Monday, 31 August 2020

Prawn Fry




I remember the first time I had prawns when I was a little girl at my grandmother's house. Growing up inlands, I was not exposed to sea-food at all, except when I visited my grandmother at Chennai. It was a Sunday special for them to head to the wet market and purchase fish/prawns. I had no idea what prawns looked like or tasted like. It was a couple of hours before they got back and another couple of hours before they could clean it well to start cooking. Those were small prawns so it took a lot effort to clean and when cooked they rolled up to the size of buttons. I found that fascinating and not to mention yummy.
 
At that time, I did not realize that it would be more than a couple of decades before I started cooking prawns myself. And from the first experience, I was not looking forward to the cumbersome cleaning that was involved.  

One evening my husband had ordered jumbo prawns (cleaned and deveined) from an online store and instead they sent small ones without deveining. He patiently started cleaning them and got tired mid-way and left the deveined prawns right on the kitchen top and uncleaned ones in the sink and scooted off. I stepped in to cook dinner and could not get to the sink without finishing up what he started and cleaning the sink and kitchen top as well. It took me a couple of hours to get through the whole chore and obviously dinner was delayed way beyond. I was furious with the online store and with my husband. 😡

But all that effort is worth it when the prawns are cooked 😉. I personally prefer prawns soup or prawn curry based on coconut milk, but somehow my daughters prefer the fry. As expected their preference wins 😁. But hey! When the kids polish off their bowls and look satiated that is a reward in itself right? So no complaints on that front. 

Anyways to the recipe. This recipe is something I remember having seen on facebook. Based on what I remembered from that video, I tried it out and it turned out well, I just kept at it since then only varying the spices level. 

Recipe (serves 4)

For garnishing:
Curry leaves - 4-5
Cumin seeds - 1 tsp 
Green chillies (slit) - 2 (optional, I always leave this out)

For the fry:
Onions (finely chopped) - 1 medium
Tomato (finely chopped) -  1 small 
Salt - to taste
Turmeric powder - 1/4 tsp
Chilli powder - 1/2 tsp 
Cumin powder - 1/4 tsp
Ginger - 1 inch piece (mashed well)
Garlic - 4-5 cloves (mashed well)

Prawns (medium sized about 25-30 in number) - 500g

Oil - for frying (I prefer olive oil or coconut oil)

Method: 

Heat some oil in a frying pan, add the curry leaves, cumin seeds and green chillies. When the cumin turns colour, add the onions and turmeric powder. Fry until the onions turn transparent and then start shrinking. Add the tomatoes and mashed ginger and garlic. If you prefer to use the garlic-ginger paste, you can use about 1 tsp of the paste. 

Fry until the tomatoes turn into a nice pulpy consistency. Add a little more oil if needed. Finally add the chilli and cumin powder until the whole mix comes together and the oil starts to separate. 

At this stage add the cleaned deveined prawns and toss the fried paste around the prawns. Fry for a while (2-3 mins) and watch in fascination as they shrink and start shrivelling. 

Close the lid of the frying pan and let it sit for a few minutes. The prawns release water. There is no need to add any more water. I usually leave the lid closed for about 3-4 mins. Do not overcook the prawns. Open the lid and let the water evaporate. 

Garnish with coriander leaves and serve hot with rice or roti. 

Tip: Whenever I fry something, I feel a lot of the spices and gravy get stuck to the pan and go straight down the sink when washed. My mom used a trick to make use of the remnants of gravy in the pan and I adopted the same more for the taste. Take a couple of spoons of white rice and toss it into the kadai and scrape off the oil and spices and gravy stuck to the frying pan. Now your pan is clean and you have about 1/2 cup of flavoured and yummy rice. My daughter loves this. 

Verdict: I have standardized the above recipe as I have cooked it several times. It turns out mildly spiced and I prefer it with olive oil as opposed to coconut oil. You can use the oil of preference, and adjust the spices as per your taste. 

Saturday, 29 August 2020

Banana Bundt cake




Banana and chocolate make delectable baked goods. I always keep a couple of over-ripe bananas in the freezer for that quick sweet craving, either pancakes for breakfast or a delicious cake for an evening treat. 

I made this on my dad's birthday and the kids were super excited about having him cut the cake in the evening. 

