background img

The New Stuff

Showing posts with label coconut milk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coconut milk. Show all posts

Creamy prawn curry
Creamy prawn curry Creamy prawn curry

Creamy Prawn Curry

I remember  as  child ,I always liked prawns just because I would always get the feeling of munching cashews , the look and the crunchiness was similar to that of cashews for me. And my mother would just deep fry them in refined oil and sprinkle some salt, pepper and chat masala and we would devour them in minutes. I love when the prawns pinken and curl up on frying even though I have turned into a vegetarian since the last five years.

Creamy Prawn Curry

       Here is a prawn curry recipe which I am posting on the blog keeping my sister’s tastes in mind.She likes prawn curry but the there should’nt  be just prawns in it and unlike the previous prawn curry that I have put up on the blog , no chunks of tomatoes, just a smooth silky curry with a few prawns and a mild flavor of the spices.

Creamy Prawn Curry

Ingredients for Creamy prawn curry:


1.             300 grams shelled and deveined prawns  ( about one cup              heaped)
2.             ¾ th boiled peas
3.             One cup cubed carrots
4.             4-5 tablespoons tomato puree
5.             One level tablespoon ginger garlic paste
6.             One level teaspoon coriander powder
7.             Half a teaspoon turmeric powder
8.             ¾ th teaspoon Kashmiri red chilli powder
9.             Salt to taste or about one and half teaspoon
10.         Two generous pinches of fenugreek seed powder ( optional)
11.         Two generous pinches of fennel seed powder / saunf powder ( optional)
12.             Two medium onions sliced thin
13.             A few sprigs of curry leaves
14.             One teaspoon cumin seeds
15.             3-4 tablespoons refind oil
16.             200 ml coconut milk


Method for Creamy Prawn curry:

1.  Take oil in a heavy bottomed pan and when it gets warm on medium heat add the cumin seeds.


2.  The moment they change colour after a few seconds add the curry leaves and tumble in the carrots.


3.  Stir the carrots for 2-3 minutes and then add the peas and stir for another two minutes.


4.  Remove the carrots and peas and keep aside and in the same pan add the sliced onions.
5.  Stir fry the onions till they turn a golden brown and then add the tomato puree, ginger garlic paste, turmeric powder, coriander powder and the Kashmiri red chilli powder one by one and stir till the mixture begins to leave oil on the sides.


6.  Add just about a quarter cup of water and the moment it comes to a boil tumble in the prawns , give a stir and cover and let the prawns cook for about five minutes or till cooked through.





7.  Add the peas and the carrots followed by the coconut milk, and the moment the curry on the sides of the pan begins to simmer, just turn off the gas and sprinkle the dry fenugreek powder and the fennel seed powder and the salt and give a good stir.



Creamy Prawn Curry

8.  Serve hot with rice or noodles.

Creamy Prawn Curry


Creamy prawn curry
Creamy prawn curry Creamy prawn curry

Creamy Prawn Curry

I remember  as  child ,I always liked prawns just because I would always get the feeling of munching cashews , the look and the crunchiness was similar to that of cashews for me. And my mother would just deep fry them in refined oil and sprinkle some salt, pepper and chat masala and we would devour them in minutes. I love when the prawns pinken and curl up on frying even though I have turned into a vegetarian since the last five years.

Creamy Prawn Curry

       Here is a prawn curry recipe which I am posting on the blog keeping my sister’s tastes in mind.She likes prawn curry but the there should’nt  be just prawns in it and unlike the previous prawn curry that I have put up on the blog , no chunks of tomatoes, just a smooth silky curry with a few prawns and a mild flavor of the spices.

Creamy Prawn Curry

Ingredients for Creamy prawn curry:


1.             300 grams shelled and deveined prawns  ( about one cup              heaped)
2.             ¾ th boiled peas
3.             One cup cubed carrots
4.             4-5 tablespoons tomato puree
5.             One level tablespoon ginger garlic paste
6.             One level teaspoon coriander powder
7.             Half a teaspoon turmeric powder
8.             ¾ th teaspoon Kashmiri red chilli powder
9.             Salt to taste or about one and half teaspoon
10.         Two generous pinches of fenugreek seed powder ( optional)
11.         Two generous pinches of fennel seed powder / saunf powder ( optional)
12.             Two medium onions sliced thin
13.             A few sprigs of curry leaves
14.             One teaspoon cumin seeds
15.             3-4 tablespoons refind oil
16.             200 ml coconut milk


Method for Creamy Prawn curry:

1.  Take oil in a heavy bottomed pan and when it gets warm on medium heat add the cumin seeds.


2.  The moment they change colour after a few seconds add the curry leaves and tumble in the carrots.


3.  Stir the carrots for 2-3 minutes and then add the peas and stir for another two minutes.


4.  Remove the carrots and peas and keep aside and in the same pan add the sliced onions.
5.  Stir fry the onions till they turn a golden brown and then add the tomato puree, ginger garlic paste, turmeric powder, coriander powder and the Kashmiri red chilli powder one by one and stir till the mixture begins to leave oil on the sides.


6.  Add just about a quarter cup of water and the moment it comes to a boil tumble in the prawns , give a stir and cover and let the prawns cook for about five minutes or till cooked through.





7.  Add the peas and the carrots followed by the coconut milk, and the moment the curry on the sides of the pan begins to simmer, just turn off the gas and sprinkle the dry fenugreek powder and the fennel seed powder and the salt and give a good stir.



Creamy Prawn Curry

8.  Serve hot with rice or noodles.

Creamy Prawn Curry



Papaya coconut smoothie


If a beverage can make us blissful then this smoothie is one of them. A simple blend of papaya and my all time favourite coconut milk with some sugar and ice is absolutely delicious and really really uplifts the mood if at all one having the blues.
     All we need to have is a cup full of cubed papaya fruit , one 200 ml can of coconut milk , half a cup of crushed ice and two tablespoons of powdered sugar ( optional incase you don’t want the extra calories). Just blend them all. That’s it. 





Papaya coconut smoothie


If a beverage can make us blissful then this smoothie is one of them. A simple blend of papaya and my all time favourite coconut milk with some sugar and ice is absolutely delicious and really really uplifts the mood if at all one having the blues.
     All we need to have is a cup full of cubed papaya fruit , one 200 ml can of coconut milk , half a cup of crushed ice and two tablespoons of powdered sugar ( optional incase you don’t want the extra calories). Just blend them all. That’s it. 






Avial


If you have not read my post on “prawn curry “ being a pure vegetarian , you will not understand a Punjabis reverence for coconut oil . Besides the story there , there is another reason why I began to appreciate the contribution of coconut in enhancing the flavours of the vegetables.
        We spent about an year in the Andaman and Nicobar islands and there the vegetables are shipped from the mainland , so not only are they expensive but also not so easy to get in plenty, and above all they are not as juicy and fresh because of the long journey they have done from the mainland to this island.
      I used to eat fish back then so we did enjoy a lot of fish curries and fish pakoras and lobsters and all the stuff but there are times when even a pure non vegetarian craves for colourful and palatable veggies.
      Somehow the vegetable preparations  did not appeal to my pernickety nature and since my kids were small and naturally fussy eaters it was quite a challenge to make them eat anything at all.
       It was then that I began the use of coconut as often as possible in most vegetable  preparations whether they were dry or with a bit of a curry.
      There is an excellent and simplest way to have raw papaya with coconut and it was a hit with my family.I would soon be putting it on the blog.
       Luckily for me coconut was one thing which obviously was in abundance and I have yet to taste a sweeter and more delicious coconut than what you get in the Andamans.  And there were these two trees right in front of our house and I got about a hundred something from them and I distributed them generously besides keeping lots for myself.



