A quick post, will update this later...
Ingredients
3 pounds ground beef( sirloin)
4 Tbs chopped cilantro
2 jalapeño or Thai chili diced( how spicy do you want it?)
Half onion finely diced
I Tbs ground ginger and garlic paste
I tsp cumin powder powder
1 tsp chilli powder or paprika.
Blend together voila and grill !
Seasoned Skillet
Friday, October 18, 2013
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Red Hot Chicken Curry with Peas
I hear the rumbling of a rickety van down the street and a booming
voice echoing through a megaphone “Fowls! Fresh Fowls!!”. The continuous honking of the horn makes me want
to stick my head under the pillow and fall right back to sleep. It’s Saturday, no
school and a rare chance to catch those extra forty winks. Alas! That indulgent
thought is short-lived, for Saturday in almost every Durban household is Fresh
Fowl Curry Day, a delicacy definitely worth the “all day” affair of prepping
and cooking.
Mother shouts out at the top of her voice “C’mon get up the
fowl van is here, go tell them to stop!” No arguing with that command, you do as you’re
told, or else! Such was the story in
almost every household in an Indian suburb every Saturday morning. The van
would drive by slowly and stop at intervals along the streets, while people
flocked around packed mesh cages at the back of the van to pick their live chickens. Honestly, I have no idea why
my mother asked me to go and stop the van when it was going to stop anyway!
And so the day began. The entire morning was spent cleaning
and cutting up the chicken, separating it into different portions for different
cooking methods, the big washing up and cleaning everything it touched and finally it makes it into the pot. Then the big torturous wait! When do we eat?
Nowadays, with all the endless choices we have for chicken,
there’s no reason why the same tastes and flavors can’t be acquired in a very
quick time. Here’s my recipe for a spicy curry that never fails to invoke those
memories and make me relive them in every bite.
Ingredients
Whole spices (1 cinnamon stick, 2 star anise, 3 cardamom, ½ tsp
cumin seeds, 1 bay leaf)
1 medium onion diced
4 pounds chicken cut into pieces (Use what you prefer. I
like the bone in and a combination of dark and white meat)
4 Tbs mixed masala (I use Durban mix)
1 tsp garlic paste
1 tsp ginger paste
3 medium tomatoes diced
1 Tbs salt
1 cup green peas
Heat oil on medium heat and add whole spices. When they
start to splutter, add the onion and sauté gently till it starts to turn light
brown.
At this point you can remove the larger whole spices if you’re
worried about unsuspectingly biting into one (not nice!).
Alternately, you could toast and grind the whole spices and
add it when you add the masala which is the next step.
Add the Durban Masala to the onion and stir for 30 seconds
or it will burn.
Add the chicken, ginger and garlic and mix till well
incorporated.
Cover the pot and simmer for about 5 to 10 minutes, stirring
occasionally so that the chicken absorbs the flavors and spices are well
distributed.
Add salt and tomatoes. You can adjust the salt later according to
your taste.
Cover and cook on medium till tomatoes start to break down.
Simmer for another half hour to 45 minutes.
If you're like me and like extra gravy, add half a cup of water and simmer a little longer.
If you're like me and like extra gravy, add half a cup of water and simmer a little longer.
Add the frozen peas in the last 5 minutes of cooking.
Garnish with cilantro and serve with rice, roti or make a
bunny chow.
Now grab a big glass of water with lots of ice and a couple
extra napkins and chow down!!
Friday, June 14, 2013
Bacon, Brussels sprouts and Onion Quiche
I opened my fridge yesterday looking for something to eat,
and I was assaulted by some of its contents that came flying out at poor
unsuspecting me! Mind you, it was 3pm and I had not eaten breakfast or lunch so
needless to say, I was totally unimpressed by the turn of events. Unimpressed
and hungry as I was, I knew it was my own doing and a fridge clean-out was
definitely the order of the day….well! What was left of the day anyway.
A quick glance and almost as brutal as the attack of my
butter dish on my right elbow a few seconds ago, the idea of QUICHE lodged
itself in my culinary head. I had
everything right there glaring at me. If I had left-over roast chicken or any
other vegetables that would have been a different story. But screaming out at
me was some bacon wrapped in plastic wrap, some left over brussel sprouts that
didn't make it into the last dish and a chunk of mozzarella from the previous
time I made pizza.
So here goes! Get creative with those left-overs, all meat, no meat, more cheese, less cheese....the possibilities are endless...
Ingredients
4 strips of bacon diced
2 cups brussel sprouts sliced thinly
1 medium onion diced
6 eggs
1 cup milk
1 cup grated mozzarella cheese (or any other soft cheese you
prefer)
Salt and pepper to taste
Heat your oven to 400F and grease your baking pan. For this
I used a rectangular glass dish approximately 6 x11 inches.
