sweet'. Now, who are we mere mortals to argue with that kinda logic, right? It’s a fantastic meal in one and looks so freaking amazing. That said, I love this version of Salad Nicoise (Nee-sh-wah) more than the original! Gasp Gasp :P.
Masala Fried Fish with Salad Nicoise
Prep time: 15 mins
Marinating time: 1 hr
Cooking time: 15 mins
Serves: 4
What you need:
For the Masala fried fish:
4 steaks (400 gms) Sear Fish/ any white fish (1 inch thickness)
½ tsp Turmeric
2 Tbsp Chili Powder (or according to taste)
½ tsp Ginger Garlic paste
Salt
Oil for frying
For the Salad Nicoise:
1 big Cos Lettuce, (rinsed and well dried)torn into shreds
4 Tomatoes, chopped
3/4th cup sliced Black Olives
4 hard Boiled eggs
1 Onion, finely sliced
2 slices old bread, cut and fried into croutons (use the same oil as the fried fish for awesome flavour)
For the Vinaigrette:
3 Tbsp Virgin Olive Oil
2 Tbsp white wine Vinegar
1 tsp Dijon Mustard
Salt and freshly ground Black Pepper
What to do:
First of all, don’t be alarmed by the list of ingredients. It’s just assembly. Artful tossing together. Starting with the fried fish. Make a thick paste with turmeric, salt, ginger garlic paste and chili (add as much heat as you can take, but be advised that extra chili powder tends to blacken the fish and leave debris in the cooking oil). Marinate the fish steaks by rubbing the paste on both sides of the fish. Set aside. Add all the vinaigrette items into a bottle and give it a good shake till it looks like everything is homogenously incorporated. Keep cool in the fridge.
Heat oil to just below smoking point, put in the fish steaks and immediately lower the heat. Fry for 4 mins on each side. The extra masala will settle to the bottom of the pan. Drain and keep warm.
Wash the lettuce and pat the leaves dry. (Or use a salad drier). Toss in the rest of the ingredients (tomatoes, onions, olives) accordingly. Toss over the vinaigrette (Approx. 1 Tbsp per plate), just before serving to avoid the lettuce leaves becoming limp. Divide among four plates with one boiled egg per person. Place the fried fish in the center and serve with pride. Dig in with absolute abandon!
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Baked Beans and Pasta Hot Pot
I am always trying out new recipes that I fish out of the internet or my gazillion new cookbooks. I almost forgot how much I love the good ole recipes of yore. No, I’m not talking about the medieval times, just rewinding to school. One of my first cookbooks was one that I stole from mom. The free cookbook that came along with the Preett Pressure Cooker! It had a ‘how to use a pressure cooker guide’ as well as ‘101 recipes from India and Elsewhere’. (with pictures!!) I was hooked. J I came across it, while cleaning my bookshelf last week. Yellowing, tattered along the edges, a few pages coming loose of the thread binding – but there it was, waiting to exhale. I picked it up gingerly and spent an hour reading it cover to cover. (Yes, I read cookbooks.. . how many times do I have to say it?). I zeroed in on the Baked Beans Pasta recipe. It was considered very international in those days. I know… we were easily impressed! But considering we found pasta (only macaroni mind you) and baked bean cans in Thoms or maybe Nilgiris on MG road, once in a blue moon – it was always a special dish. Honestly, I love this recipe from the bottom of my heart. It’s my little time machine to simpler days…
Baked Beans and Pasta Hot Pot
Prep time: 15 mins
Cooking time: 20 mins
Serves: 4
What you need:
1 ½ cups uncooked Pasta
1 small tin Baked beans in Tomato Sauce
½ cup grated Cheese
2 Capsicums
3 Tomatoes
3 Onions
3-4 cloves Garlic
1 tsp Chili Powder
1 Tbsp Oil
1 Tbsp Butter
Salt and Pepper to taste
Mixed herbs for flavor
What to do:
Slice onions and Capsicums into rings. Blanch tomatoes, peel and dice. Cook pasta according to the instructions on the packet, drain and keep aside. (Ensure you toss in some olive oil so that it doesn’t stick). Heat oil in a skillet, add butter. Toss in onion and capsicum and fry for a while. Remove a few and keep aside for decoration. Add crushed garlic, chopped tomato, chili powder and salt to taste. Allow to cook for a few mins. Add pasta, baked beans in tomato sauce and half the grated cheese. Toss in some mixed herbs for flavour. Mix well and heat through for 2 mins.
Grease an oven proof dish. Pour mixture in. Decorate with onion and capsicum rings. Sprinkle remaining cheese, dot with butter and bake for 15-20 mins in a moderately hot oven (180-190°C). Serve hot!
