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First Lichi of the Year... [May. 8th, 2008|06:15 am]
[Tags|, , ]
[mood |food]
[music |food]

The Lichi (it is spelt in many ways..the name originates in the Chinese language) is one of my favourites.








Yesterday, KM got the first fruit of the season (which is all too short.)

YUMMMM.
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Spinach [May. 1st, 2008|03:09 pm]
[Tags|, , , ]
[mood | sleepy]
[music |MSS...bhOgeendra shAyinam]

Of all the multitudinous varieties of greens that are available (I could not begin to list them...there are so many....!), my favourite is spinach.

I have a very sweet young woman who brings bunches of spinach to my front door. It's fresh and green and I drool just looking at it....so this time I thought I would photograph it, too.

Just look at it...fresh and so wholesome, deliciousness is written all over it!


spinach 300408

Of course, the bunches generally come attached with what sometimes appears to be most of the soil of Karnataka...washing has to be a careful business, and I take extra care because I am mindful of pesticides, too...

I googled for spinach washers and got either industrial stuff or this patent info

I usually make either a north Indian dish (Palak, with or without panneer or matar or alu), or a very simple south Indian dish, for which the recipe is as follows:

Cut off roots of spinach. Wash thoroughly, and chop not too fine (I generally buy three bunches at a time...what you see in that photo above.) Add some water, and boil with a little salt, just enough, so that the green colour (lovely!) is not lost. (generally, 4 to 5 min.). Drain and reserve the water. Take a little of the spinach and grind it well.

In the water that the spinach has been cooked, and mix in two tbsp of rice flour, and set aside.


Add 1 tsp oil in a pan, and sputter some mustard seeds, and 2 red chillies. Add the boiled spinach and the ground spinach (which, along with the rice flour, will bind the dish together.) Add pounded jeera and black pepper...about 1 tbsp each. Thoroughly mix the rice flour in the water and add to the pan, and let the whole thing simmer for just a minute or two, and switch off the heat.

This is fantastic with vathal kuzhambu and rice....but I could eat it on its own!

Spinach is NOT easily available in Chennai, for some reason, the plant (or herb) doesn't grow well there. But in Bangalore...it's just great.

Here's the Wiki entry for Spinach


And here's an entire cookbook devoted to it!

It's obviously high in Chrolophyll , which was once touted as the "fresh-breath" ingredient in toothpastes, prompting one wag to ask this:

"Why stinks the goat on yonder hill...
That only feeds on chlorophyll?"

...oh well, jokes apart... here, by sheer coincidence, is an LJ friend's post

Popeye...you were on to a real good thing, all those years ago! I may not have bulgy arms or one eye or a pipe stuck in my mouth...but...I *LURRRV* spinach!

I do also like the frozen variety that I can get abroad, which has all the cleaning, chopping and labour removed...I have never tried canned spinach, though.

Here's the nutrition part

Waiting for all your comments, including all you lurkers!! Do you like it? Do you hate it? How do you eat it or avoid it? Is there anyone who is allergic to it ?

I rarely make food posts....I am not one of those creative cooks, I cook to get by.

And, by the way...that colander in the picture, I have had for 32 years, and the towel, for 12 years....

Next time she comes home, I will photograph Chitra the spinach (and lemons and murungakkAi and sweetcorn in season) seller, and introduce you to her, too.

Oh, and the cost? Three bunches cost Rs.10...that is...about 25 cents...
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Sigh... [Apr. 25th, 2008|09:39 pm]
[Tags|, , , , ]
[mood | tired]
[music |CNBC is yelling....]

...a whine is the most difficult sound on earth to bear with,it goes through one's head.... But it has to be borne sometimes. That's the only way to prevent it from increasing in volume.


