Monday, May 26, 2014

Leftovers: Rice Salad

When I get into the kitchen to cook these days, it's only western cuisine. A few reasons for this. The first is that my kids love non-Indian food. The second is that my cook makes all the Indian stuff pretty well. The third is that I am not a big fan of the labor surrounding most Indian dishes.

Call me lazy if you will, but that's the truth.
And today's recipe I'd the perfect example if what I am taking about.

Rice Salad. Here is my version of it, much influenced by the leftovers in my fridge.

Ingredients
1. Leftover cooked rice
2. Lettuce leaves - torn
3. Basil leaves
4. Walnuts - chopped
5. Cottage cheese (paneer) - cubed into bite sized pieces
6. Pear - cubed into bite sized pieces
7. Thai chili dressing

Method
1. Combine ingredients 1 to 6 in a bowl.
2. Pour dressing over it.
3. Toss, serve and eat.

Enjoy!



posted from Bloggeroid

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Beetroot salad

I am a fledgling balcony kitchen gardener. Recently, my basil has been flourishing, and my little balcony has the oh-so-refreshing fragrance of basil every time a gentle breeze blows. I even gifted a pot to M... Keep growing, dear basil!

So, I have been looking for new recipes to include basil in.

Now beetroot was one of those vegetables that somehow was prepared in just one on two ways at home- both dry Malayali preparations. One was beetroot thoren, which is with coconut and the other was the tongue twister mezhukupuratti, which is almost the same as the north Indian sabzi with different spices. I had never made any non-Indian dish with beetroot. Part of the reason was that I hate the boiled beetroot salad one generally finds in these buffets. No taste.

And here I was stucl with some beetroot in the fridge, and no Indian meals on the horizon since my cook was on leave and I usually don't cook the laborious Indian dishes. Was searching the net for an easy beetroot and basil salad to go with my Rice Casserole and got inspired by the Triple beetroot salad. So here is my version of it.


Ingredients
1. Beetroot
2. Basil leaves
For dressing
3. Olive oil
4. Balsamic vinegar
5. Salt
6. Pepper

Method
1. Pressure cook full beetroot with the skin on for two whistles or boil it till a knife inserted does not face crunchy resistance. The water and knife will be stained fuschia... Oh so pretty
2. Dunk the boiled beetroot into ice cold water. This stops the beetroot from over cooking.
3. Peel off the skin and chop the beets into half inch cubes
4. Toss with basil leaves and the dressing.




Enjoy!






posted from Bloggeroid


Leftovers: Rice casserole

Generally by the end of the week, I have little containers of leftovers in the fridge. Can't think of throwing them, yet can't bring them to the table in their current avatars. The casserole is my failsafe method of infusing new life into these leftovers.

The building blocks are simple.
1. The main carb... Rice or pasta or bread
2. Protein... Sometimes meat, fish or egg. Sometimes I go vegetarian and use lentils (dals) or cottage cheese (paneer)
3. Veggies... In leafy, grated, chopped, sliced or pureed form
4. Sauce... Red or white or some combination
5. Topping... Have used mashed or sliced potato, bread slices, bread crumbs, beaten egg, cheese, milk with one of these...

Here are the ingredients of today's leftover rice casserole. Layer the following in a glass baking dish and pop into the microwave or oven for about 10 min till the top is cheesy and bubbly.

1. Leftover rice
2. Cottage cheese crumbled
3. Corned beef lightly sauteed
4. Marinara sauce. Which is basically home made sauce of roasted tomatoes, garlic and bail
5. Topping of beaten egg and grated Parmesan cheese







Enjoy!

posted from Bloggeroid

Egg in a hole recipe

I am a big chick flick fan. Shamelessly so. I like the soppy dialogs, the predictable endings and the general sweet and warm feeling a movie leaves you with. It's good fun to watch the older chick flicks... The ones from the 80s with the big hair. 90s air brushing. And the millennium ones with the story lines becoming less sticky sweet and more real. 



Today's breakfast was inspired by a chick flick. The old Cher one... Moon struck. The scene where her mother makes breakfast. Eggs in a hole. She used a crusty baguette, it looks like but I used our trusted sliced white sandwich bread.

The movie may not be all that great but breakfast sure was!

Here's the recipe in pictures.








And if you want it double fried...





posted from Bloggeroid