Sunday, June 24, 2012

Quick fix: Thakkali adai


Thakkali Adai. Photo: M. Srinath
Thakkali Adai. Photo: M. Srinath
The Hindu :TIRUCHI, June 22, 2012
INGREDIENTS: (Serves 3)
Parboiled rice: One cup
Tomatoes: Four
Red chillies: Three
Saunf : Few
For seasoning
Chopped green chillies: Two
Chopped onion: One
Curry leaf and chopped coriander leaves: A pinch each
Cumin and asafoetida: A pinch each
Salt: To taste
METHOD
Dice tomatoes and red chillies. Mix with rice and saunf and soak for three hours. Grind into batter. Now, mix all seasoning ingredients with the batter.
Pour batter in a pan and add oil. Cook for five minutes till well done.
Serve with avial and coconut chutney.
Chef R. Senthil Kumar. Photo: M. Srinath
Chef R. Senthil Kumar. Photo: M. Srinath
Proprietor-cum-chef R.Senthil Kumar dishes out North Indian recipes at the newly opened ‘Ezham Suvai’, a multi-cuisine vegetarian restaurant at Collector Office Road, Trichy Cantonment. He has 10 years of culinary experience in a cruise liner and Indian restaurants in the United States. The restaurant offers traditional Jain cuisine.

Friday, June 22, 2012

அருமையான...பஞ்சாபி சன்னா

Punjabi Channa


போல்ட் ஸ்கை :வியாழக்கிழமை, ஜூன் 14, 2012,

வட இந்திய உணவுகளில் சன்னா என்றால் மிகவும் பிரபலமானது. அதுவும் சப்பாத்தி, பூரி என்றால் சன்னா தான் சைடு டிஸ். அது போல் நம் வீட்டில் செய்யும் சப்பாத்திக்கும், பூரிக்கும் பஞ்சாபி சன்னா செய்து கொடுப்போமா!!!
தேவையான பொருட்கள் :
வெள்ளைக் கொண்டைக்கடலை - 250 கி
வெங்காயம் - 4
தக்காளி - 4
இஞ்சிபூண்டு விழுது - 2 டீஸ்பூன்
மிளகாய்த்தூள் - 2 டீஸ்பூன்
தனியாத்தூள் - 2 டீஸ்பூன்
மஞ்சள் தூள் - 1/2 டீஸ்பூன்
மாங்காய்த்தூள் - 1 டீஸ்பூன்
நெய் - 3 டேபிள் ஸ்பூன்
உப்பு - தேவையான அளவு
கொத்தமல்லி - தேவையான அளவு
செய்முறை :
1. முதலில் கொண்டைக்கடலையை இரவிலேயே நீரில் ஊற வைத்து விட வேண்டும்.
2. பின் மறுநாள் காலையில் குக்கரை அடுப்பில் வைத்து, அதில் இந்த கொண்டைக்கடலையை கழுவி, சிறிது உப்பு போட்டு, 4-5 விசில் விட்டு இறக்கி வைக்கவும்.
3. வெங்காயம், இஞ்சிபூண்டு விழுது ஆகியவற்றை மிக்ஸியில் போட்டு நைஸாக அரைத்துக் கொள்ளவும். பின் தக்காளியை சிறிது நேரம் வெந்நீரில் போட்டு, அதன் தோலை உரித்து மிக்ஸியில் அரைத்துக் கொள்ளவும்.
4. பிறகு ஒரு வாணலியை அடுப்பில் வைத்து அதில் நெய் விட்டு அதில் அரைத்த அந்த வெங்காயக் கலவையைப் போட்டு வதக்கவும். பின் அதில் தனியாத்தூள், மிளகாய்த்தூள், மஞ்சள் தூள் சேர்த்து நன்கு வதக்கவும்.
5. நெய்யும், கலவையும் பிரியும் வரை வதக்க வேண்டும். பின் அதில் அரைத்த தக்காளியை ஊற்றவும்.
6. பின் அதில் வேக வைத்த அந்த கொண்டைக்கடலையை போட்டு போதுமான அளவு தண்ணீர் விட்டு, சிறிது உப்பு சேர்த்து நன்கு கொதிக்க விடவும்.
7. மசாலாவானது கெட்டியானதும் அதில் காய்ந்த மாங்காய்த்தூள் சேர்த்து வதக்கவும்.
8. இதோ சுவையான பஞ்சாபி சன்னா தயார்!!!
இதன் மேல் வெங்காயத்தை பொடியாக நறுக்கி போட்டும், எலுமிச்சை சாற்றை பிளிந்தும் பரிமாறலாம். இதனால் உண்ணும் போது நன்கு மணமாக இருப்பதோடு, சுவையாகவும் இருக்கும். மேலும் இது சப்பாத்தி, பூரி போன்றவற்றிற்கு மிகவும் அருமையாக இருக்கும்.