Here, for all my sick-for-Bangalore-darshini-food friends abroad, is a plate of RAVA IDLI in Park View, the little eatery near my home:


rava idli Park View 230408 mrepctres


And here's the beautiful spiral that's left by unravelling the plantain leaf in which the KADUBU, a typical Mangalore dish, is steamed, and after the Kadubu has become an ex-Kadubu and slipped into the past tense...


kadubu in the past tense...Park View Restaurant apr 08


The other speciality of Park View is their Neer Dosa....will photograph it one of these days.
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Play at Kirkwood Theater Guild [Jan. 26th, 2008|11:58 pm]
[Tags|, , , ]
[mood |tired and dispirted today]
[music |old hindi music]

Yesterday, A was down again, and decided that the best way to cheer herself up was to go to a play; so she chose the Kirkwood Theater Guild , where there was a production of The Fourth Wall by A R Gurney , an American playwright.


The play was very much in the style of Ibsen and Shaw, both of whom were extensively quoted in the course of the action...and though I felt that the cast were rather self-conscious (well,it was a self-referential, deconstructionist play to begin with) about their being actors on a stage, they warmed up as the play went on , and it became very enjoyable. Much of the political humour, though, it topical, and the playwright would have to keep updating it or changing it if the play is not to become dated or stale. Steve Callahan was Roger, Ken Lopinot as Floyd (an excellent comic assay), Colleen Malone was Julia, and Janet Roby Schwartz was Peggy. Jan Meyer directed the play, and Danny Austin was the asst. director.


more details that won't be of interest to anyone else but me )
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Wishing everyone a Happy Onam [Aug. 27th, 2007|01:29 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , , , ]
[mood |festive]
[music |nAgaswaram...malaya mArutham]

I would like to wish every one of my MaLayAlam friends a happy and prosperous ONam festival.


GuruvAyoor ViLakku with PookOlam


That is what we refer to as a " guruvAyoor viLakku"...made in the typical Kerala style (it generally has no "muhappu" or tip ornament))

It is surrounded by the typical ornamentation of ONam..pookkOlam, or kOlam with flowers.

And here's wishing that peace and plenty be your lot, especially plenty of good food!



Anna Sadhya Kochi

That is the Anna Sadhya (the feast) on the banana leaf.


From right to left, at the top of the leaf (er, someone correct me if I am wrong):


pacchadi, koottu, erishEri, thOran,aviyal, kALan, and pappadAm (that's the lovely part of the meal, crunching the crisp pappadAm into the rice!)

On the second tier, paruppu; chOru (parboiled rice) with sAmbAr poured into it, to be mixed; and a vAzhai pazham (banana)

On the bottom half of the leaf (south of the "equator" and to the left) ...three varieties of pickle -- elimicham pazham (lemon), nArthangai (lime) and puLi inji (tamarand-and-ginger).

The glass contains shukku veLLam, warm water that's been boiled with a little dry ginger, which is excellent for the throat.

The sAmbAr-and-rice will be followed by rasam-and-rice, then the pAyasam (sweet porridge, YUMMMMM) will be served (it's quite literally finger-licking good, as we lick it up with our fingers!) and the mOr (buttermilk)-and-rice to end the meal.

Slurp. Burp. Zzzz!

Wish you all the very best.
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The very little that I got to know about Tanzanian cuisine [Aug. 23rd, 2007|01:42 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , ]
[mood |ignorant]
[music |the Beatles]

Well, having posted all that, I decided that though I never got a chance to eat in a Tanzanian home, I must set down the little that I learnt about food in Tanzania.

I might be mistaken, so do correct me if you have more accurate knowledge.

Apparently the staple food is maize/corn, and from maize/corn flour they make a kind of sticky pasty preparation called Ugali. This is just the flour, cooked in water with salt.

They also have a stew to go with it which is called Achali.

Apart from this, I was told about two dishes by the chef at one of the hotels:

"Kuku was Kupaka", which is stewed chicken simmered in coconut, and served with Ugaii and Achali

and


"Nyama ya Kukaanga" whihc is marinated beef flakes, again served with Ugali and Achali.

I was rather surprised when Huruma told me that tamarind is not used in the local cuisine, or the vegetable "drumstick" (moringa), as both trees grow plentifully in the region.

That's the trouble with staying in hotels..you get the generic touristy food...

