| One Page Cookbooks
 All   recipes copyrighted. No reproduction / commercial use without permission. Siramki@Gmail.com | |
| 1.: Paruppu (mashed lentils) To a pressure cooker add  half a cup of tuvar dal, a pinch of turmeric   powder, a cup ( 200 ml)  of water &    two pinches of salt. Pressure cook for   two whistles. Let cool and mash.  | Iyers   are Tamil Brahmins, who migrated from North India in   waves from as early as 3000 years ago. Some were invited by southern kings   for performing vedic rituals and some moved after vedic sacrifices were   banned under the Buddhist / Jain kings. They settled mostly in Cauvery delta   of central Tamilnadu (Tiruchi, Tanjore and Mayavaram). They adopted and influenced   the language, cuisine and culture of the south. The different  Iyer sects roughly correspond to the   migratory waves as in  Vadama   (northern sect), Vathima ( central sect ), Brahacharanam ( Guru followers),   Ashta Sahasram ( eight thousand)  etc. Even   after 3000 years, their language still retains a smattering of Sanskrit words,   most vedic rituals remain intact, many still pay homage to the north Indian   river Narmada and  all of them trace   their ancestry to one of the eight sages of the vedic era.  Iyer Cuisine   is vegetarian and frowns on the use of  of anything apart from basic spices. So   spices like fennel, cinnamon, cloves, bay leaves are not used. Onions / garlic   are believed to be aphrodisiacs and are avoided / replaced by asafetida. But   unlike the more orthodox Iyengar cuisine, Iyer cuisine tolerates them and they   are increasingly used. Like most south Indian curries,  Iyer curries are built on tamarind, lentils,   yogurt and coconut. Different combinations of these building blocks give rise   to different curry families. . Cooking   rituals : A bath is mandatory before cooking /   eating. Concepts like madi (avoiding contact with unwashed   garments), pathu (avoiding contact with cooked food), echil   (avoiding contact with saliva), preferring freshly prepared food and frowning   on storing leftovers are still religiously observed in many households. It is   interesting to note that all these rules were originally designed for one   purpose - to ensure food safety. The concept of echil led to South India’s   undying love for the use of banana leaf as plates (The plates get   contaminated by saliva and throwing them away was considered preferable to   washing and reusing them). The concept of not storing ‘left overs’ has been frustrating   quite a few housewives down the ages. In spite of advances in food safety,   storage and refrigeration, and in spite of the fact that many curries   actually taste better the next day, the weight of tradition still remains   strong ! Serving   Rituals:  The   cooked food is first offered to Gods, then to ancestors (who are believed to   appear in the guise of crows) and then served, first to males. They chant a   hymn worshiping  food, sanctifying  it, ritualistically offering it to various   Gods before being eating. A brief ritual is observed at the end of the meal,   thanking the Gods.  The women are   served next, but do not follow these rituals. The most favourite 'curries' of the   Iyers are also the most basic, requiring little or no cooking at all.  Iyers are known for their love of Thayir (yogurt)   , paruppu ( boiled tuvar dal) and ghee. The meal starts with cooked rice   consumed with paruppu and ghee and ends with yogurt eaten mixed with rice.   Iyer’s undying love for yogurt- rice combo has earned them the name ‘Thayir   Sadam', which is what most lunchboxes of Iyer children still contain ! Iyer   migrations to Kerala, Karnataka and Andhra have led   to the development of distinct cuisines in these places. At their core,   you'll see that these cuisines follow the Tamil Brahmin style of cooking,   with some key ingredients replaced with whatever was available easily in the   new lands they settled in. For example, replace sesame oil with coconut oil, replace   tamarind with yogurt as a souring agent and Tanjore cuisine starts resembling   Kerala Brahmin cuisine. Instant   Sambar powder : Mix two spoons of coriander powder,   a spoon of red chili powder, a pinch of asafetida and turmeric powder
 Shopping   List : 50 gms: Coriander seeds, Dried neem flower,   dried turkey berry, pepper, cumin, salt.  mustard, curry leaves, turmeric, dry red   chili, green chili, asafetida, peanuts, sun dried vegetables, sambar powder. 250 gms: Tuvar dal, chana dal, mung   dal, urad dal,  yogurt, tamarind paste,   eggplant, beans, raw papaya, butter, milk. One each -   Coconut, lemon & potato, carrot. | 
| 2.:  Ghee   (Clarified   butter)    Take a cup of unsalted butter. Add to   a pan and heat on medium flame till it melts. Continue heating  till the bubbling & frothing stops and   the liquid becomes golden and transparent (you should be able to see the   bottom of the vessel through the liquid). Switch off flame. Bottle the golden   liquid. The bottom layer of sediment is usually removed, but it is perfectly   edible.  (When you evaporate all water   out of butter, it becomes ghee). | |
| 3.:   Thayir Pachadi (Raw   yogurt curry)      Take a cup( 200 ml)  of yogurt. Mix in two pinches of salt and a  handful of chopped / grated carrot /   cucumber / tomato / beetroot. | |
| 4.:  Paruppu Podi (spicy   lentil powder)      Heat a pan. Add a handful of mixed lentils tuvar dal /   mung dal / chana dal. Stir and roast on low heat till lentils brown. Let   cool. Blend to a powder with two dry red chilies, a pinch of asafetida and   three pinches of salt. | |
| 5.:  Vatral Kulambu (Sour stew with sun   dried vegetables)       Heat a spoon of oil. Add two pinches of   mustard, a pinch of asafetida, and half a handful of sun dried vegetables   (sundakkai / okra etc). Dissolve 3 spoons of tamarind paste, two pinches each   of jaggery/ sugar, salt and sambar powder in a cup of water. Add to pan.   Bring to a boil and simmer for 10 min. | |
| 6.:  Paruppu Thogayal   (Lentil paste)   Heat a pan. Add a handful of split mung dal. Stir &   roast  over medium heat till it browns.   Let cool. Add to a blender with two dry red chilies, two pinches of salt  half a handful of chopped coconut, a bit of   tamarind, little water and grind to a thick paste.  Omit coconut, tamarind and you have Pathiya   Thogayal | |
| 7.:.  Milagu Kulambu (Pepper   sour stew)    Heat a spoon of oil. Add two pinches  each of peppercorns, coriander seeds, cumin,   chana dal, tuvar dal and 2 curry leaves. Stir and cook on gentle heat till   lentils start to brown. Let cool and grind to a powder. Heat a spoon of oil.   Add two pinches of mustard and pinch of asafetida. Mix a spoon of tamarind   paste in a cup of water. Add to pan. Bring to boil and simmer for 5 minutes.   Add the ground powder, two pinches of salt & simmer for a minute. | |
| 8.:.  Araichu Vitta   Sambar  (Lentil   Tamarind stew)   Heat   half a spoon of oil. Add a dry red chili, a pinch each of dhania, pepper,   tuvar dal and half a handful of grated coconut. Roast and grind together.  In a cup of water, mix half a spoon of   tamarind paste , three pinches of salt, sambar powder, a pinch of asafetida   and a handful of chopped and boiled vegetables ( Ash gourd/okra/eggplant  etc ). Bring to a boil and simmer for 5   minutes. Add the blended powder, half a handful of boiled and mashed tuvar   dal  & simmer for two minutes. | |
| 9.:   Lemon   Rasam (Lemon lentil soup)  Heat half a spoon of ghee. Add two pinches of cumin. Mix   half a handful of boiled and mashed tuvar dal in a cup of water. Filter and   strain out solids. Add the filtered liquid to pan. Add two pinches of sambar   powder and salt. Simmer for 2 minutes. Take off heat. Mix in the juice of a   lemon & a pinch of coriander leaves.   | |
| 10.:  Thayir (Yogurt)   Boil a   cup of milk. Let cool till lukewarm. Mix in a spoon of yogurt. Cover and rest   for 4 -5 hours in a warm place till it sets. Refrigerate. | |
Friday, December 25, 2009
Iyer Curries
Labels:
Brahmin cuisine,
Iyer cuisine,
South Indian curries
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Food Consultancy / Licensing / Crash Courses
Contact siramki@gmail.com for complete Food consultancy from concept to completion.
Customised one page cookbooks now available for pressure cooker / microwave / mixie / masala & other cooking product manufacturers. Replace bulky recipe books with easy to refer One page cookbooks and watch your sales soar !
Customised one page cookbooks now available for pressure cooker / microwave / mixie / masala & other cooking product manufacturers. Replace bulky recipe books with easy to refer One page cookbooks and watch your sales soar !
Twecipies
Blog Archive
- 
        ▼ 
      
