“When love and skill work together, expect a masterpiece.”
John Ruskin
Thank you for Anushree for sending me a copy to review. I really enjoyed the book!
[print_this]Recipe: Butter Chicken {pan fried version}
Summary: A flavoursome home style butter chicken bursting with the goodness of fresh tomatoes. A recipe in which the marinated chicken pan fried as against traditionally grilled. Recipe from The Chakle India Cookbook by Aditya Bal
Ingredients:
- 500gm boneless chicken {cut into tikka sized pieces}
- 1 tsp salt
- Few drops refined oil
- 50g butter
- 1/2 tsp sugar
- Juice of 1/2 lime
- The Marinade
- 3 tsp ginger-garlic paste
- 1/2 onion, pureed
- 4tbsp whisked curd
- 1tsp coriander powder
- 1tsp cumin powder
- 1/2 tsp turmeric powder
- 1tsp hot red chili powder
- Juice of 1 lime
- Rich Tomato Gravy
- 7-8 ripe tomatoes, blanched, peeled, puréed
- Few drops of refined oil
- 50g butter
- 1/2″ piece ginger chopped fine
- 2 green chilies, chopped fine
- 1/2 tsp turmeric powder
- 1tsp hot red chili powder
- 1/2 tsp cumin powder
- 1sp coriander powder
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1/2tsp sugar to balance the acidity of the tomatoes
- 4-5 tsp full cream {I used low fat 2 tsp}
- Garnish
- 2-3tsp chopped fresh coriander leaves
- Knob of butter
Method:
- The Marinade
- Combine all the marinade ingredients in a small bowl. Put the chicken into a large glass or plastic bowl. Add the marinade and mix it well into the chicken with your hands. Cover and leave to marinate in the refrigerator for a couple of hours
- While the chicken is marinating, prepare the rich tomato gravy.
- Rich Tomato Gravy
- Heat a medium size sauté pan and add the oil and butter. Keep the pan on medium heat till the butter is foaming. The oil prevents the butter from burning as it as a much higher smoking point.
- Once the foam subsides somewhat, add the chopped ginger and green chilies and sauté for a couple of minutes on medium heat.
- Add the spice powders and sauté, till they are aromatic and richly coloured.
- Now add the fresh tomato purée and stir to mix with the spices.
- Simmer on low heat, till the tomato gravy is thick and has a rich and deep red colour and the oil rises to the top.
- Season well with salt and add the sugar. Stir through and simmer for a few minutes longer. Turn of the heat and set the gravy aside to mature.
- To cook the chicken
- Remove the marinated chicken from the refrigerator and bring to room temperature. season with salt and mix well.
- Heat a heavy non stick frying pan and add a few drops of refined oil and the butter
- Once the butter is hot, add a few chicken pieces at a time and sear them on high heat, till the develop a rich caramelized crust and are slightly charred around the edges. remove to a plate and repeat with the remaining pieces.
- Now, return all the seared pieces to pan and fry them all together. ass the sugar, lime juice and any remaining marinate. continue to fry the chicken, till it is almost fully cooked and turns a lovely, charred, golden brown.
- Add the thick spicy tomato gravy to the chicken and de-glaze the pan to lift up those intense pan deposits.
- Cook on medium heat, stirring well to make sure the chicken is fully submerged and coated in the delicious gravy
- Simmer uncovered to reduce the gravy
- Turn the heat down to a simmer and add the thick cream. stir through to combine and cook for about five minutes to blend well
- Check for a balance of flavours: the gravy should be rich and buttery, bursting with the spices and concentrated tomatoes; the chicken, perfectly tender and packed with the rich flavours of the creamy tomato gravy.
- Add a knob of butter and enjoy this home-style butter chicken with naan or tandoori roti.
Recipe: Chola Masala {Spicy Chickpeas}
Summary: A real Punjabi classic which is eaten all over North India and is cooked with endless variation. This is a snack which can double up as a meal too. {I used just chickpeas but the recipe has gram too} Recipe from The Chakle India Cookbook by Aditya Bal
Ingredients:
- 1 cup chickpeas, soaked overnight
- 1 cup whole Bengal gram or kala chana, soaked overnight {I didn’t use these so I increased the chickpeas}
- Curry Base
- 2 tsp refined oil {I used Leonardo olive oil from here}
- 1″ cassia stick
- 1tsp cumin seeds
- 4-5 cloves
- 1/4 tsp whole black peppercorns
- 4 green cardamoms
- 2 brown cardamoms
- 1 bay leaf
- 1 1/2 onions chopped fine
- 1/2″ ginger, chopped fine
- 5 garlic cloves, chopped fine
- 1/2 tsp turmeric powder
- 1 tsp red chili powder
- 1tsp coriander powder
- A pinch of asafoetida powder / hing {I used a big pinch}
- 1 tsp salt
- 3 tomatoes, chopped fine
- 1/2 tsp sugar
- 2 tsp butter {I used olive oil again}
- Juice of 1/2 lime
- 2-4 tsp chopped fresh coriander leaves
Method:
- Drain the soaked chickpeas and gram for any toxins, wash well and parboil in a pressure cooker with 3 cups water for 25-30 minutes {I use a pinch of baking soda too}. The chickpeas should hold shape but be soft enough to be mashed with a fork or between fingers.