Heat a skillet and cook the bacon till slightly crispy. You
don’t need oil as the bacon will cook in its own fat. Drain off some of the
bacon fat if there’s too much. Add the
onion and brussel sprouts to the bacon and cook for a few minutes till
vegetables are just tender and sprouts and still bright green.
While that’s cooking and cooling off slightly, whisk the eggs,
milk and cheese in a large bowl. Season it
with salt and pepper.
Now mix the bacon mixture into the custard and pour into the
greased pan.
Cover with aluminum foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove
foil and bake for another 10 minutes. The top will brown and to make sure it’s
done, insert a knife and it should come out almost clean.
Voila! While munching on some almonds trying to appease my hunger
and waiting for my quiche to get done, I cleaned and reorganized my fridge. Now
back to square one and ready to restock.....but not before I sit down, put my feet up and chow down.
Monday, June 10, 2013
Brown Bag Apples
So I was at the grocery store browsing the produce section
when the “I’m so loving my job bagging apples “ guy asked me if I’d like a bag……of apples, that is.
To be honest, I didn’t really want them but because he was so friendly, with
his infectious pearly white smile, raving about how good they were I said OK.
At the checkout, I realized that this so called bargain bag cost me about $10
for about 15 Gala apples. Ah well, I thought, I’m sure we can eat those before
they go bad on me.
3 weeks later, 5 lonely apples are still staring at me from
the bowl on the kitchen counter, just like they were from the day I brought
them home. Not wanting to throw them out, after all they did keep me company
for 3 whole weeks; I decided to make a quick dessert that even I might like.
I’m not really into desserts, but this one blew me away and I’ll surely be
making it a lot more when those 2 trees I have start dropping fruit like
confetti at the close of a Las Vegas show!
Ingredients for Baked
Apples
4 apples peeled, cored and sliced into wedges
Juice from 1 lemon
3 tsp brown sugar
½ tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp pure vanilla extract
Walnuts or raisins
½ stick butter
Extra sugar for sprinkling
Heat your oven to 400F.
Juice the lemon into a bowl and add the sugar, cinnamon and
vanilla extract.
As you’re slicing the apples, toss into the bowl and coat
with the mixture so they don’t turn brown. The lemon juice will prevent
oxidation.
Grease a pie dish or small ramekins (I prefer to make
individual ones) and arrange apple slices in some kind of pattern or no pattern
at all. Pour any remaining juice into the ramekins.
Place a small pat of butter over the apples and cover with
foil.
Bake for about 20 minutes, remove from oven and sprinkle
some brown sugar over the top.
Bake uncovered for 15 minutes or until the sugar has
caramelized.
What’s apple pie without ice cream right? Once they cool a
bit, top with some vanilla ice cream and some apple chips.
The chips are so easy to make. Slice some rounds off a whole
apple, as thin as you possibly can. Place on a a flat surface like the back of a baking sheet and sprinkle generously with some brown sugar. Bake in the same oven
that you just baked the apples in. After 10 minutes, turn off the oven and let
the chips sit in there for about 5 minutes. Pry them away while they’re
still warm to prevent them from sticking when the sugar hardens. Let them cool and trust me, they will crisp.
You can easily make this ahead, refrigerate and just heat it
up as you feel that need for an “apple pie” fix…enjoy!
Pickle-Spiced Chicken with Butternut Squash Risotto
Having lived in California for almost 14 years, I am still
amazed by the bounty of beautiful fruit, vegetables and herbs, which not only
grace store shelves, farmers market stalls and little road side stands, but the
trees that are so laden just in my street alone! Silicon Valley might be noted
for being world leader in technology and innovations but I sure note it for the
fact that I can walk my dog, pick some fruit off neighbors’ trees and come home
with enough fruit for a fruit salad for 3 days!
So why waste this wealth…I started pickling, making jams,
chutneys, sauces, and whatever else my culinary mind could come up with. Pickling
spice has become a staple ingredient in my pantry and lo and behold, the idea
for this recipe.
Ingredients for Pickling
Spice
(This is sort of what is used in making Achar. I usually get
a blend from South Africa, but with the vast amounts I’ve been using recently I
had to conjure up my own version.)
1cup crushed red chili
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp black mustard seeds
1 tsp fenugreek seeds
1 tsp paprika
1 tsp granulated garlic
Mix together and store in airtight jar. To actually use this
as a pickle mix, I add a few more ingredients but for this recipe we will use
the above.
