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Showing posts with label egg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label egg. Show all posts

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Day 04 - Christmas and Food Chronicles in Kolkata - Thai Pau, Dal Bora, Kati Rolls, Kehwa, Dragon Ball tea, Street Momos

The warm aroma of the last two 'Thai Paus' from the old man bearing goodies from Tiretti Bazaar and the legacy of the far east is an undeniably nice way to begin the day.
Two large Thai Paus filled with the heady and familiar morning mix of spring onions joined with the Chicken and hard boiled egg looked, smelt and invited devouring for breakfast.

To set the context---a little digression ...

China is not a country of rice (and noodles) it seems. The regions that predominantly grow wheat have a tradition of making Mantou 饅頭. Steamed, bread and bun seem antithetical since I've always had 'baked' associated with bun/bread in my head. Chinese think and do otherwise :) Happily, they brought it with them and made it an integral part of many of my mornings as I grew up in Kolkata. 

চিনা পাড়া or China Town... A space in my morning memories filled with the aromas of meat and fish ball soup, followed by bamboo and prawn dumplings and of course... Paus. That's what mantous are called here. 
The Thai variation is called... Well... Thai Pau. Pretty close to what Wikipedia declares as "salapao" . Instead of the Chinese sweet red pork bits, this one is much larger and is stuffed with a concoction of chicken cooked with green onions and hard boiled eggs.



(Aside--The province of Shanxi (山西) is where Mantou is supposedly called is often called momo (饃饃)!)

Baba and I went to Chandni Chowk for some work and I smelt the irresistible aroma of the roadside dal bora. Now these are crisp little bits of rough ground dal with spices, condiments, and flecks of aromatic green chillies providing a hint of heat, flash fried in a kadai before a sprinkle of rock salt gets you to salivate...
Making of the Dal Bora

ঠোঙ্গা ভর্তি ধুমাইত ডাল বড়া
Crispy Dal Bora topped with Rock Salt 



The granular ground Dal that makes the Bora... 



The maker (of the bora)...

Piping hot bora...



Work done we headed towards New Market aka the Stewart Hogg Market for some kati rolls. Now, this is one place where one could do a heritage walk for food. Many who grew up in Kolkata will have nostalgic memories.

Aminia... A familiar name...
Aminia opened extension counters or franchisee outlets in the south of Kolkata and eventually elsewhere years back. However, the original outlet still draws the hordes... Primarily for the Biriyani and Chap

Nizam's ... Now... 
 Nizam's claims to be the 'inventor of the Kolkata Kati roll'... Alas, with changing audience, they have turned a "No Beef" restaurant...
The iconic Chaplin too has now been razed to make way for the new and glitzy.

UP Bihar Restaurant
 We wanted some beek kati rolls, so we walked in to the UP Bihar Restaurant. This is reminiscent of the Nizam of the days gone by. In the taste, the selection on the menu, ambience, and surprisingly... price...


The paratha of Nizam and the surrounding shops are different from the ones that one gets elsewhere. The texture is different. Flaky and crisp on the surface from the searing charcoal fired inch thick steel tawa and well cooked soft dough between. 
The kababs are still cooked over charcoal on bamboo skewers. 
It is an interesting assimilation of influences... oriental (bamboo skewers), spices (arabic, south east asia, and Indian sub continental), and cooking methods (mongol and eurasian).

What I like in these rolls is the lack of sauce. The horrible fake tomato and lurid chilly sauce successfully drowns most flavours that the simple onion shreds and dash of lemon evokes and compliments in the rolls found in New Market.

Beef Kati rolls


Inside the beef kati roll..
Although not on the menu, I dredged my food memories and ordered the Anda Aloo roll. This was a favourite from my childhood. A couple of biriyani aloos are crumbled with griddle sauteed onions in a fried egg coated parantha. A dash of lemon later, it is just heavenly. 

Anda Aloo Roll


Inside the Anda Aloo Roll...

And of course the meal ended with a palate cleansing cup of tea.


A meandering walk through the spice section of New Market took us towards Park Street.

Next it was time for some nice tea at the Cha Bar in Oxford Book store. I ordered dragon ball tea for myself...  
Dragon Ball tea...

And Kashmiri Kehwa for Baba..
Kashmiri Kehwa
 I love Cha Bar for the tea pots they use and display. The beautiful tea ware is a refreshing change from the self same ceramic and despicable plastic that one is served in.