Friday, June 15, 2012

மனச்சோர்வை குறைக்கும் ஆறு உணவுகள்

Six Foods Cure Your Depression
போல்ட் ஸ்கை :வியாழக்கிழமை, ஜூன் 14, 2012, 14:30



எல்லாரும் இப்போதெல்லாம் ஐஸ்கிரீம், சிப்ஸ், பிஸ்கட், ஃபாஸ்ட் புட்-ன்னு அதிகமாக சாப்பிடுகிறார்கள். அதுவும் இதை வேலை செய்பவர்கள் அதிகம் உண்பதால் அவர்களுக்கு பசியானது அடிக்கடி சீக்கிரமாக ஏற்படுகிறது. அப்போது அவர்களால் வேலையை சரியாக செய்ய முடியாமல் போய்விடுகிறது. இதனால் அவர்கள் மனச்சோர்வுக்கு ஆளாகிவிடுகிறார்கள் என்று விஞ்ஞானப்பூர்வமாக கண்டுபிடித்துள்ளனர் விஞ்ஞானிகள். மேலும் ஒரு சில உணவுகளை உண்டால் மனச்சோர்வு ஏற்படாது என்றும் கூறி அந்த உணவுகளையும் பட்டியலிட்டுள்ளனர்.
1. பாதாம் பருப்பு - அதில் அளவுக்கு அதிகமாக மக்னீசியம் உள்ளது. உடலில் மக்னீசியமானது குறைவாக இருந்தால் நரம்புகளில் கோளாறு ஏற்பட்டு, இதனால் மனச்சோர்வு ஏற்படும். மேலும் காராமணி, பசலைக் கீரை மற்றும் உருளைக் கிழங்கிலும் மக்னீசியம் அதிகமாக உள்ளது.
2. கடல் உணவு - கடல் உணவுகளான மீன், நண்டு, இறால் போன்றவற்றை உண்பதால் உடலானது சற்று ரிலாக்ஸ் ஆக இருப்பதோடு, சற்று புத்துணர்ச்சியோடும் இருக்கும். மேலும் இவற்றை உண்பதால் மனதில் தோன்றும் தேவையில்லாத குழப்பங்களும், எதிர்மறை எண்ணங்களும் நீங்கி, மனச்சோர்வும் கட்டுப்படும்.
3. பால் - மனச்சோர்வோடு இருப்பவர்கள் பால் அல்லது பால் பொருளான தயிரை உணவில் அதிகம் சேர்க்கலாம். ஏனெனில் பாலில் அதிகமாக ஒமேகா-3 இருப்பதால், இது உடலை புத்துணர்ச்சியாக இருப்பதோடு, தேவையில்லாத எண்ணங்களால் ஏற்படும் மனச்சோர்வும் அகலும்.
4. சிக்கன் - இதுவரை நாம் சிக்கன் உண்பதால் நலம் என்று யார் சொல்லியும் கேட்டிருக்க மாட்டோம். ஆனால் இப்போது சிக்கன் பிடித்தவர்களுக்கு ஒரு நல்ல செய்தி, சிக்கனில் அதிகமாக புரோட்டீன், உடலுக்குத் தேவையான அமினோ ஆசிட் இருப்பதால், இது மனதை அமைதிப்படுத்தி, ஒரு நாளைக்கு உடலுக்கு தேவையான சக்தியைத் தருகிறது.
5. கார்போஹைட்ரேட் - எடை குறைய வேண்டுமென்று உணவில் கார்போஹைட்ரேட் நிறைந்த உணவை சாப்பிடாமல் இருக்க வேண்டாம். கார்போஹைட்ரேட் உள்ள உணவு எடையை அதிகரிக்கும் தான், ஆனால் அதே சமயம் கொஞ்சம் கூட சேர்க்காமல் இருக்க கூடாது. இதனால் மனச்சோர்வு தான் ஏற்படும்.
6. சாக்லேட் - மனச்சோர்வு குறைய சாக்லேட் கூட ஒரு சிறந்த உணவு. ஏனெனில் கோக்கோவில் அதிகமாக ஆன்டி-டிப்ரசன் பொருள் உள்ளது. சாக்லேட் சாப்பிடும் போது மனதிற்கு ஒருவித மகிழ்ச்சியை ஏற்படுத்தும். மேலும் இதில் வைட்டமின் பி இருப்பதால் மூளையை ஆரோக்கியமாகவும் வைக்கும்.
ஆகவே டயட் மேற்கொள்பவர்கள் மேற்சொன்ன அனைத்து உணவுகளையும் மனதில் கொண்டு கடைபிடியுங்கள். இதனால் எடை குறைவதோடு, உடலானது ஆரோக்கியமாகவும், மனச்சோர்வு இல்லாமலும் இருக்கும்.

