Showing posts with label condiments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label condiments. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

White Cabbage and fresh Green chillies Salad (sambharo)



Sambharo is rather like a spicy cooked salad always served up as a condiment to a main meal.   It's usually made with carrots, white cabbage, raw mangoes, raw papaya and hot green chillies - stir fried in oil, mustard seeds and turmeric. It can be served hot or cold.    This kind of a salad is my favourite and any leftovers are used as sandwich fillers for my lunch.  A lot of Indian takeaways serve a small portion of sambharo with ganthia.  Most gujarati thali's will have a serving of  sambharo. Sambharo is always made hot and spicy and served in a very small portion as it's usually served  to give the main meal a hot spicy taste.  This is a simple version of the sambharo and it tastes great too.

Ingredients

4 cups white Cabbage -shredded finely
8-10 small hot green chillies (you can use peppers or jalapenos)
1 tablespoon sunflower oil (or any cooking oil)
1/2 teaspoon mustard seeds
1/2 teasppon salt
1/2 teaspoon turmeric
1/2 teaspoon sugar (optional)
1 tablespoon lemon 

Method:

1.  Heat the oil in a saucepan.

2. Add the Mustard seeds.    When the mustard seeds stop popping, add the cabbage.

3.  Stir fry the  cabbage and allow it to be coated with the oil.

4.  Add the salt, turmeric and sugar (or not).

5.   Stir the cabbage and do not cover it with a lid as the cabbage should remine slightly el dante. 

6.   Add the lemon, stir and transfer the sambharo to a serving dish.

7 .  You never add garlic or  ginger or chilly powder to this dish.  Nor do you serve it with any garnishings such as coriander. 

8.  You usually serve it as an extra with your main course or with certain Indian snacks such as lamba gathia.

9. It's such a tasty dish that you would be forgiven for eating it as a sandwich filling.

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Wednesday, 27 April 2011

Mango Chundo (Mango preserve) – Microwave version



Most Indian dishes are accompanied by chutneys and pickles of some sort. Some are made fresh on the day and some last longer. This Mango Chundo is a popular preserve from the Gujarat side of India. It has a sweet and sour taste and if made correctly, can last a long time. I tend to make it and keep in small jars rather than putting it all in one big jar. By using a bottle at a time, the preserve lasts longer. This chundo is best made with raw mangoes. I bought some at the Asian stores and they are called Rajapuri mangoes.  These mangoes have a small stone and lots of pulp so although they may be expensive, they are worth it as you get a lot of mango pulp and mangoes have the taste and  aroma you can only dream of.

Ingredients for about 2 Jam jars worth of Chundo (approximately a 1,000 grams)

2 large Rajapuri or similar mangoes (the grated weight of the 2 mangoes was 775 grams)
700 grams sugar (you could use another 50 grams less too!)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon turmeric
1-2 teaspoons chilly powder
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
5-8 cloves
5-8 cinnamon sticks
Teaspoon of cardamom seeds
5-8 whole pepper cones
1 tablespoon sunflower oil

Method

1. Peel the mangoes and wash them whole and dry them with a kitchen paper.



2. Grate the mangoes and weigh them. (This is essential as you need to use sugar slightly less than the weight of the mangoes) 


3. Add the salt and turmeric to the grated mango and mix well.


4. Keep this covered for 30 minutes.

5. The salt will make the mango mixture runny.

6. Now add the sugar. The amount of sugar depends on the weight of the grated mango. Most recipes ask for one and a half times the weight of the mango. My advice is to use at least 100 grams less than the weight of the mangoes. This is for 2 reasons – one is for health reasons. Too much sugar can’t be good for anyone!! Another is that the pickle needs to be sweet and sour and for that reason – go easy on the sugar.


7. When you mix the sugar, the mixture will become even runnier.

8. Transfer this to a large microwave dish with a lid. The timings for cooking in  the microwave will depend on the weight of the mango and sugar mixture plus the size and speed of your microwave.



9. Microwave this mixture on a high for 10 minutes, remove and stir the mixture. The mixture will still look quite runny.



10. Again microwave on high for 10 minutes, remove and stir the mixture.



11. By now, you’ll notice that the mixture is starting to look darker and thicker.



12. Keep repeating the microwave cooking and stirring for 5 minutes at a time.



13.  My chundo took about 35 - 38 minutes to cook.  When only a small amount of moisture remains, stir and leave the mixture to cool. You will notice that it continues to thicken and the consistency of the chundo will look similar to marmalade.



14. Whilst it’s cooling, add the chilly powder. The amount of chilly powder shouldn’t over power the sweet and sour taste so add one teaspoon and then the second one if you feel it needs an extra kick! .

Now prepare the tempering with the spices:



15. In another microwave dish, add the spices -cinnamon, cardamom, whole peppercones, cloves and cumin. Warm these spices for a minute. This will release the oils in the spices and produce a lovely aroma.

16. Add 1 tablespoon of oil to the spices and heat it in the microwave for 2 minutes.

17. Now add this spice mixture to the mango chundo and stir.



18. Once this mixture cools, transfer the chundo to clean sterilized bottles and enjoy with any Indian dish.


Like all my recipes, I take great pride in givng you as many details as I can so that you can easily follow the instructions and also have the confidence that the recipe will work.  I hope that when you follow any of my recipes, you will let me have your opinion on how the dish turned out!

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