Ate at Bawarchi Dosas
in Miramar area with Kristina this month. I just love Southern Indian for offering
Chinese dishes on the menu as well as having some bread-like items that
are often made from lentil, chickpea or rice flour (I will always miss
naan but this makes up for it).
Kristina kept getting distracted by the
odd dance videos playing on the TV screen behind me. The man mainly gave
Zoo-lander-esque looks as he pauses from his Ricky Martin type dancing
the in rain routine at a club. The woman sadly stares at him from
across the room and a glistening tear rolls down her cheek. Her hair
whips around in the wind. He steps down and walks ever so slowly
towards her while putting on his sunglasses (in the club). The other thing that we noticed is that the man and woman in each video never actually kissed. Cultural value? I did a little reading on BBC.
Aside from
having bouts of laughter, we were adventurous and tried Masala Papad
(note: order yummy yogurt based mango lassi drink to go with this mouth numbing crispy
lentil-based appetizer.) I have seen papads at Fresh and Easy (or am
sure the Indian market near this restaurant carries them) that you can just fry up at home,
or apparently you can microwave them if you are trying to be healthier.
Speaking of trying to be healthier, I tested out a baked pakora
recipe I found on Irreverent Vegan's blog over the weekend. I wish I hadn't run out of parchment
paper-trying to butter up foil did not cut it...but at least stuck on
there is better than having to soak and scrub the cookie sheets. I
chopped up beet greens to use instead of spinach and also just add grated
zuchini as that is what I had on hand. Personally, I was a bit put off
by the chutney that went with the recipe. I think I am used to/prefer
the more vinegar-based chutneys and it was a bit much on the ginger for
my liking (and I do like ginger-pickled with sushi, in candy form, for
upset tummy as a tea). I've copied the pakora recipe below with my
modifications. I think next time I might try decreasing the salt. I would make this again-very
tasty even without a sauce. Just be ready to heat up your home-500 F
bake temp! Nice winter recipe, no? Save on your heating bill! We're just starting to have drizzly, light jacket weather here.
Baked Pakora (chickpea battered veggies)
- three handfuls of chopped leafy greens (beet greens today)
- one zucchini grated-this one was probably about 1" diameter and 7" long
- 2
cups chickpea (garbanzo bean) flour-I got Bob's Redmill brand, starting
to see this available at even regular chain grocery stores now, but
again go for Indian market if you want it cheaper. I liked the taste of
the Redmill flour though.
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 1/2 tsp curry powder
- 1 tsp cumin
- 1/2 tsp turmeric
- 1/2 tsp red pepper (optional)
- 1 1/2 tsp dried coriander (cilantro)
- 1 1/2 cups water
Tools needed: spatula safe for oven flipping, cookie sheets, parchment paper, 1 large bowl
Pre-heat the oven to 500 F.
Mix
the dry ingredients in a large bowl. Add water a bit at a time, until
you make it a bit thicker-than-muffin batter type consistency. Add your
rinsed, chopped/grated veggies (you can be creative here use what you
have on hand) and mix until covered with batter.
Spoon
batter onto parchment paper lined cookie sheets. The lumps should hold
their form (not keep spreading) The size lumps I made yielded about 12
pakora. Make bigger or smaller-just adjust the cooking time (also
depends on your oven, I had to take mine out early).
The
original recipe has you bake on one side 8 minutes and then flip the
pakora on the other side for 10 to get the crunchy crust. Mine only
needed 8 minutes on the second side, luckily I stayed in the kitchen because they brown fast!
What recipe have you health-ified and loved? (or hated?) What's your take on PDA's in public?
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