உடல் உஷ்ணத்தை குறைக்கும் தாழம்பூ


  போல்ட் ஸ்கை:  திங்கள்கிழமை, ஜூன் 11, 2012, 17:08


கோடைகாலத்தில் உடல் உஷ்ணம் ஏற்படுவது இயல்பு. உடல் உஷ்ணத்தினால் நீர்க்கடுப்பு, பித்தம் உள்ளிட்ட பாதிப்புகள் ஏற்படும். இதுபோன்ற காலங்களில் தாழம்பு சிறந்த மருந்தாக செயல்படுகிறது. வாசம் வீசும் தாழம்பூக்களின் மருத்துவ குணங்களை பட்டியலிட்டுள்ளனர் சித்த மருத்துவர்கள்.
தாழ‌ம்பூ மண‌ப்பா‌கினை ஒரு தே‌க்கர‌ண்டி அளவு ‌நீ‌ரி‌ல் கல‌ந்து இருவேளை குடி‌த்து வர உட‌ல் உ‌ஷ‌்ண‌த்தை‌த் த‌ணி‌க்கு‌ம். தாழ‌ம்பூவை ‌நீ‌ரி‌ல் ஊற வை‌த்து அ‌ந்‌நீரை குடி‌த்து வர ‌விய‌ர்வையை ‌உ‌ண்டா‌க்கு‌ம்.
தாழ‌ம் பூ செடியின் வேரை இடி‌த்து சாறு ‌பி‌ழி‌ந்து அதனுட‌ன் வெ‌ல்ல‌ம் கல‌ந்து உ‌ட்கொ‌ண்டு வர வெ‌ப்ப நோ‌ய்க‌ள் த‌ணியு‌ம். தாழ‌ம் இலையின் ‌விழுதை இடி‌த்து சாறு ‌பி‌ழி‌ந்து நெ‌ய்யுட‌ன் கல‌ந்து கா‌ய்‌ச்‌சி 5 ‌மி‌ல்ல‌ி அளவு உ‌ட்கொ‌ண்டு வர ‌நீ‌ர்‌க்கடு‌ப்பு, ‌நீ‌ர்‌ச்சுரு‌க்கு குணமாகு‌ம்.
தாழ‌ம்பூவை து‌ண்டு து‌ண்டாக வெ‌ட்டி ‌நீ‌ரி‌ல் இ‌ட்டு கா‌ய்‌ச்ச வே‌ண்டு‌ம். ‌நீ‌ர் ந‌ன்கு கொ‌தி‌த்து பூ‌வித‌ழ்க‌ள் வத‌ங்‌கிய ‌பி‌ன் வடிக‌ட்டி, தேவையான ச‌ர்‌க்கரை கூ‌ட்டி பாகுபதமா‌ய் கா‌ய்‌ச்‌சி வடிக‌ட்டி‌க் கொ‌ள்ளவு‌ம். இதுவே தாழ‌ம்பு மண‌ப்பாகு. இதனை ஒரு ‌தே‌க்கர‌ண்டி அளவு ‌நீ‌ரி‌ல் கல‌ந்து இருவேளை குடி‌த்து வர உட‌ல் உ‌ஷ‌்ண‌த்தை‌த் த‌ணி‌க்கு‌ம். இ‌ப்படி செ‌ய்தா‌ல் ‌பி‌த்த நோ‌ய்களு‌ம் ‌தீரு‌ம். அ‌திகள‌வி‌ல் ‌சிறு‌நீ‌ர் வெ‌ளியாவதை‌த் தடு‌க்கு‌ம். தாழ‌ம்பூ மண‌ப்பா‌கினை வெ‌யி‌ல் கால‌ங்க‌ளி‌ல் ‌தினச‌ரி உபயோ‌கி‌த்து வர அ‌ம்மை நோ‌ய் வராம‌ல் தடு‌க்கலா‌ம்.
தாழம்பூ தோல்நோய்களை குணமாக்கும். மண‌ப்பாகை தாழ‌ம்பூ வே‌ரினை‌ப் பய‌ன்படு‌த்‌தி செ‌ய்து வை‌த்து‌க் கொ‌ண்டு உ‌ட்கொ‌ண்டு வர சொ‌றி, ‌சிர‌ங்கு, ‌தினவு, தோ‌ல் நோ‌ய்க‌ள் குணமாகு‌ம்.
தாழ‌ம்பூவை நெரு‌ப்பு‌த் தண‌லி‌ல் கா‌ட்டி கச‌க்‌கி சாறு ப‌ி‌‌ழி‌ந்து அ‌தி‌ல் ‌சில து‌ளிகளை கா‌தி‌ல் ‌விட்டால் காது வ‌லி, கா‌தி‌ல் தோ‌ன்று‌ம் க‌ட்டி ஆ‌கியவை குணமாகு‌ம். தாழம்பூ சாம்பலை காயங்களின் மீது பூச புண்கள் குணமாகும்.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Dal Bati: The Original Marwari Recipe

Boldsky :Thursday, June 7, 2012, 17:29 [IST]

Dal Bati is the pride of Marwari food. Call it unhealthy or fattening, there is nothing to beat the taste of this dal recipe. Even the obscene amounts of ghee that you pour on Dal Bati does nothing to discourage a real foodie. This Rajasthani recipe is based on the needs of a very rough and dry climate.
A word of warning; This dal recipe is also a perfect example of typically spicy Indian food. The ghee and mirch (dry red chilli) chonk (seasoning) makes this Rajasthani recipe one of the spiciest foods ever. But, when you are making it at home, you can easily modify the spice content to your comfort. Although it is a classic dish, Dal Bati is not really a very complicated recipe. Check it out yourself.

Ingredients For Bati:
Flour 2 cups
Fennel seed (saunf) 1 tsp
Ghee 2 tbsp
Salt as per taste
Ingredients For Dal:
Toor dal (pigeon peas) ½ cup
Urad dal (black eyed dal) ½ cup
Moong Dal (green gram dal) 2 tbsp
Chana dal (Bengal gram dal) 2 tbsp
Cumin seeds 1 tsp
Dry red chillies 4
Onions 2 (chopped)
Tomato 1 (chopped)
Red chilli powder 1 tbsp
Ghee 3 tbsp
Salt as per taste

Procedure To Make Dal Bati:

1. Soak all the dals in water for at least an hour.
2. Knead a soft dough with all the ingredients of the bati. Make small balls out of them.
3. Now cook these balls in a pot of boiling water for 5-7 minutes. Strain the water and cut the balls into halves.
4. Deep fry the bati in piping hot ghee for about 4-5 minutes. When they turn golden brown, strain and keep them aside.
5. Pressure cook all the dals for 2 whistles.
6. In a deep bottomed pan heat ghee. Season it with cumin seeds, red chillies and red chilli powder.
7. Saute the onions in it until they turn golden brown. Then add the tomatoes and sprinkle salt over it.
8. When the tomatoes melt into a pulp, pour the boiled dal into it. Cook for 2 minutes and you are done.
Pouring lots of warm ghee over the bati and dal while devouring it is a must!