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Penne with Bell Peppers Roman Style
I had two lovely yellow bell peppers in my fridge. After four days of racking my brains to come up with a mind blowing recipe, I chickened out. I could not see them go to waste for my lack of creative genius. Thanks to the gazillion cook books I own, (yes, I am cookbook cuckoo!) finding a recipe was a breeze. I would like you to believe that I put in considerable amount of effort picking and choosing just the right recipe, but the truth is I like a good gamble. So I closed my eyes and put my finger on the peppers list in the index! I give you here – Pasta with Peppers Roman Style. The Roman bit is because I had a crush on Julius Caesar. Ok, am playing with you now! Traditionally, tiny black wrinkled olives grown in the Lazio region of Italy are used in this roman dish. But I used Spanish olives. Oops! Don’t declare a war till you’ve tried it. iBuen Apetito!
Penne with Peppers Roman Style
Prep time: 15 mins
Cooking time: 35 mins
Serves: 4
What you need:
1/3 cup Olive oil
1 Onion, finely chopped
1 cup Black Olives, pitted and coarsely chopped
400gms canned chopped Tomatoes, drained/ 500gms Tomatoes, blanched and chopped
2 Yellow/ Red Peppers, seeded and cut into thin strips
Salt and pepper
350gms dried Penne/ Fettucine
Freshly grated Parmesan cheese to serve
What to do:
Heat the olive oil in a large heavy bottomed pan. Add the onion and cook over low heat, stirring occasionally, for 5 mins or until softened. Add the tomatoes, bell peppers and olives. Saute for 5 mins. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Cover and let simmer over very low heat for 25 mins. Stir occasionally.
Meanwhile bring a large heavy bottomed pan of lightly salted water to a boil. Add the pasta return to a boil and cook according to instructions on the packet. Penne must be tender but with a bite. Drain ad transfer to a serving dish.
Spoon the sauce onto the pasta and toss well. Sprinkle generously with the parmesan and serve immediately, with extra grated parmesan.
Note: Green bell peppers are not recommended in this recipe as they are a little too sharp and do not provide enough contrast with the saltiness of the olives.
Friday, December 3, 2010
Insalata Caprese (Mozzarella, Basil and Tomato Salad)
I know it’s not summer and this is definitely a summer salad. But on a dreary winter day like today, the colors sure cheer me up. This is such a simple salad but tastes heavenly. The creaminess of the bocconcini is well worth the visit to a gourmet store. (By the way, the white colour and creaminess is because it’s made from buffalo milk.) But if you can’t stomach the thought, then fresh mozzarella is fine as well. Like I was saying…chase the winter blues away with some red, white and green!
Insalata Caprese
Prep time: 10 mins
Serves: 6
What you need:Insalata Caprese
Prep time: 10 mins
Serves: 6
6 medium, ripe Tomatoes
4 fresh small Mozzarella (Bocconcini) balls
1 Tbsp Lemon juice
4 Tbsp extra virgin Olive Oil
Handful of shredded Basil leaves
Freshly ground Black Pepper, to taste
What to do:
Slice tomatoes thickly. Slice mozzarella thinly and interleave with tomato slices and basil leaves. Combine lemon juice and olive oil in a small bowl. Mix well using a wire whick. Drizzle dressing over salad. Sprinkle with shreds of basil leaves and pepper. Serve!
P.S. This salad is best served freshly made. Tomatoes at room temperature bring out their flavor.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Baked Eggs with Tomatoes
First of all I would like to apologize to my beloved food – The Egg. I’m surprised I haven’t done a post on it as yet! Eggs are so versatile and so tasty and kind of a staple in the diet, so it’s easy to overlook them. Egg whites are often considered the perfect source of protein because the body uses 100 percent of the nutrients they provide. Plus they are free of saturated fats and excess carbohydrates. The egg yolk (the best part according to me) is jam packed with nutrients. There is a controversy with the cholesterol bit, but the doctors are changing their stance now to saying its OK to have about 4 yolks in a week. So there, we’ve tackled that bit. Remember when we were kids and we had half boiled eggs in a cup? Well, this is the more sophisticated adult version. According to me, serving anything in a mini ramekin is très chic :)
Baked Eggs with Tomatoes
Prep time: 5 mins
Cooking time: 15 mins
Serves: 4
What you need:
4 Eggs
4 Tbsp chopped skinned Tomatoes
8 Tbsp Double Cream
4 x 150ml Ramekins
Salt and Freshly ground Black Pepper
What to do:
Spoon 1 Tbsp of cream into each ramekin, then break and egg into each one, taking care not to break the yolks. Season, and then top each egg with another tablespoon of cream and 1 tablespoon each of chopped skinned tomatoes. Sit the ramekins in a roasting tin, and pour hot water to come just halfway up their sides. Cover the roasting tin with foil, and then carefully slide into a preheated oven (180°C/350°F/Gas4). Cook for about 15 mins and serve immediately.
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