I still remember that I had a hand coconut grater and in one go I grated 17 coconuts and about seventy in three days. I froze them for future use and used them liberally in all recipes.
   So that is my story behind  my extensive use of coconuts and making South Indian dishes with the same . Lets get on with the recipe of Avial , which can be altered to whatever vegetables you like and skip the ones you dont as long as you use the vegetables which are firm like carrots , yam etc.
                        
Ingredients:


1.   One cup sliced thick and one inch long potatoes
2.   One cup beans sliced long
3.   One cup sliced  carrots
4.   One cup peas
5.   Half a cup thick yogurt
6.   Half a teaspoon turmeric powder
7.   One teaspoon salt or to taste
8.   One green chilli slit
9.   Coconut oil
10.   One cup grated coconut
11.  A few curry leaves
12.  Half a teaspoon cumin seeds
13.  One green chilli or to taste
14.  Half a cup of water

 Method:

1.   Place the chopped vegetables in a pot and add turmeric powder, the sliced green chilli and half a cup of water.




2.   Cover and let cook on medium flame till completlety cooked , toss the vegetables in between so that they cook evenly.




3.   Meanwhile place the coconut , cumin seeds and the green chilli with about four tablespoons of water  and just give one blitz, do not over grind, the coconut is not to become a paste, the whole idea is to just give one quick mix to the ingredients.


4.   When the vegetables are completetly done , add the coconut mixture, give one stir and turn the gas off.




5.   Add the curd , another stir followed by the salt.


6.   You could pour the coconut oil now or just before serving .


7.   Tastes great just by itself with plain boiled rice or with accompaniments of your choice.



Avial


If you have not read my post on “prawn curry “ being a pure vegetarian , you will not understand a Punjabis reverence for coconut oil . Besides the story there , there is another reason why I began to appreciate the contribution of coconut in enhancing the flavours of the vegetables.
        We spent about an year in the Andaman and Nicobar islands and there the vegetables are shipped from the mainland , so not only are they expensive but also not so easy to get in plenty, and above all they are not as juicy and fresh because of the long journey they have done from the mainland to this island.
      I used to eat fish back then so we did enjoy a lot of fish curries and fish pakoras and lobsters and all the stuff but there are times when even a pure non vegetarian craves for colourful and palatable veggies.
      Somehow the vegetable preparations  did not appeal to my pernickety nature and since my kids were small and naturally fussy eaters it was quite a challenge to make them eat anything at all.
       It was then that I began the use of coconut as often as possible in most vegetable  preparations whether they were dry or with a bit of a curry.
      There is an excellent and simplest way to have raw papaya with coconut and it was a hit with my family.I would soon be putting it on the blog.
       Luckily for me coconut was one thing which obviously was in abundance and I have yet to taste a sweeter and more delicious coconut than what you get in the Andamans.  And there were these two trees right in front of our house and I got about a hundred something from them and I distributed them generously besides keeping lots for myself.



I still remember that I had a hand coconut grater and in one go I grated 17 coconuts and about seventy in three days. I froze them for future use and used them liberally in all recipes.
   So that is my story behind  my extensive use of coconuts and making South Indian dishes with the same . Lets get on with the recipe of Avial , which can be altered to whatever vegetables you like and skip the ones you dont as long as you use the vegetables which are firm like carrots , yam etc.
                        
Ingredients:


1.   One cup sliced thick and one inch long potatoes
2.   One cup beans sliced long
3.   One cup sliced  carrots
4.   One cup peas
5.   Half a cup thick yogurt
6.   Half a teaspoon turmeric powder
7.   One teaspoon salt or to taste
8.   One green chilli slit
9.   Coconut oil
10.   One cup grated coconut
11.  A few curry leaves
12.  Half a teaspoon cumin seeds
13.  One green chilli or to taste
14.  Half a cup of water

 Method:

1.   Place the chopped vegetables in a pot and add turmeric powder, the sliced green chilli and half a cup of water.




2.   Cover and let cook on medium flame till completlety cooked , toss the vegetables in between so that they cook evenly.