Southern spice lasagnae


Southern spice lasagnae. Photo: Special Arrangement
ShermaRaj:The Hindu:Madurai:14 June 2012

Ingredients:
(For dough)
Maida: 100gms
Oil: 10ml
Salt: 15gms
Method:
Make a tight dough and sheet into thin layer.Cook it in a hot plate and cut into rectangular even sheets. Keep aside.
(For paneer masala)
Grated paneer: 100gms
Colour capsicum: 30gms
Turmeric, coriander and chilli powder: 10gms each
Chopped ginger, garlic and chilli: 10gms each
Jeera whole and powder:10gms each
Method:
Heat oil in a pan.Add ginger, garlic, chilli and Jeera. Then add the colour capsicum, grated paneer and finish with salt and fresh coriander
(For mushroom masala)
Mushroom masala: 100gms
O.T.M. masala: 20gms
Makhani masala and jeera powder: 10gms each
Salt: To taste
Method:
Heat oil in a pan. Add the mushrooms and cook well. Add the O.T.M masala, the makhani gravy and jeera powder and check for seasoning. Keep the masala aside.
(For spinach and potato masala)
Spinach: 75gms
Potato: 50gms
Chopped onion:50gms
Chopped garlic and chilli: 10 gms each
Jeera:10 gms
Chilli powder:15 gms
Turmeric powder:10 gms
Amul cheese: 30gms
Method:
Heat oil in a pan. Add jeera, chopped garlic, ginger and chillies. Then add the chopped onions and sauté till translucent. Add the powder masalas and chopped spinach and potato. Cook till the raw flavour goes. Keep the filling separately.
Now, keep the sheet prepared earlier in a plate and fill it with the already cooked paneer masala.
Then place the other sheet on top of it and spread the already cooked mushroom masala on top. Keep another sheet on top of mushroom masala and over it spread the potato and spinach masala. On the last sheet put the grated cheese and cook it oven
Chef Sherma Raj.A works as Commi-I at the The Gateway Hotel Pasumalai in Madurai. He has been with the Taj group of hotels for the past four years. Prior to this, he was with Hotel Park Plaza as commi-II. He started his career with Bell Hotel, a food chain in Madurai, after completing a course in hotel management.

How to make…Dibba Rotte



Dibba Rotte
Anuradha Venkatesh:The Hindu:14 June 2012
I learnt this dish from my mother who learnt it from her mother.
Dibba rotte is a traditional Andhra recipe and is usually cooked in a heavy kadai set on dying embers after the morning's main meal has been cooked.
 Usually eaten in the evening it however makes for a great breakfast dish.
What you need
Urad Dal - 1 cup
Raw rice, soaked for about 4 - 6 hours - 2 1/2 cups
Cumin seeds – 1/2 tsp
Pepper – 1/4 tsp
Asafoetida – 1/4 tsp
Red chilli – 1
Salt – 1 tsp
Gingelly oil – 1/2 cup
Cooking instructions
Grind the soaked raw rice to idli batter consistency in a blender along with cumin seeds, pepper, asafoetida, red chilli and salt.
Whip the batter and let it rest, covered, for about an hour. This batter makes about four medium-sized dibba rottes. The batter should not ferment.
Heat a thick bottomed kadai, add 3 tbsp of oil and pour about a quarter of the batter into it. Cover and cook on a very low flame (about 15-20 min) till the bottom develops a thick golden crust. Turn over using a large spatula. Cook the other side, uncovered, this should take about seven-10 minutes. Slide carefully on to a plate, cut into wedges and serve hot with ginger pickle or avakkai.
Anuradha Venkatesh is an HR consultant who runs a soft skills training firm. She loves everything about food — the making, the reading about, the eating and the dreaming.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Meals that heal- Berry that delights

RICH SOURCE OF VITAMIN C Gooseberry
Gabriel :The Hindu :3 June 2012

Gooseberry (‘amla' in Hindi and ‘nellikai' in Tamil) has medicinal properties. 

Amla is an extensively used in making ayurvedic medicines.

 It is believed to rejuvenate all the organ systems of the body. According to ayurvedic experts, regular consumption of amla increases longevity. 

Amla is a potent source of vitamin C. Amla is excellent for strengthening the hair and maintaining its colour and lustre.As a powerful antioxidant, it helps scavenge free radicals. Free radicals are unstable oxygen-based ions in the body that are linked to disease and premature aging. Amla cleanses, hydrates and nourishes the skin.  
Now, for a recipe.

Amla Delight

Ingredients 
Khoya: 500gm
Powdered sugar: 250gm
A few drops of yellow colour

For the filling
Amla grated and cooked with 2 tbsp of sugar: 1 cup
Sugar candy: 3 tbsp
Desiccated coconut: quarter cup
A few almonds finely sliced for decoration

Method:  Mix khoya, sugar and yellow colour.  Mix the ingredients for the filling together.   Take a lemon-sized portion of the khoya mixture, flatten it on your palm and place one tsp of the filling in the centre of it and again shape it like a ball. Press lightly. Roll it in the desiccated coconut and garnish it with sliced almonds.

Sous Chef Vivanta by
Taj Connemara 


Who let the chef out?


Cooking up a storm: Chef Hemant Oberoi
Cooking up a storm: Chef Hemant Oberoi
The culinary masters are now increasingly mingling with diners, making Page 3 appearances, and donning the marketer's hat.


BL :Sravanthi Callapalli:june 6,2012

 

With a swipe of the cleaver, Martin ‘Wizard of the Wok' Yan chops a clove of garlic into smithereens, and grins widely, knowing he's making an impression on the couch potato watching his show. The amiable Sanjeev Kapoor, perhaps India's best recognised culinary king, has been talking up a storm even as he ladles out dish after dish from his Khana Khazana. Anthony Bourdain has delighted and disgusted with panache while the delectable Nigella effortlessly puts together an entire Christmas meal.


Chefs have been holding us in thrall in our living rooms as they cook up a feast on the TV shows. Now, even 9-year-olds amaze us with their very adult recipes on Junior Masterchef.


But wait, who's that person approaching our table at the fine dining restaurant? S/he's the chef, and wants to know if you're enjoying your meal. It's not just the celeb television show chef who's a big brand. Every other fine dining restaurant in town is now forcing its culinary wizards out of their kitchens to meet and chat with diners.


And they are not confined to the restaurant. They make regular appearances on Page 3, on television shows and other media to promote their establishment, be it their own or their employers'. On the one hand, the chef markets the restaurant while on the other, the establishment promotes its chef as a culinary star. The result: The chef is increasingly wearing a dual hat. From menu planning to marketing recipes, he's got to be savvy at both.