- Transfer them to a bowl and mash them lightly with a fork, keeping half of them whole. {I tend to do this when I add the chickpeas to the curry. I also reserve any remaining liquid and use it to this the curry later}
- The Curry
- Heat the oil in a wok/kadhai and add the whole spices and bay leaf. Saute on medium heat till they crackle and release their aroma.
- When the whole spices are nutty and richly coloured, add the onions and sauté for a few minutes, till they turn light golden brown.
- Stir in the ginger and garlic and sauté till they are softened and lightly coloured.
- Sprinkle in the spice powders, salt and sauté for a couple of minutes till they are aromatic and toasted. Add a few drops of water to deglaze the pan and lift up the spices stuck to the pan. Bhuno {roast} the masala 3-4 times with water, till the base is homogeneous and oil rises to the surface.
- Mix in the cooked chickpeas {and gram if using} and fry them in the masala base till they are well coated.
- Add the tomatoes and continue to fry on high heat till they begin to disintegrate. Sprinkle in the sugar and mix well to combine.
- Pour in enough water {I used the reserved liquid here} to come 1″ above the contents of the pan. Stir to combine, bring to a boil, turn the heat down and simmer gently for about an hour or more. {I have to confess I just popped everything back into the cooker and gave it a whistle within!}
- Cook until the starch glutenizes with the liquid, so they are soft and creamy in texture and the gravy thickens. Taste and adjust salt if required.
- Now add the butter and lime juice to lift the flavours, then sprinkle the coriander leaves and stir well.
- Check for balance of flavours: The cholas should be extremely soft and creamy but with a little bite to them ad should have the robust taste of whole spices. The dish should be thick and concentrated in flavour.
- Serve with hot roi, puri or bhatura and a salad.
[/print_this]
Don’t miss a post
Also find me on The Rabid Baker, The Times of India
Of course it sounds flavourful Deeba. This is what I want coming out of my kitchen.
Droolicious! And the collection of props is mind blowing.
err.. did the teen get more “grounding” at home or did you forget because of the delicious book 🙂
two beautiful recipes! Both look so tasty and mouthwatering.
Cheers,
Rosa
Deeba – this sounds amazing! I love butter chicken and am so excited to make it at home. Is the curd the same as paneer? Sorry about my ignorance – I just want to make sure!
Both of these recipes are on my “to do” list . Many of the ingredients are ones I’ve never heard of so I’ll need to do some research. Both beautiful dishes.
The pictures,as usual,are awesome Deeba!Couldn’t take my eyes off the first one(even though I am a vegetarian:P)
I love the Chak Le India show. The butter chicken looks absolutely fab.
I *love* butter chicken. My family is Pakistani and it’s not a dish that’s typically made in my house so I love when Indian friends make it…although it always leaves me with a food coma 😉
http://www.paperplatesblog.com
Yum yum ….
Just those pictures make me hungry.
I hope it’s a good book. I like his cooking. Indian with a twist.
Hey Deeba,
I’ll share a secret: Aditya’s recipe is nice but I like yours better..:) Down to using the Shaan tandoori masala(they are my favs)
And for the chholey I have a simpler recipe , especially if you are looking for the “blackened” “Roshan ke bhature chholey” types..Boil the chholey with sliced onions and 1-2 tsps of tea leaves(no need to tie them in a muslin bag..the leaves dissolve leaving no after taste)..and then the tadka is even simpler – sliced ginger , vertically split chilies(dependent upon how hot you can bear) and the whole masalas that you used , plus corainder powder, black pepper powder and teensy bit of aamchur.no turmeric please…That’s it..the rest of the process is same as yours..you can let the chholey simmer and thicken as much as you want ..I confess I hardly use any chillies or pepper corns as my pre-pre-teen does not eat anything remotely spicy..:(
Sorry I should have updated this before. Curd is the same as yogurt.
Thanks for letting me know about the curd being yogurt! I just bought his book, by the way. It was a little tricky to find in the U.S. but I managed! ~ David
Hi Deeba, your pictures are great as usual. Where did you get yr wooden spice box? Love how it looks.