But I suppose, if the Masai's favourite drink is milk mixed with blood, one would be better off with mineral water!

[info]thaths....you say you know the region well...can you let me know something more about the cuisine?
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Drama of Life and Death...near Ranganathittu, 16 July 07 [Jul. 17th, 2007|01:10 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , , , ]
[mood |enthralled]
[music |none yet]

I went to Ranganathittu area to do some birding and while I did have a lovely time, with all the usual birds on display, I also watched this little drama of life and death nearby....

On one of the weeds, I watched a butterfly alight on a flower. But inexplicably, almost as soon as it landed on the flower, the butterfly seemed suddenly to wilt...you can see it just hanging off the flower:

Butterfly drama 2 160707 Ranganathittu area

It then fell off altogether, and lay, dead or dying, on a leaf below. Intrigued, I decided to investigate. I gently held the flower to see what could have caused the death of the butterfly, which you can see lying (by now dead) on the leaf below:


Butterfly drama 3

All was revealed...from under the flower crawled the hunter, the predator, which had been lying in wait for just such an opportunity as the one that happened...

Butterfly drama 5


As soon as the butterfly landed, the spider bit it, and paralyzed the butterfly fatally. Even as I looked at it, it dropped off on to the leaf below to proceed to the meal:

Butterfly drama 4

Here's a close-up of the predator..incredible, I could swear that was a "happy" face on the back of the spider!


Picture of the predator butterfly drama

I thought it was ironic to see a happy smiley face on the back of a creature which had just dealt a violent death to another...but on second thought, it was just a living creature getting a meal for itself, so I suppose, now that the meal was ready, a smiley wasn't an inappropriate thing for the spider to have, as it went off for its lunch....
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Shiok [Nov. 25th, 2006|03:57 pm]
[Tags|, , , , ]
[mood |drooling]
[music |none]

My third post today, because I am going to be away from my laptop for a while again....

Yesterday evening, a few friends met up at Shiok restaurant, run by [info]themadman.  It is so rare to find a restaurateur with this level of knowledge and passion about food. Every dish that was served was mouth-watering , from the eggplant starters to the flat rice noodles( I only ate the vegetarian dishes though!) I *must* particularly mention the oh-so-fragrant rice dish that I ate three times as much as I should have! KM is still raving about the steamed fish that he was served, without a drop of cooking oil, and says it is the very first time he has eaten this kind of steamed fish (it was Bengali Bhekti). Madhu...it was well worth the three kilos or so that are probably going to grin at me from the mirror soon....

Do check out [info]themadman's Shiok website at

http://shiokfood.com/

and his Chef's Notes at

http://www.shiokfood.com/notes/


Like me (unless you live in Indira Nagar in Bangalore of course) you will regret that you don't have Shiok nearby!

Yesterday he showed his collection of fine steel knives, and talked about the processing of food....well, I think my opinion of his expertise comes through pretty clearly in my words!

Nuff said. Bangalore people....visit Shiok! Other people...visit Bangalore and then I will take you to visit Shiok! (Probably I am preaching to a lot of converted people, I know...)

And [info]tariquesani and [info]swatisani, who, with their young son Aasim, invited us over....thank you, so much! The "pEt poojA" was religiously done yesterday....
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Festivals [Oct. 21st, 2006|02:46 pm]
[Tags|, , ]
[mood |bloated]

.

Festivals = Too Much To Eat.

What must it feel like to regularly have too little to eat?
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Inspired by a post by [info]themadman [Oct. 5th, 2006|05:18 pm]
[Tags|, , , ]
[mood |amused]
[music |Kula Deepam...Madurai G S Mani]

....

Unusual Indians, culinary-wise:

 Iyengars who don't like filter coffee
Gujjus who don't like bhel puri
Bengalis who don't like fish
Tambrams who don't like curd rice
Kashmiris who don't like kahva
Punjabis who don't like sarson ka saag
Malayalis  who don't like tea (chaaya to be precise)

I know at least one person in each of the above categories....
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