To build and maintain the image of the celebrity chef, the media and customers must be kept constantly excited by innovative work, so now appearances on TV have become de rigueur. Hemant Oberoi, Corporate Chef and Grand Executive Chef at the Taj Mahal Palace, says, “There are two types of chefs – television chefs and chefs on television. I aspire to be remembered as the latter.”


Chennai-based Chef Anand of the restaurant Cornucopia has been mingling with his diners since as far back as 1987. “I do it because I love meeting people, and I'm very passionate about my food, but not as a marketing tactic. Of course, it eventually translates into more money but that wasn't the motivation,” he insists.


DUAL ROLE DILEMMA


A chef who did not wish to be identified said the desire for celebrity causes problems – Marketing wants the chefs to come outside and chat up the patrons; some chefs don't want to do it. They dislike guests telling them how the food should have been and often do not accept criticism, he says.


Recently, a senior chef of an upmarket restaurant in Chennai was given his marching orders for failing to comply with a company policy. His fault: He rarely went out to chat with the diners.


To Vipin Sachdev, his employer, managing director of Tuscana Kryptos Restaurants, this was anathema, as he believes a chef should inspire as much trust and confidence as a good doctor – both professions involve one's health, after all! “If you go to the hospital, you would want to be seen by the doctor, not the receptionist. It's similar in restaurants, best to meet the chef rather than the manager or the waiter,” he says. The group has its own celebrity chef in Chef Willi, a New Zealander, who is used extensively to market its restaurants.


Sachdev says having an experienced, celebrity chef can even turn into savings for the restaurant. “Yes, they cost money, but more people come in. And they know how to make great-tasting food even while curbing wasteful expenditure,” he says, adding that in Burgundy, one of his restaurants, he recently cut the price of the lunch buffet from Rs 785 to Rs 650. He doesn't accept, though, that prices are hiked because of the chef's celebrity. “Whether it's Rajinikanth or some other actor, the ticket prices at the cinema stay the same. It's the same case here,” he argues.


Vikas Khanna, the New York-based Michelin-star chef who hosts Masterchef India (Season 2), says India's love for food as a country has “become pronounced with the help of so many networks and outlets.” He believes celebrity chefs have intensified the bond with the guest and it has created a much higher demand for dining out.


Mehrnavaz Avari, Food & Beverage Manager, The Taj Mahal Palace, Mumbai, admits restaurants gain a premium due to their association with celebrity and titled chefs (Michelin-starred, or Iron Chef, for example). She says, “Restaurants can command a higher price if a celebrity chef is actively involved in the menu creation,” she adds.


The Le Meriden brand of hotels has gone a step further and given them a new artistic positioning. Renowned coffee barista Fritz Storm is part of this group, as is Michelin-star chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten and they ‘curate' (note the usage of the word – relatively new to the world of food and beverages ) the coffee and breakfast experience across the Le Meridiens of the world. Both actively engage with guests and the media.


CUISINE GURUS


Globally, while chefs have already earned cuisine guru status, that development is slowly being seen in India too.


In Bangalore, the restaurant scene is incomplete without a reference to Chef Abhijit Saha, the chef and co-owner of Caperberry, which does food based on molecular gastronomy. Saha has also created the menu for Fava, a Mediterranean restaurant and lounge bar in the ultra-luxurious UB City. A willingness to ‘do the new', apart from communication skills and confidence are important attributes of a celebrity chef, he says.


Marryam H. Reshii, Delhi-based gastronomy writer, says the true celebrity chef as in Anthony Bourdain (who does not cook but travels and writes about food and presents it on TV), Gordon Ramsay, Angela Hartnett and Pierre Hermes is still some time away from India. Quite scathingly, she adds, “We are obsessed by phoren, which is why Praveen Anand (of Park Sheraton, Chennai), Ranveer Brar (Executive Chef, Novotel, Mumbai) and Saby Gorai (Olive, Delhi) are not approached by fans on the roads.”


Brand endorsements are another aspect of celebrity-chefdom. Chef Saha views them as stepping stones towards celebrity stature. “The marketing of an external brand further strengthens one's status. This is very good in terms of business for the restaurant.”


Chef Saha is clear about the role of a celebrity chef in building brand image. “Many restaurants today are celebrity chef-driven. Customers find it easy to associate with such restaurants. Numbers cannot be driven by a celebrity chef alone; they have to be backed by substance in terms of consistently high quality food and service,” he says.


While opinion is divided on who's a celebrity chef and who's not, and whether these chefs have caused a rise in the price of food, it is clear that the day of the chef as a brand ambassador has finally happened.


And as Vikas Khanna sums up, “Prices on the menu mean nothing. If the food and the experience are worth the value, the places will continue to exist.”


With additional reporting by Archana Achal

Sunday, June 3, 2012

இனிப்பான வாழைப்பழ போண்டா...

Banana Bonda

போல்ட் ஸ்கை :வியாழக்கிழமை, மே 17, 2012,

குழந்தைகள் விரும்பி சாப்பிடும் வாழைப்பழம் உடலுக்கு மிகச் சிறந்தது. அந்த வாழைப்பழத்தை கொஞ்சம் வித்தியாசமா நம்ம செல்லங்களுக்கு செஞ்சு கொடுப்போமா!!!

தேவையான பொருட்கள் :

பாதி கனிந்த வாழைப்பழம் - 2
துருவிய தேங்காய் - 1/2 கப்
சர்க்கரை - 1/2 கப்
ஏலக்காய் பொடி - 1/4 டீஸ்பூன்
முந்திரி, திராட்சை, நெய், உப்பு - தேவையான அளவு
தேங்காய் எண்ணெய் - பொரிக்க

செய்முறை :

முதலில் வாழைப்பழத்தை பு‌ட்டு வேக வை‌ப்பது போல தோலுடன் ஆவியில் வேக வைக்கவும். பின்னர் அதன் தோலை உரித்து, அதிலுள்ள விதைகளை நீ‌க்‌கி, தண்ணீர் சேர்க்காமல் அதைப் பிசைந்து கொள்ளவும்.