2009
(157)
- 
        ▼ 
      
December
(18)
- Non Vegetarian Pickles
- Chettinad Curries - A Primer
- Iyer Curries
- Iyengar curries
- Spinach Tambli Variations ( Blended spinach - coco...
- Non Veg Thokku Varieties ( Tamilnadu's spicy paste)
- Keerai Thuvaiyal Varieties ( Blended spinach curri...
- 10 South Indian Pepper Curries
- 10 Sharbat families
- Indian Curry Families - Uttar Pradesh
- Orissa Breakfasts : A Primer
- Indian Curry Families - Orissa
- Indian Curry Families - Bengal
- Indian Breakfasts - Bengal & Bangladesh
- Indian Breakfasts - Bihar & Jharkhand
- Indian Curry Families - Bihar & Jharkhand
- South Indian Curry Families - A Primer
- North Indian Curry Families
 
 
- 
        ▼ 
      
December
(18)
Cooking is fun - Duplication is a pain !
"It is extraordinary to me that the idea of creating thousands of recipes by mixing building blocks takes immediately to people or it doesn’t take at all. .... If it doesn’t grab a person right away, ... you can talk to him for years and show him demos, and it doesn’t make any difference. They just don’t seem able to grasp the concept, simple as it is". ( Thanks Warren Buffett !)
"What's angering about instructions in many cookbooks is that they imply there's only one way to cook a dish - their way. And that presumption wipes out all the creativity." Cook dishes your way - Download  1001 South Indian curries  now and learn to cook, not to duplicate ! ( Thanks Robert Pirsig !)
"Recipe purity is no different from racial purity or linguistic purity. It just does not exist. Cuisines are alive and change all the time. What is traditional today was esoteric just a few decades back. So being a 'foodist' is as bad as being a racist !
About Me
- Ramki
- Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
- Okay, let me start from the very beginning. 1500 crore years ago, with a Big Bang, the Universe is born. It expands dramatically. Hydrogen forms, contracts under gravity and lights up, forming stars. Some stars explode, dusting space with the building blocks of life. These condense into planets, one of which is Earth. Over time, self replicating molecules appear, multiply and become more complex. They create elaborate survival machines (cells, plants, animals). A variety of lifeforms evolve. Soon, humans arise, discover fire, invent language, agriculture and religion. Civilisations rise and fall. Alexander marches into India. Moguls establish an empire. Britain follows. Independence. Partition. Bloodshed. The license raj is in full sway. I'm born. India struggles to find its place. Liberalisation. The Internet arrives! I move from Tirupur to Chennai. Start a company. Expand into Malaysia, Singapore and the Middle East. Poof! Dot com bust. Funding dries up. Struggle. Retire. Discover the joy of cooking, giving, friendships and the pleasures of a simple life. Life seems less complicated. Pizza Republic, Pita Bite and Bhojan Express bloom !
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment