Pakoras!
Tonight was pakoras, deep-fried fritters of mixed vegetables in a lightly-spiced chick-pea batter. Vegetables included onions, potatoes, carrots, spinach, zucchini, cauliflower. After they are fried I sprinkle them with some "chat masala"; in India every street vendor of snacks (aka "chat walla") has his own mix of masala, which usually includes salt and amchur (dried mango powder) as well as hot and aromatic spices, so it is sour, salty, and hot. I ate them with rice and lentils, plus some home-made mango chutney, and a little something to wash it all down.
Tonight was pakoras, deep-fried fritters of mixed vegetables in a lightly-spiced chick-pea batter. Vegetables included onions, potatoes, carrots, spinach, zucchini, cauliflower. After they are fried I sprinkle them with some "chat masala"; in India every street vendor of snacks (aka "chat walla") has his own mix of masala, which usually includes salt and amchur (dried mango powder) as well as hot and aromatic spices, so it is sour, salty, and hot. I ate them with rice and lentils, plus some home-made mango chutney, and a little something to wash it all down.
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Te Bheag nan Eilean (pronounced "chay vek nan yellen"), from the Isle of Skye. It has an unusually high proportion of malt for a blended Scotch, not widely available. For some strange reason it has been sold here in Nova Scotia for decades. It is very good, and definitely has some of the "Skye" character (a bit of smoke, a hint of salt).
I finally did homemade ketchup! it was incredible, never tried a so delicious sauce. The only con would be that maybe 1/2 tsp of cayenne pepper is a bit on the hot side, as I am not used to spicy ketchup, but not too hot. Just a taste matter. Thank you very much!Mustards' Ketchup
3 1/2 lbs tomatoes, peeled and chopped
1 to 1 1/4 lbs apples, peeled if using green, chopped
3 onions, chopped
1 1/2 c sugar
2 c cider vinegar
1 tbsp sea salt
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
6 black peppercorns
6 allspice berries
6 cloves
Combine all ingredients in a large stainless steel pot and bring to a
boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook, uncovered, for about 2 hours, until
it is the consistency of commercial ketchup. Allow to cool slightly,
then puree in blender until very smooth. Return to heat for several
minutes to thicken further, stirring often. Strain and cool.
I would post some pictures but somehow my mobile phone has deleted all my pictures I had stored! grrrrrr!!! 😡
I just ended up buying a packet of chili powder, due to not knowing the exact ingredients. Otherwise, it is a fast a easy way to make chili at least for the first time. I haven't cooked it yet, but I liked the idea of only adding the fresh ingredients and see what happens. Then I will try to add the thing at my own, after cooking a first batch 😀Ain't that the truth. I don't know where they get off selling that stuff as chili powder..
I finally did homemade ketchup! it was incredible, never tried a so delicious sauce.
Difficult to go back to the stuff in the squeeze bottle!
Difficult to go back to the stuff in the squeeze bottle!
When our CSA has .5$ a pound tomatoes it's on my list to try. BTW CSA's here is SF? I realize now what a crime syndicate the wine and spirits industry is in MA, but I still see more artisanal farming in New England.
Yeah, there are, but let me share two secrets with you, both in Fairfield: Larry's and Parker Farms (Suzie Parker grows the best tomatoes I've ever had). Of course, you've also got Berkeley Bowl, the finest produce store in the world. So I never bothered with the CSA there, but we depend on it here.
This encourages me to try variations on it. I never beleived I (24 years old, today's my birthday 🙂 ) was able to outperform a commercial brand. But I neither beleived I was able to outperform a commercial amplifier 4 years ago, but I did (and do) 🙄 .Difficult to go back to the stuff in the squeeze bottle!
Tonight was pakoras
Nice. Here, in this part of the country we have a heavy south asian presence so seeing your Pakoras is nice.
I (vaguely) recall making eggs like that when a kid-it was a sleeve put over the egg before boiling, boiling caused the sleeve to shrink to fit.
Tell us about those eggs. The chicken ones I mean. How are they decorated? 🙂
Ha! Russia getting modern!
Hand-painting used to be the done thing. Now you can buy shrink-on plastic sleeves.
First boil the eggs, then soak in onion-skin water to make brown. Apply sleeve (it is a tube), dunk in hot water for a minute and it shrinks to the egg.
Very hard boiled eggs are dry and boring ....
The fishy ones are much more interesting!
This is Cal typing. I screwed up big time. I went to quote myself from this post and forgot to copy and paste to a new post so I wiped out this one instead. It was a copy of the hot sauce recipe and The Baron saying he was going to try it, plus some other stuff I can't remember. Sorry Baron.
I cannot afford "real" caviare any more - used to get it via the Russian black market 😱 😱 , but no more.
That Red, 500grams for about $75us, is actually preferred as one can eat lots of it! This one was very fresh without any fishy smell.
With fresh plain white french bread, unsalted butter and a very smooth vodka it goes down a treat.
"Standard" Vodka is also available in UK shops at about £20/litre. Replacing Stoly on the market. Amazing stuff: no burn at all, especially if server from the freezer with a consistency of motor oil.
No sense of alcohol or slurring of speech, just a progressive warm well being until one suddenly falls over.
That Red, 500grams for about $75us, is actually preferred as one can eat lots of it! This one was very fresh without any fishy smell.
With fresh plain white french bread, unsalted butter and a very smooth vodka it goes down a treat.
"Standard" Vodka is also available in UK shops at about £20/litre. Replacing Stoly on the market. Amazing stuff: no burn at all, especially if server from the freezer with a consistency of motor oil.
No sense of alcohol or slurring of speech, just a progressive warm well being until one suddenly falls over.
That Red, 500grams for about $75us,
That is twice what we pay. 🙂
"Standard" Vodka is also available in UK shops at about £20/litre.
That is half what we pay. 🙁
just a progressive warm well being until one suddenly falls over.
😀
I cannot afford "real" caviare any more
Who can, white vaciar (spanish humor attempt) should be inhaled from a horizontal mirror with a straw nowadays.
I recall the days of doing six ounces of beluga in a weekend, at Moscow rate, at a time before caviar quality went down the crabper.
Once, during my door era, i scored a 1/2 kilo tin that a customer had left behind for whatever reason, for 50 bucks.
Ah, my Escobar student days, gone with the hair.
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