Tea done we decided to have a light dinner. So, I gravitated towards a roadside stall selling momos. This I had not tried in this trip and I wanted to bench mark the momos with the ones from Delhi. 

Momos and Chicken Soup

 The interesting bit about the Kolkata Momo is the teeny little bowl of chicken broth that is served gratis with the momo . 

That done it was time to head home and prepare for the next day ahead.

 

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Zero Oil Egg Curry...

A lot of people in office are on a 'dieting' spree to become trimmer. So a lot of 'harrumph' happens when we share lunch and I get questions about 'how many teaspoons of oil' is in whatever I cook. Since a litre of cooking oil lasts me for months (even after using oil in some muffins), this irks me no end.

So one fine morning I decided to cook up some egg curry without any damned oil!



I 'd already hard boiled a few eggs the night earlier... So, in the morning I took out a couple of tomatoes, a little haldi, dhania, and jeera powder, a few cloves of garlic, and little nub of ginger. 


I puréed all of this together into a neat little paste before I did anything else...


I slapped the purée into my trusty non-stick pan...


... and simmered till I'd got a nice little 'reduction' happening that had imbibed all the flavours....


I also had come palak (spinach) that I washed and chopped up (almost as an after thought).


I put the palak into the reduction and added a wee bit of salt to get the palak to sweat out a bit...
And then I added the boiled eggs and I had my curry ready :)



Monday, March 21, 2011

Pan Crisped Egg Noodles

On a lazy morning you just want to make something quick and yummy and then go back to snooze mode. This prompted me to make this nice and quick noodle from some left over noodles in the fridge.


I quickly smashed and chopped some garlic and kept the noodles ready...




Then I quickly fried an egg, well beaten till fluffy with a fork...




I kept the eggs aside and drizzled a little oil in the non-stick pan and gently fried the garlic on high heat till I saw the stirrings of brown at the garlic edges...




The noodles and eggs went in and got tossed around to absorb the garlicky flavour from the noodles




I turned on the high and left it on high (without stirring or tossing for the bottom layer to turn nice and crispy...


And then I dug in to my Sunday breakfast... :)







Thursday, March 17, 2011

Carrot Walnut Grape Cake

I have been waiting to try out a carrot cake in the new oven. It was the first thing I'd tried in the convection microwave and I now I wanted to try it out in my new oven.


While I was waiting for Guru to come with the TV, I started with the irritating part—grating two and a half cups of carrots...






That done, I was smiling and measuring out the walnuts after breaking them into wee little bits.... (a heaped cup)


Then a teaspoon of baking powder went into two and a half cups of atta (whole wheat)...




... and a cup of brown sugar (dark brown not demerara... about 200gm) was kept aside...


...since I could not lay my hand on sour cream, I whipped some sour dahi (yoghurt) to make the cake a bit moister...




The walnut bits and the flour got whisked and thoroughly mixed...




...while I lightly greased and floured the sides of the baking tins and papered the bottoms...




I used two tins (one spring-form) and realized that I need to buy another spring-form tin for cases like this where I want to bake layer cakes...




  Next, I cracked four eggs into the mixing bowl and started whisking them...




I added the dahi and half a cup of cooking oil as well (since I did not want to add butter and make it too rich...)




I creamed in the sugar next ...




Soon the mix was nice and frothy and the brown sugar had started working it's effect...




I added the grated carrot—and the twist in the tail—the squashed grapes...




The walnut and flour went in next...




... and into the tin...


The baking took 45min ...




Once the cakes cooled, I whipped together 150gm of cream cheese and added a little less than half a cup of icing sugar and knob of melted butter for the frosting.


I slathered on a generous helping on the bottom layer...


... and then added the top layer and put the rest of the frosting...




Minutes later Guru and I had devoured a wedge while the cat got some frosting...




Here's what the wedge looked like before it went into out stomachs...



The rest of the cake carved  up for distribution...




Here're the ingredients:


2.5 cups - Grated Carrots
1    cup  - Brown Sugar
1    cup  - Walnut Bits2.5 cups - Black Grapes (Squashed)
2.5 cups - Atta (Whole Wheat Flour)
4           - Eggs
100 gm   - Sour Yogurt (Dahi)
0.5 cup  - Vegetable Oil


Frosting:

150gm - Cream Cheese (I used Britannia... Philadelphia is horribly expensive but preferred)
100gm - Icing Sugar
 25gm - Melted Butter (used Amul)