சர்க்கரையைச் சிறிதளவு தண்ணீரில் சேர்த்து, சர்க்கரைப்பாகு செய்து கொள்ளவும். பிறகு அந்த பாகுவில் துருவிய தேங்காயை, உப்பு, நெய், ஏலக்காய் பொடி, முந்திரி, திராட்சை சேர்ந்து பூரணமாக கலந்து வைத்துக் கொள்ளவும்.

பின்னர் வேக வைத்த வாழைப்பழத்தை சிறு சிறு உருண்டைகளாக்கி, அதன் நடுவே பூரணத்தை வைத்து, பிறகு தேங்காய் எண்ணெயில் பொன்னிறமாக பொரித்து எடுக்கவும்.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

வித்தியாசமான மாம்பழ கேசரி

How Make Delicious Mango Kesari
போல்ட் ஸ்கை :மே 10, 2012,


பொதுவாக கேசரியை ஏதேனும் பண்டிகை தினங்களில் செய்வோம். இதுவரை நாம் அவில் மற்றும் ரவையில் தான் கேசரி செய்திருப்போம், இப்போது புதிதாக மாம்பழத்தில் கூட கேசரி செய்யலாம். இது குழந்தைகளுக்கு மிகவும் பிடித்தமான ஒரு இனிப்பாக இருக்கும். தற்போது சீசன் காலம் என்பதால் மாம்பழம் எளிதில் கிடைக்கும். மாம்பழ கேசரி எப்படி செய்வதென்று தெரிந்து கொள்ளுங்களேன்.

தேவையான பொருட்கள் :

ரவை – ஒரு கப்
பால் - ஒரு கப்
சர்க்கரை – ஒரு கப்
மாம்பழக்கூழ் – அரை கப்
தண்ணீர் – ஒரு கப்
முந்திரி, திராட்சை - 3
நெய் - 6 மேஜை கரண்டி
உப்பு - ஒரு சிட்டிகை

செய்முறை :

ஒரு வாணலியில் சிறிதளவு நெய்யை ஊற்றி அதில் ரவையைப் போட்டு பொன்னிறமாக வரும் வரை வறுத்து எடுத்து தட்டில் வைத்துக் கொள்ளவும். பின் சிறிது நெய் ஊற்றி அதில் முந்திரி, திராட்சை ஆகியவற்றை வறுக்கவும்.

மாம்பழக்கூழுடன் பால், தண்ணீர் மற்றும் சர்க்கரை சேர்த்து கொதிக்க கொள்ளவும்.

பின்னர் ஒரு அகலமான பாத்திரத்தில் தண்ணீரை விட்டு கொதித்த உடன் அதில் வறுத்த ரவையை போட்டு கிளரவும். ரவை பாதி வெந்து கெட்டியாக வரும் போது மாம்பழக் கூழ் கலவையை சேர்த்து கிளறவும். கேசரி கெட்டியானதும் இறக்கிவிடவும். அதன்மேல் வறுத்த முந்திரி, திராட்சையை தூவி அலங்கரிக்கவும். இதோ சுவையான வித்தியாசமான மாம்பழ கேசரி ரெடி.

Ooty chocolates, now in Chromepet

Toffee: Visitors choosing Ooty Chocolates from a wide range. Photo: K. Manikandan
K Manikandan :The Hindu :2 june 2012


Ooty Chocolates, started in West Tambaram two years ago, has opened another shop in Chromepet. Located in a strategic location on Grand Southern Trunk opposite the railway station and close to Vetri Theatre, the shop is a one-stop shop for sweet treats.

K. Garibaldi and Tilak Raj, proprietors, toldDowntown that they decided to launch a new shop after the response to their two-year-old branch in Tambaram was encouraging. Chocolates with roasted almond, cashewnuts and fruit and nut continued to be most popular, especially among children.

The shop also has natural and fresh home made ice-creams in more than a dozen flavours. Both the chocolates and ice-creams were free from preservatives and synthetic substances normally associated with conventional chocolates and ice-creams.

R. Vijayshankar, Editor, Frontline, inaugurated the shop recently in the presence of T.K.M. Chinnayya, Animal Husbandry Minister and P. Dhan Singh and K.M.R. Nissar Ahmed, Pallavaram MLA and Municipal Chairman respectively.

The shop also arranges door delivery for orders close to Rs. 300 and above. The shop can be reached at 98406 56317.

Home made Summer quenchers



BEAT THE HEAT With home-made drinks
The Hindu :Sreemathy Ramaswamy:1 june 2012
Beat the heat with these refreshing drinks
As the temperature around you soars, one is tempted to drink something ice cold. And, though there are many thirst quenchers in the market, these chilled drinks are only sugar syrups with added chemicals and artificial flavours. Home-made coolers are easy to prepare with fresh vegetables and fruits. Not only are these home-made juices good for health, they are economical as well.

COOL PINKY DELIGHT

Ingredients
Beetroot: 1 (medium)
Sugar: 250 gm
Method
Wash and peel the skin of the beetroot. Grate it. Cook the grated beetroot with two cups of water. Cool, blend, and strain the mixture. Boil the sugar till it reaches a one-string consistency. Allow the mixture to cool. Mix the syrup with the beetroot juice. Store it in a bottle and refrigerate. You can serve the drink by mixing the beetroot syrup with cold milk or by adding a drop of rose essence in it.

