Monday, April 30, 2012

Ghee / Neyyi / Tuppa or Clarified Butter

Making Ghee (Clarified Butter) at Home


This has been a long pending post, and  is especially for my cooking class students in Sydney!  Ghee (Hindi) / Neyyi (Tamil) / Tuppa (Kannada), is clarified butter, and very commonly made in Indian households. It is very simple to make,  yet tricky for those making it for the first time.

Indian food is incomplete without some absoloutely yummy delicious fragnant golden ghee! Its a very healthy saturated fat, unlike the yucky hydrogenated vegetable oils which are flooding the market, and even better than vegetable oils as well!   And before, my post swings away into why  ghee is better than oil,  I better get back to the recipe!

It is critical to use the best quality butter you can get your hands on to make good ghee. Ghee should be a nice yellow colour, granular (see close up  snap below), and aromatic.   The best ghee I have had is in my childhood. My grandparents had cows at home, who were revered and fed the best grass and hay. So the milk, butter and ghee where all made at home. I am yet to see ghee of that quality anywhere in all these years. 

The butter I've used below Lurpak unsalted butter. Its produces good ghee. However, my last batch was made with a grass-fed organic brand, which was far better in colour, flavour and aroma.

The recipe for ghee is simple:  Heat unsalted butter on a very low flame, and keep cooking until all the moisture evaporates, and the honey coloured clear liquid separates!   The pitures below show different stages.  The butter will first melt and start boiling. You can see the froth bubbling on top. After sometime, the froth may thin out, and if you gently blow on the surface you can see clear liquid below. At the base of the vessel you may find some white solids collecting as well. Once the white solids start turning pinkish brown, you must switch off the flame. You can add a pinch of salt, which helps the solids to stick  together, thereby making it easier to filter out the ghee. You can add flavourings such as cinnamon, cardamom, cloves if you want. In this case I added bay leaf (and no salt), which not only added flavour, but also helped gathering the solid particles to together. Addition of salt / bayleaf also helps in getting the desired granular texture of ghee. My grandmom used to say "Nalla neyyi manal madiri irrukanum"which means "Good ghee should be almost like sand"!!   Pour out the liquid ghee carefully into a clean dry glass or stainless steel container.  You can use a filter if you wish.  When the ghee cools, it will  solidify.  


500grams of unsalted Lurpak butter

The butter has melted.

The mositure is evaporating and froth is thinning out.

Clear honey coloured ghee is seen below the froth. Time to switch off the flame.

Bayleaves have been added.

Carefully pour out only the liquid in a dry steel / glass container.


Look at that amazing yummy ghee!


Notice the granular texture of this beautiful ghee!


Few Tips:
1. Use the best quality butter you can find. Grass-fed organic butter is good!
2. Use a fairly thick pan and a very low flame.
3. Make sure you don't overcook or undercook. Once ghee is made its a matter of minutes before it overcooks! The colour will turn dark brown, and it will smells burnt and bad. If the smell changes, discard the entire batch! Its bad for health, and spoils the taste of food. If ghee is undercooked and any moisture is present, it will go rancid!4. Store ghee in a dry glass / steel jar in your pantry. Use a dry spoon always. Never put your ghee in the fridge - this will reduce the life span of ghee, as the condensation in the fridge will again cause your ghee to go rancid quickly. If properly stored, your ghee will last for months - if you haven't already eaten it!

Event: CWS - SoyBean - 1st May to 31st May 2012


Hello Friends,

I am guest hosting a beautiful event "Cooking With Seeds" which was started by Priya of "Priya's Versatile Recipes". She has a beautiful space full of very delicious and awesome clicks of the recipes which are very inviting.

Well this month I am hosting her series event "Cooking With Seeds" and choose this months spices as "SOYBEAN". This guest event will start from the 1st of May and end on 31st May. So please send in your recipes to anu.healthykitchen@gmail.com or leave a comment.

Please link all you recipes to this guest event page and Priya's event page.

Make sure you send in your recipes with recipe name, your name, your blog/website url, recipe link and pic link.

Use of Logo is mandatory to participate in this event.

SoyBean:
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SoyBean is a healthy source of protein and oil. It is widely used in the form of meal, soy milk, tofu, soy sauce etc.,
To consume soybean must be cooked properly.
SoyBean is considered as a complete protein source. A complete protein is one that contains significant amounts of all the essential amino acids that must be provided in the human body because of the inability to synthesize them. For this reason, soy is a good source of protein, among many others, for vegetarains and vegans or for the people who want to reduce the amount of meat they eat.

so try to add it regularly in your diet and if at all you try any recipes this month....don't forget to link it here.. :)

Hope to see some innovative, creative and healthy recipes!

Announcing Serve It Series - Serve It - Preserved



The theme(s) we selected for the May Edition of 'Serve it' is Preserved. Remember the summer holidays back home when we go to grandma's place, meet all cousins and spend lot of time playing under the sun?? We used to make full use of the sun by getting scorched by the heat and getting back home only for our meals and drinks break - Rasna and lemon juice. Oh... how we miss those days. During