Sunday, March 06, 2011

Dark Chocolate Cookies


Yet another recipe for cookies...this time I wanted to try with dark chocolate. I actually never heart of cookies made of dark chocolate, but did wanted to try. These cookies came out so good and they were so soft inside with a crunchy outside and with exact sweetness that I wanted.

Ingredients:
-------------
1 1/2 cup Dark Chocolate
7/8 cup Brown Sugar
3/4 cup All Purpose Flour
1tsp Butter
2 Eggs
1/2 tsp Baking powder
1/2 tsp Salt
3 tbsp Sugar

Method:
-------------
  1. Preheat the oven to 180°C.
  2. Melt the chocolate and butter in a bowl over a pan of boiling water.
  3. In another bowl, combine the flour, baking powder and salt.
  4. In a third bowl, mix the eggs with the sugar until light in color.
  5. Add the flour mixture into the egg & sugar bowl. Stir well.
  6. Add in the melted chocolate. Stir well.
  7. Cover a tray with baking parchment.
  8. Refrigerate the dough in the fridge for about 30-45 mins so that it hardens a bit and you can make balls easily.
  9. Using teaspoons, make small balls of dough, roll them in the sugar and place them on the baking tray.
  10. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes.

Going "Home"

A Long Way Up - Susan Pachikara (COPYRIGHT 2011)

In December, I traveled 8,000 plus miles to Kerala, the place older relatives still refer to as "home." Though I never lived with its borders, the tiny state on the southwest tip of India shaped my food identity. This journey would be different from the five I had taken before. I would be traveling without my parents - as tour guides, translators, experts on etiquette, and reservoirs of family history. In the past, they had shared unwritten rules (you'll shock people when you use your left hand) and in their company I never worried about taking a rickshaw across town. They provided directions. When strangers pinched me on the cheek and asked, "Do you remember me?" - a dizzying question given the branchiness of our family tree - my mom provided the answer. "This is your maternal grandmother's sister's second cousin's daughter."

During the eleven years since my last sojourn to Kerala, I had sharpened my kitchen skills in culinary school. I had also documented many of my mother's recipes, trying to preserve what seems like a dying art. I numbered steps and quantified murky measurements. Two "dashes" of turmeric became a fourth of a teaspoon and I deciphered "a 2-inch piece of ginger" as being "a generous tablespoon."

Over the intervening years, I had also recognized that many mainstay Kerala dishes - such as sambar (dahl stew), idiappam (rice noodles), and the vast array of thorans (stir-fried dishes) - were deliciously low-fat. I hoped to share the recipes I collected to help chip away at the obesity epidemic current raging in the U.S.

Cabbage Vendor - Susan Pachikara (COPYRIGHT 2011)

I wanted to use this trip to gather recipes from relatives still in India. I also wanted to study the origins of the Kerala pantry. To see firsthand how and where the native berries, seeds, and roots that give Malayalee food its vibrancy grew. I knew that for centuries Kerala was the world’s only source of peppercorns and that the prized berries had spurred the region’s maritime trade predating the Kubla Khan. But I wanted to know what they looked like on the vine. (I vaguely remember my father pointing them out in the yard of his family home years ago. But sadly, what registered in my adolescent mind, “Zzzzz. Boring!”) I would also seek out cardamom growing wild in the mountains. Its exotic oils perfume Kerala’s sweet and savory dishes. Over time, the spice has also found its way into Middle Eastern coffee and Swedish pastries.

Susan Pachikara (COPYRIGHT 2010)

I knew my pursuit would conjure up memories of my grandmother’s dimly lit kitchen where I watched in wonder as she fed dried coconut husks to an open fire. Their brown hairs flashed like threads of lightening once ignited. Using the back of a cleaver, she would crack open the shells of coconuts harvested from the lanky trees dotting the yard. Sitting on a low wooden bench fitted with a serrated blade, I happily shredded the flesh into a triangular hill of coconut confetti that ended up in many family dishes that I'll be sharing with you including the cabbage thoran below.

CABBAGE THORAN
(Cardamom Kitchen LLC - Copyright 2011)

Serves 6


TIPS

- Warning: I've gotten greedy at the farmer's market and chosen the largest possible cabbage. I end up with WAY more shredded cabbage than I need. The leaves are tucked tightly. Chopping loosens them and the quantity seemed to grow exponentially! So don't make this mistake.
- Do not overcook the cabbage. It should be served with a bit of a crunch.

INGREDIENTS

2 tablespoons olive oil or canola oil
3/4 teaspoon black mustard seeds
1 teaspoon urad dahl (black graham, split)
2 teaspoons minced garlic
1 cup onion, thinly sliced
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon turmeric
I jalapeno, split, seeded and quartered
10 curry leaves (optional)
1 teaspoon salt
4 cups shredded cabbage
2 tablespoons shredded, unsweetened coconut

INSTRUCTIONS

1) Heat the oil in a large saute pan on medium-low heat. Add the mustard seeds and cover.

2) When the mustard seeds begin to pop, add the urad dhal. Cook until the dhal turns light brown.

3) Increase heat to medium. Add the garlic, onions, cumin, turmeric, pepper, curry leaves, and salt. Cook until the onions are translucent.

4) Add cabbage and coconut. Stir to coat with spice mixture.

5) Cover and cook for 1 minute.

6) Remove lid and stir. Cover and cook for another minute.

7) Remove lid and cook uncovered until the cabbage is cooked, but still a bit crunchy.

Aval Payasam / Avalakki Payasa - Beaten Rice Porridge/ Pudding

AVAL PAYASAM /AVALAKKI PAYASA

Aval payasam ( Tamil )/ Avalakki Payasa ( Kannada ) can be prepared in no time. The texture of Aval ( beaten Rice ) is such that it gets cooked very quickly. Soaked Aval when seasoned with spices and garnished with herbs makes a wholsome meal. Like wise when Aval is combined with milk and sugar it becomes the yummy Aval Payasam which can be relished as a dessert even after a heavy meal.

                                                  
INGREDIENTS

Hard Aval ( Hard Beaten Rice ) - 1/4 cup
Milk - 2 cups
Sugar - 1/4 cup
Cashew nuts - a few
Raisins - a few
Cardamom - 2
Pachche karpoora ( edible camphor ) - 1 small flake
Ghee - 1 tbsp

METHOD

1. Heat  2 tsps of ghee in a pan and roast the cashew nuts and raisins and keep them aside.
2. Roast the Aval in the remaining ghee till it pops up and becomes reddish brown in colour.
3. Boil milk in a heavy bottomed vessel for five minutes till it becomes flavoursome.
( Grind a table spoon of cashew nuts with little milk into a smooth paste and cook it along with the boiling milk, if you like your Payasam to have a pudding like consistancy.)



4. Add the roasted Aval to the boiling milk and cook on medium flame till it becomes very soft.
5. Add sugar and cook for five more minutes, and then switch off flame.
6. Powder the cardamom and edible camphor together and mix into the Payasam.
7. Garnish with roasted cashew nuts and raisins.

                                             

Relish the sweet and creamy Aval Payasam either warm or chilled.

This post goes to "Lets Celebrate Sweets- Warm Desserts" event hosted on Mharo Rajasthan Recipes blog. Here's the original event post on Nivedita's blog.