ORANGE TINT JUICE

Ingredients
Carrot: 3
Sugar: 250 gm
Lemon: 2
Method
Wash, peel, and then grate carrots. Boil two cups of water and add the grated carrot. Cook well. Cool the mixture and strain it. Boil water and add the sugar till it reaches a one-string consistency. Add the lemon juice and boil for five minutes. Cool and mix with carrot juice. Store the mixture in a bottle. Add cold water while serving the juice.

GREEN GINGER JUICE

Ingredients
Ginger: 150 gm
Lemon juice: 1 cup
Sugar: 250 gm
Mint leaves (pudina): 1 cup
Method
Wash and peel off the skin of the ginger. Wash again to make sure all dirt is removed. Dice the ginger and grind it into a fine paste by adding water. Strain and keep aside; white sediment will form in this mixture. Strain out the sediment. Grind the mint leaves with some water and strain. Add sugar with one cup water and boil till it reaches one-string consistency. Add the ginger juice, mint juice, and lemon juice and boil for five minutes. Let it cool. Store in a bottle. Serve the drink by adding water and ice. This drink is good for those with stomach ailments.

RED DELIGHT

Ingredients
Tomatoes: 4 or 5
Sugar: 200 gm
Lemon juice: 3 tsp
Method
Boil water, put in the tomatoes, cover the vessel, and turn off the stove. Leave it to cool. Once it is cool, peel the tomatoes and deseed it. Grind the tomatoes to a fine paste. Boil one cup of water, add the sugar and make sugar syrup.
Add the tomato paste and boil it. Add the lemon juice next and bring it to boil. Cool it. Add water and serve.

My Grandma’s Recipe: How to make …… Kollu Kozhambu

Kollu Kozhambu. Photo: M. Srinath
Kollu Kozhambu. Photo: M. Srinath


The Hindu :1 june 2012



A spicy twist to health food
Horse gram is rich in healing properties and is popularly given to new mothers, heavily menstruating women and children who need to become stronger.
What you need:
Tamarind: lemon-sized ball
Horse Gram : 100 grams
Pepper: 6 to 7 tsp
Turmeric powder: a pinch
Red Chillies: 6
Bengal Gram: one handful
Asafoetida: a pinch
Coriander seeds: a handful
Curry leaves and coriander: a few
Mustard: a pinch
Salt: to taste
Cooking Instructions:
Roast without oil and powder all the above mentioned ingredients except salt, tamarind and mustard. Mix the tamarind with water and bring to a boil. Add the powdered ingredients to the boiling tamarind and continue to boil until it reduces to a thick consistency. Season with mustard and add to the dish before garnishing with curry leaves and coriander. This horse gram in this dish is ideal for those looking to reduce weight.
Radha Balaji. Photo: M. Srinath
Radha Balaji. Photo: M. Srinath
Radha Balaji is a home maker who spends her free time tending to the garden patch outside her house. She even grows her own curry leaves and a few vegetables.


The Golden Dragon restaurant at the Taj Coromandel in Chennai

Soya rice at Golden Dragon
Soya rice at Golden Dragon


Archana Achal:The Hindu:1 June 2012



The Golden Dragon restaurant at the Taj Coromandel in Chennai has been regarded as one of the finest Chinese cuisine dining options in the city for decades. This reputation looks like one that is going to stick on, especially with the changes the hotel has made at the restaurant over the last few years. Late last year, they introduced a tea-pairing menu which was well received and now, they have added new dishes to the menu to lure health-conscious gourmands.
Contemporary move
The decision to add new dishes to the menu was made to make the restaurant more contemporary. Plus, Chinese styles of cooking are quite suited to good health, since it involves a lot of steaming and quick stir-frying with minimal oil. Chef Ho Chun Kee (William), who has close to forty years of culinary experience researched the recipes back in China before bringing them to Golden Dragon. Cantonese cuisine was a perfect choice and the dishes were made to represent both home and street-style cooking from the area. The ingredients used are quite seasonal and being paired with teas from their tea menu, the dining experience attempts at being a light yet satiating one.
The Ultimate trio of vegetables.
The Ultimate trio of vegetables.
Starting off
Two bamboo steamers arrive filled with dumplings that are paired with a subtle, green silk tea. The Chew Jao dumpling is a delight for mushroom-lovers, filled with straw and shitake mushrooms, bamboo shoot and cashew nuts. The soft mushrooms are given an edge with the crunchy nuts, creating contrasting textures. The chicken and chive dumpling is lighter in flavour and steamed to perfection. A contemporary condiment placed on the table is mustard sauce, very un-Chinese but popular with diners. The dumplings are followed by Drunken Tofu – firm tofu that is soaked in hot garlic sauce is garnished with sautéed onions. The spicy starter is offset by the Green and White tea with peaches and chamomile aroma. The wok fried chicken with sour plums and shitake is less forceful in flavour, with a subtle tang from the plums. A ginger and mushroom soup is served next with cinnamon roll-looking, fried garlic bao or Chinese bread. The soup has a consistency between thick and thin and is surprisingly sweet, attributed to palm sugar used often in Cantonese cooking. A vegetable soup with tomato is also available if you prefer clear soups. Aromatic white tea with fruit and flower overtones accompany the soups and is a good choice to clear your palate.
The Tea bar
The Tea bar
The main idea
The sides to the rice and noodles are varied and made with imported ingredients like lotus stem and bamboo shoots from Thailand. Sometimes, scallops with roe intact are brought in from Ukraine. The Ultimate Trio, a dish with crunchy snow peas, crisp lotus stem and baby corn stir-fried with chilis had balanced flavour and aroma, while the Hunan chicken in black bean sauce with earthy greens carried the familiar taste of sour black beans. But the aromatic soya rice was the star attraction. A mix of sticky and normal rice is steeped in soya sauce (that is fermented for ten days) and served with stir-fried cashew nuts. The dish is delicious enough to be eaten on its own with its dense soy flavour. Served with the light Fortune Ball tea, it is a great addition to the menu. Pan fried flat Hofan noodles are steamed and served in bamboo shoots which impart a deep, earthy flavour to an otherwise subtle noodle dish. Seafood-lovers can try the Prawn Cantonese, where the flavour of the fresh prawns is not overpowered by the garlic sauce.
Toffee bananas at Golden Dragon
Toffee bananas at Golden Dragon
Flambéed fruits are a clear choice for dessert after the substantial main course. The chefs use brandy, triple sec or other liquors for the flambé. Fresh, flambéed peaches were served for this review and were not too sweet, which was perfect with the vanilla ice cream placed alongside. But if you have a proper sweet tooth, do not miss out on the litchi and basil seed ice cream. Made entirely in-house, this sweet concoction was polished off quickly. Fresh slices of litchi and crunchy basil seeds added great texture to the smooth ice cream. Pu-erh tea is served with the desserts and one hopes its famous slimming properties kick into action straightaway.
Chef William
Chef William
The additions to the menu are light and delicious, and will not have you reaching for table condiments. Always a sign of a good meal.
What: A new menu
Where: Golden Dragon, Taj Coromandel, Chennai
How much: Rs 4,000 for a meal for two without wine