3.   Meanwhile place the coconut , cumin seeds and the green chilli with about four tablespoons of water  and just give one blitz, do not over grind, the coconut is not to become a paste, the whole idea is to just give one quick mix to the ingredients.


4.   When the vegetables are completetly done , add the coconut mixture, give one stir and turn the gas off.




5.   Add the curd , another stir followed by the salt.


6.   You could pour the coconut oil now or just before serving .


7.   Tastes great just by itself with plain boiled rice or with accompaniments of your choice.




Prawn curry
Prawn curry Prawn curry Prawn curry Prawn curry

Prawn curry

I learnt this prawn curry from a good friend of mine who is a Malayali and an excellent cook  . She has taught me quite a few typical Kerala dishes and I would soon be coming up with lots of them.

Prawn curry

     This  prawn curry tastes best if cooked in coconut oil but you could use the regular refined oil too. I must tell you how I, being a Punjabi came to using coconut oil in my cooking. We were living in Cochin in those days, and once I was passing in front of my neighbour’s door and I smelled a heavenly aroma of food wafting from the door. When I met her the next day I asked her what she was cooking and she said that her cook was preparing “Avial”.
I told her about my sniffing spree  and she offered to send her cook to teach me how to cook it. Well she told me what all to keep ready as the cook did not know Hindi or English and I obviously did not know any Malyalam.
     So the next day the pleasant and kindly cook came and with no common medium of conversation we went along with this teaching and learning business in the international language of gestures. Then when the dish was cooked she managed to articulate the word oil…and I handed her the bottle of refined oil, she nodded her head and said something and I smiled back and she smiled back and said something and walked out waving and muttering and I very smartly understood that she is coming back with something.
    She was back in a jiffy with a bottle of ”coconut oil”.Now like most Punjabis I was a bit sceptical about this stuff and I tried to object and she understood that and she refused very firmly in malyalam and I understood and decided to keep quiet and let her do as she pleased. She poured a good amount of the oil over the prepared dish and I grimaced and vowed that I am not going to eat this stuff…how can one eat coconut oil I reasoned to my ignorant self. We conversed whatever over a cuppa and God knows what we talked about , but I remember that she kept smiling  and so did I.
    Anyways , I must admit that the “avial “was smelling great and tasted good too. We enjoyed the lunch very much but I very stubbornly tried the same recipe but used the normal refined oil in place of coconut oil. Well , honestly the outcome was a disaster and I admited that the credit for the delicious avial went to the "coconut oil" and then began my life long love and respect for this beautiful and heavenly oil called coconut oil.
   But luckily for non coconut oil lovers , this prawn curry recipe tastes good if not as great with refined oil too.

Prawn curry

So don’t miss such a simple and delicious  prawn curry just because I wrote coconut oil the first thing in my ingredient list.

Ingredients:


1. 300 grams prawns
2. 4 tablespoons coconut oil/ refined oil
3. A few sprigs of curry leaves
4. 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
5. Two medium sized onions chopped fine
6. One large tomato chopped into big chunks
7. Two tablespoons grated ginger
8. 10 cloves garlic crushed
9. ¼ th teaspoon teaspoon turmeric powder
10.            ¾ th teaspoon Kashmiri  red chilly powder
11.          Two pinches fennel seed powder
12.          Salt to taste           

Method:
1. Take the oil in a pan and on medium flame let it get warm and then add the cumin seeds.


2. After a 10- 15 seconds add the curry leaves followed by the ginger and garlic. Stir fry for about five minutes.


3. Add the chopped oinions and on medium flame stir  till the onions turn pink.


4.Add the turmeric and the red chilli powders and stir fry for another minute to roast the masalas well.


5. Pour half a cup of water and...


.......give it a stir and let the water boil.


Add the prawns and stir and cover , the prawns won't take more than 5-7 minutes to cook.