The recipe is from Divya's blog


Recipe (serves 6) 

Ingredients:
Flour (maida) - 3/4 cup
Baking powder - 1 1/2 tsp
Baking soda - 1/4 tsp
Salt - 1/2 tsp
Banana - 1 large very ripe
Sugar - 3/4 cup
Egg - 1 (at room temperature)
Butter - 1/4 cup
Buttermilk - 50ml (see note)
Vanilla extract - 1 tsp

Note: Buttermilk can be made by taking 50 ml of milk, removing 1tsp from it and replacing it with 1tsp of vinegar. Let it sit for 10 mins.
Optionally, you can use 25ml of curd beaten and added to 25 ml of milk and let it sit for about half an hour. 

Method:

Preheat oven to 180 degrees C.

Grease a bundt pan (6 cup). It is a good idea to grease well with butter and then sprinkle some flour on the butter. That way the cake releases easily from the bundt pan.

Sift the flour, baking powder, salt and baking soda in a bowl. 

Make sure the banana is really ripe and mash it using a blender. 

Add the sugar and egg to the mashed banana and beat well. Then add the butter and beat for another minute until the mixture is thick and creamy. 

Add the buttermilk and vanilla extract and beat until just blended. 

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredient bowl and fold in until just blended. Make sure not to over mix as it will result in a tough cake. 

Scoop into the bundt pan and smooth out the top evenly. 

Bake for about 40mins or until the top turns golden brown and the cake passes the skewer test.

Remove and let it cool completely before you try to turn the pan and release the cake. 



Verdict:
Quick and easy recipe for a delicious evening snack. I would have preferred it a little less sweet. I will be trying it out with 1/2 cup of sugar instead of 3/4 cup next time. 


Some pictures from the celebrations my daughters had set up for my father. Love of the children is just immeasurable. Happy Birthday Appa!





Saturday, 1 August 2020

Microwave Mug Cake - A quick something for that intense sweet craving



When we were growing up Mom used to give us pottukadalai (roasted Bengal gram) with sugar/jaggery. That was our quick fix for a sweet craving. I still keep a box replenished with pottukadalai and jaggery mix for folks at home to munch on.  

But nowadays kids are spoilt for choices, be it TV or food. They want something new every time. So anytime I come across some quick recipe for kids snacks I make sure to try it out so I can be ready to assuage one of those intense cravings and "I don't want this all the time, it is so boring" whines. 

I don't recollect the original recipe, I only remember that the recipe was for just one mug cake. 

What follows is the recipe I have standardised for my use. I typically make 4. The kids down 1 each as soon as it is made and save the other one for later. 

Recipe (makes 4 in 180 ml china cups or kullads)


Ingredients:
1 egg (if you want eggless, please check the substitution below)
1/4 cup (4 tbsp) - milk
2 tbsp - butter
1/4 cup (4 tbsp) - whole wheat flour
1/4 cup (4 tbsp) - sugar
1 tsp - vanilla essense
1 tsp - baking powder

Topping (optional)
Chocolate chips or chopped chocolate.

Method:
Melt the butter in one of the mugs/cups.
Whisk the egg, milk, and sugar in a bowl with a fork. Add the melted butter and whisk again. Add the flour, baking powder and vanilla essence and make a smooth paste.

If adding chocolate chips or chopped chocolate, add them to the batter at this stage.

Grease four china cups/kullads with a little melted butter.

Spoon the batter to fill the cups upto half way. Microwave the 4 cups/kullags for 1.5 minutes at full power. Insert a toothpick to make sure the mug cake is cooked.

Substitute for Eggless variant:
Instead of the egg listed above, you can substitute with one of the following:
a. grind a teaspoon of flax seeds
b. grind half a ripe banana robusta
The microwave time may need to be increased by about 30 seconds for the eggless variant. Be sure to check in between so the cake is not overcooked.

Substitute for Chocolate mug cake:
Instead of 4 tbsp of whole wheat flour, use 3 tbsp of whole wheat flour and 1 tbsp of cocoa powder (if using Dutch processed cocoa powder, add a tsp of vinegar to the recipe)


Verdict: A little too eggy for my taste, but the kids do not mind.  

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