Marinate Chicken
4 chicken breasts
3 Tbs of the above mix
¼ cup plain yogurt
½ tsp salt
Mix everything together and marinate for about an hour in
the fridge. Bake in 400F oven for 35 minutes. Make sure you slather the marinade
over and cover it with foil for the for the first 20 minutes. Bake uncovered
for another 10 to 15 minutes till this nice crust is formed over the chicken.
In the meantime you can make the risotto which
is nice and creamy, slightly sweet and a wonderful accompaniment to the spicy
chicken. Also you don’t need a sauce or gravy because this rice dish is so
moist.
Ingredients for
Butternut Squash Risotto
Half stick butter
Half butternut squash cubed
Half medium onion diced
1 clove garlic crushed
1 cup brown rice
2 cups chicken stock or water
Salt and pepper to taste
On medium heat, melt the butter in a non-stick pan. Sauté
the onion and garlic till translucent. Add rice and squash and toast lightly.
Add small amounts of the stock and stir till it’s almost absorbed. Keep adding
small amounts of stock, stirring often for a nice smooth consistency. Brown rice
takes longer to cook and you might need to add more stock or water. If you
choose any other rice it will be a lot faster. Cook till rice is done and the
starch renders into the stock to make a creamy base.
Be not afraid for this entire ensemble takes less than an hour
to put together (if you marinated the chicken already) and you will even have time
to grill some zucchini or asparagus on
the side without it taking too much of that precious time we all hold on to so
endearingly.
Spinach & Potato Curry
A very vivid memory of my childhood is that of my
grandmother in her garden, barefoot with cracked heels, an old doek (scarf)
wrapping her head as she’s bent over lovingly tending the fruits of her labor.
She nurtured her plants like she did us boisterous, naughty, snotty-nosed kids….all
seven of us! Just like her vegetable
garden where she found peace and solace, her weather beaten face relaxing into
an almost trance-like state, she acquired that same look when she fed us her freshly
cooked garden pickings, cooked on the old coal stove. Every time I eat any kind of cooked greens, I
think of her and the loving memories she made for us. This dish especially
transports me like a time machine right to that very garden in Sea Cow Lake.
Ingredients for Spinach & Potato Curry
1 medium onion diced
1 tsp cumin
Half tsp mustard seeds
4 to 5 dried red chilies
2 medium potatoes large cubes
1 tsp masala
Half tsp turmeric
2 cloves garlic chopped
1 large bag or 2 small bags of fresh spinach
1 tomato diced
Salt
Coat a pan with oil and heat onion, cumin, mustard seeds and
chilies. When onion is translucent, add the potatoes, garlic, turmeric and
masala lightly browning them. Add spinach and tomato. Cook till potatoes are
done and water has evaporated. Adjust salt as you go. Remember the spinach
wilts down to nothing so it’s better to add salt at the end.
Enjoy it as a meal like I do, or as a side dish to your
other favorite memorable dishes.
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Durban Style Mince Kebabs in Tomato Chutney
If you’re a chili head like most Durbanites, you know there’s
no going back to bland tasteless meals that lacks a punch and that ability to
set your mouth ablaze in a very satisfying way. You know you want something that
will satisfy that curry craving and won’t take several hours to prepare. Here
is my recipe for a quick satisfying meal that can be eaten with rice, “shop”
bread or rolled in a roti. Almost as famous as the Bunny Chow, a Kebab and Roti
Wrap can be found in most take-away or dine in cafes in Durban.
Ingredients for Kebabs
2 pounds ground lamb which is traditional but beef or pork
is just as tasty
Half medium onion finely diced
3 green chilli finely chopped
Handful of chopped cilantro
1 tsp ground cumin
1 tsp mixed masala
1 tsp ginger and garlic paste
1 tsp salt
Mix everything together well and form into 1 and half inch size
meatballs.
Heat a non-stick pan with enough oil to coat the surface and
brown meatballs on all sides….they don’t have to cook all the way through. Do
them in batches if you have to. It’s a quick process. You don’t want to scorch
the oil cos we’re making the chutney in the same pan and same oil. You can
always add more oil if you need. I usually have a big enough pan to brown all
of them at the same time.
Chutney
Half medium onion diced
2 cloves garlic chopped
1 tsp cumin seeds
Quarter tsp turmeric
1 tsp Masala
Salt, pinch of sugar and splash of vinegar to taste.
5 chopped tomatoes
Add everything to the meatballs in the pan except tomatoes
and fry lightly. Add tomatoes and cook till it breaks down. Adjust seasoning
and garnish with cilantro.
If this doesn't doesn't hit that chili head nerve, then you have to take that trip down to the southern hemisphere to that city called Durbs by the sea!
If this doesn't doesn't hit that chili head nerve, then you have to take that trip down to the southern hemisphere to that city called Durbs by the sea!
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