6.  Add 200 ml of coconut milk along with the tomatoes and the salt and cook for just about two minutes more, not more otherwise the coconut milk will begin to curdle.



7.  Sprinkle the fennel seed powder and serve the prawn curry  with steamed rice.

Prawn Curry


Prawn Curry



Prawn curry



   
 



Prawn curry
Prawn curry Prawn curry Prawn curry Prawn curry

Prawn curry

I learnt this prawn curry from a good friend of mine who is a Malayali and an excellent cook  . She has taught me quite a few typical Kerala dishes and I would soon be coming up with lots of them.

Prawn curry

     This  prawn curry tastes best if cooked in coconut oil but you could use the regular refined oil too. I must tell you how I, being a Punjabi came to using coconut oil in my cooking. We were living in Cochin in those days, and once I was passing in front of my neighbour’s door and I smelled a heavenly aroma of food wafting from the door. When I met her the next day I asked her what she was cooking and she said that her cook was preparing “Avial”.
I told her about my sniffing spree  and she offered to send her cook to teach me how to cook it. Well she told me what all to keep ready as the cook did not know Hindi or English and I obviously did not know any Malyalam.
     So the next day the pleasant and kindly cook came and with no common medium of conversation we went along with this teaching and learning business in the international language of gestures. Then when the dish was cooked she managed to articulate the word oil…and I handed her the bottle of refined oil, she nodded her head and said something and I smiled back and she smiled back and said something and walked out waving and muttering and I very smartly understood that she is coming back with something.
    She was back in a jiffy with a bottle of ”coconut oil”.Now like most Punjabis I was a bit sceptical about this stuff and I tried to object and she understood that and she refused very firmly in malyalam and I understood and decided to keep quiet and let her do as she pleased. She poured a good amount of the oil over the prepared dish and I grimaced and vowed that I am not going to eat this stuff…how can one eat coconut oil I reasoned to my ignorant self. We conversed whatever over a cuppa and God knows what we talked about , but I remember that she kept smiling  and so did I.
    Anyways , I must admit that the “avial “was smelling great and tasted good too. We enjoyed the lunch very much but I very stubbornly tried the same recipe but used the normal refined oil in place of coconut oil. Well , honestly the outcome was a disaster and I admited that the credit for the delicious avial went to the "coconut oil" and then began my life long love and respect for this beautiful and heavenly oil called coconut oil.
   But luckily for non coconut oil lovers , this prawn curry recipe tastes good if not as great with refined oil too.

Prawn curry

So don’t miss such a simple and delicious  prawn curry just because I wrote coconut oil the first thing in my ingredient list.

Ingredients:


1. 300 grams prawns
2. 4 tablespoons coconut oil/ refined oil
3. A few sprigs of curry leaves
4. 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
5. Two medium sized onions chopped fine
6. One large tomato chopped into big chunks
7. Two tablespoons grated ginger
8. 10 cloves garlic crushed
9. ¼ th teaspoon teaspoon turmeric powder
10.            ¾ th teaspoon Kashmiri  red chilly powder
11.          Two pinches fennel seed powder
12.          Salt to taste           

Method:
1. Take the oil in a pan and on medium flame let it get warm and then add the cumin seeds.


2. After a 10- 15 seconds add the curry leaves followed by the ginger and garlic. Stir fry for about five minutes.


3. Add the chopped oinions and on medium flame stir  till the onions turn pink.


4.Add the turmeric and the red chilli powders and stir fry for another minute to roast the masalas well.


5. Pour half a cup of water and...


.......give it a stir and let the water boil.


Add the prawns and stir and cover , the prawns won't take more than 5-7 minutes to cook.


6.  Add 200 ml of coconut milk along with the tomatoes and the salt and cook for just about two minutes more, not more otherwise the coconut milk will begin to curdle.



7.  Sprinkle the fennel seed powder and serve the prawn curry  with steamed rice.

Prawn Curry


Prawn Curry



Prawn curry



   
 



Popular Posts