Gourmet Files : Power in a puff


Two not enough: Deep fried and delicious.
The Hindu :Vasundhara Chauhan:2 june 2012
When the round piece of dough emerges from hot oil, looking all brown and puffed up, you can't help succumbing to the temptation.
Last Sunday my little sister-in-law invited us to lunch. It was getting on to 45°, it was dry as only Delhi can be in May, she lives on the top floor of her apartment building, and the loo was blowing. In other words, it was blazing hot. And she stood in the kitchen and made us, with her own fair hands, hot pooris with the traditional rase ke alu,dahi and achar the only other accompaniments.

That was a memorable meal, for many reasons: The company was easy and comforting, she had chilled the house with the air conditioner set to glacial, and the menu was just perfect. To have added or subtracted from it would have been criminal.

The boiled potatoes, roughly broken by hand into a thinnish orange-yellow gravy of tomatoes and dahi were flavoured with just zeera, cumin and haldi. Just a hint of hing (asafœtida), garam masala and freshly chopped coriander. The dough, the poori atta, had been kneaded with dried methi, fenugreek leaves.

Family choices

I asked for mine puffed but soft, her brother for his crisp, and our niece for her solitary one without the methi. We all ate till we collapsed and a crane had to be brought in to lift us.
The main reason was that in my house pooris are inedible (“but why, bhabhi, there's nothing to pooris — why can't you?”) and so I've given up. The second was the purity of the alu, and the crowning taste was the aam ka achar. For years I've annually suffered “hints” about the best raw mango pickle being the one with no stone, no saunf-methi-kalonji (fennel-fenugreek-nigella), only red chillies and hing and I've turned a deaf ear because I don't like it. It's cut into long, limp, thin slivers and tastes only of its ingredients, which don't work for me, they're too unconnected, too raw.

But the pickle at Chhoti's house had small triangular pieces of mango, positively reeking of hing, but sweet and hot. The texture was firm and crisp and naturally the taste was sour, but a large amount of sugar added an unexpected kick. With that savoury meal, sweetness did the trick. I'm still waiting for a consignment and the recipe.

A few days later I went to a mall for a movie, the plan was to eat a large breakfast and skip lunch. So I filled up on the mandatory popcorn and then politely agreed to share a sandwich or pizza after.

One look at the menu and sure enough, all three of us wanted to eat many things. I'm a sandwich fiend, am supposed to avoid red meat, so ordered a tuna sandwich. Tuna is supposed to be a good source of vitamins D, B3 and B6, and, in any case, it has a flavour that I like. Unlike most shop-bought sandwich fillings, which taste and smell of pink reconstituted plastic, tuna has character.

Tuna sandwich

This came in toasted brown whole wheat bread, cut into four large triangles and filled almost to bursting. The filling was held together by mayonnaise — probably eggless — and its flavour and crunch explained the name they'd given it: Colaba tuna sandwich. They could as well have named it Nungambakkam or Defence Colony Tuna Sandwich, or anything else desi. But to non-Mumbaikars, Colaba has a certain ring. In it they'd mixed fresh chopped dhania (coriander) stalks and leaves but there was also the pungent, unmistakeable bite of finely sliced raw purple onions.

I like onions as much as the next person, but only with hot food, and only with meat. We were tortured as children and not allowed onions at lunch, which was usually vegetarian, but they were served steeped in malt vinegar at dinner — which was always mutton in some form — and the habit has stuck.

The onion in the sandwich was crisp in the middle of the squishy tuna salad and its flavour balanced the smell of the tuna without overpowering it. Occasionally a succulent stem of coriander would burst freshly into the mouth. Both onions and coriander are “ornery” and a part of all our larders, but the unexpectedness of the juxtaposition was what wrought the magic.

All unusual combinations don't necessarily succeed, sometimes they manage to be only just edible. But some act like a magic wand, transforming pumpkins to carriages and scullery drudges to belles of balls.

I find that with saunf, fennel. The humble every day dhuli moong (yellow, hulled mung), often cooked in combination with masoor ki dal (red split lentil) is usually tempered, like most other dals in the North, with cumin.


   In the South it's most likely mustard seeds. This one is boiled with saunf. Sautéing saunf changes its smell completely — it becomes smoky, crisp, fried. While that's right for some dishes, it lacks the almost herbal freshness of boiling. Sorry — that makes it sound almost grassy which it's not. It adds a sweet, pleasing lightness to the dal.

All one has to do is to put the washed dal to boil with water, salt and turmeric, add a pinch of whole saunf to the pot and cook till the dal is done. Then one can temper it with a bit of chopped onions or tomatoes. But the whole stew is infused with the delicate, refreshing fragrance whose appeal comes from the simplicity and the surprise.