BIRYANI/YAKHNI PULAO…Mingling with ‘One Dish Dinners’

“In the childhood memories of every good cook, there’s a large kitchen, a warm stove, a simmering pot and a mom.”
Barbara Costikyan

LAMB BIRYANI/YAKHNI PULAO

Decided to make a biryani/yakni pulao for lunch last weekend. Have been procrastinating making it for long as it is just a bit involved. Then I thought, might as well, & went off to dust the cob-webs off my biryani utensil which hadn’t seen light of day for a while. Life seems to be all about eating & drinking…so I got on with tying my bouquet garni!! In a strange quirk of fate, after eating the Mughlai dish for lunch, we unexpectedly got invited to see a special screening of the film ‘Jodhaa Akbar’ that night. The film was a tad disappointing for a period film. It’s based on a 16th century love story about a marriage of alliance that gave birth to true love between a great Mughal emperor, Akbar, and a Rajput princess. The high point of the film was beautiful glimpses of extensive shooting done within the palaces of Rajasthan. Absolutely stunning…unbelieveable that such interiors could have been made by man, & that too centuries ago!

Back to the foodie issue then…The recipe is one my mother has been making for years, & the kids love it because the stock flavours the rice beautifully. I made a small change to it by using half milk/half water to make the stock. Had read about that in a Hyderabadi coffee table book by Pratibha Karan. And yes, I also added some star anise since the flavour is nice & subtle. This preparation is a cross between a biryani & pulao; more a pulao because the rice is cooked in stock, & a bit like biryani because I slow-cooked it on dum!

Historically, Biryani and Pulao were ‘rice and meat’ dish.
In Pulao, the ‘meat and rice are stirred’ before cooking. For Biryani, meat and rice are layered during cooking. Pulao is of Persian origin. Pilaf is another common name used in India. Mutton was cooked in water with aromatic spices. Once the meat was cooked, rice and more water were added to finish cooking. The broth with yogurt was called Yakhni.
Biryani in Farsi means ‘fry before cooking’. To make Biryani, mutton is fried in ghee and par-cooked (Cooked half way). Separately, the rice is fried in ghee, and par-cooked (cooked half way). The rice and meat were layered (cluster of rice on top of cluster of meat) in a cookware called handi. The handi is sealed with dough. It is dum cooked (baked) on low heat.

IMG 3595 It’s delicious served with a ‘Garlic Raita (yogurt)’

Ingredients:

Lamb – 750gms (ribs & shoulder cuts)
Rice – ½ kg (2 steel glasses)/ soaked for 30 minutes
Onions – 4 (3 whole; 1 sliced)
Garlic – 1 whole bulb
Garlic paste – 1 tsp
Ginger grated – 1 tbsp
Whole Coriander seeds – 3 tbsps
Whole Fennel – 3 tbsps
Star Anise -2-3 (optional)
Star Anise powder -1 tsp (optional)
Green Cardamom -3
Yogurt – 1/2 cup
Milk – 1 1/2 glasses
Bay leaves – 2
Cinnamon sticks – 2 pieces
Saffron – 1 pinch soaked in a few tbsps warm milk
Cashewnuts for garnishing

Method:

  • Make a bouquet garni with 3 onions (whole) + whole coriander seeds + whole fennel + star anise + garlic bulb + grated ginger. Tie firmly.
  • Put the lamb in the cooker with the bouquet garni + 1 1/2 glasses of water + 1 1/2 glasses of milk + 1 tsp of salt.
  • Cook under medium pressure for 15 minutes. Open only once cool. (Adjust cooking time according to your need; the lamb shouldn’t get overdone, otherwise it will fall into pieces while roasting later! CAREFUL!).
  • Once cool, pour through a soup strainer & collect stock (yakhni) in a bowl; pick out the lamb pieces & reserve in another bowl. Squeeze out the bouquet garni through the strainer. Dispose off the bouquet garni .
  • Now measure the stock/yakhni (if rice 2 glasses then stock should be 3 ½ glasses); make up the shortfall with water if required.
  • Heat ½ cup oil in a heavy bottom pan. Add sliced onion & fry till light brown.
  • Remove & keep for garnishing. Repeat with cashews.
  • Add the green cardamom & fry till light brown.
  • Add the lamb pieces, yogurt & garlic paste. Roast gently.
  • Now add the stock + bay leaves + cinnamon sticks + salt for rice & bring to a rolling boil.
  • Add the rice & let it get 2-3 rolling boils, then cover & simmer for 10-15 minutes till the rice is almost done.
  • Open & sprinkle the saffron & milk mixture evenly over the top.
  • Cover with a snug lid sealed with some dough & leave to cook on dum on a girdle/tava on low heat for about 15-20minutes. ( or in the oven at 150 degrees C for 30 minutes).
  • Don’t open immediately; let it sit for at least 10-15 minutes.
  • Garnish with fried onions & cashews.
  • Serve with a Garlic raita. (Whip a bowl of yogurt with 1 level tsp garlic paste; add salt & red chili flakes; mix well;chill)
    Notes: Always reheat biryani with a little sprinkle of milk.
How familiar those words are for all of us… ‘What’s For Lunch Honey?‘. It’s mingle time once again at Meeta’s & this time she’s looking for yourOne-Dish Dinners…”the only rule is your entire dinner should come out of ONE pot!” Sit pretty in the pot, dear biryani…it’s time to be sent off for the ‘Monthly Mingle’!

FLOUR FLOWERS…CLICKETY CLICK!!

“If I sing when I cook, the food is going to be happy.”
Pasquale Carpino

COLOURING MY WORLD…ICED SUGAR COOKIES

My favourite cookies that I made again a few days ago. A friend was going down South for a birthday & wedding in the family, & her son insisted on taking these & some mini muffins for his cousins’ birthday. Got down to baking some of these attractive cookies that add colour to any table & I never tire of making them. I feel like a great painter adding colour to my canvas! Small pleasures, & very therapeutic indeed…

Hearts piled high…

The basic sugar cookie recipe is the same one that I use for ‘Smartie Cookies’. It’s a very versatile one, and works well with this recipe. For the icing, I use powdered sugar mixed with just enough water to make it thick & flowing, then colour according to requirement, and drizzle it on the cookies. I leave them to dry out overnight in trays in the oven, and sometimes give them a minute in a hot oven to get rid of any moisture (depends on the weather actually). Though a bit fiddly to ice, practice makes them better each time.

‘Wheat ,FLOUR,Flowers…& bees for company!’
This is heading as my entry for Jugalbandi’s Click February 2008…the topic for the month being ‘Flour’. The bees seem to be there for Bee…(donno how to make a Jai)!
Assorted cookies – hearts, flowers, stars, bees , leaves…
…in the rays of the rising sun.

I had so much fun doing these…

“Every artist dips his brush in his own soul, and paints his own nature into his pictures.”
Henry Ward Beecher

CHOCOLATE-PISTACHIO CAKE…A cake to sleepover?

“Chocolate doesn’t make the world go around … but it certainly makes the ride worthwhile! “
Author Unknown

Its a ‘Chocolate, Chocolate-chip & Pistachio’ cake!

There has been palpable excitement in the son’s life as he’s off for his first sleepover. They’ve had a day out by the lake – rappling, rock climbing, Burma bridge crossing. Then it’s back to school for a bonfire night, star-gazing & studying constellations…finally the much-awaited sleepover! We’ve almost had to gag & bind him down ‘coz he’s gone bonkers planning, making lists,sticking reminders…driving us up the beanpole! He woke up this morning with a 1000 watt smile, saying this is the day he’s been waiting for “all his life”!

Heave-ho, Heave-ho…It’s off to school we go!

A cake for snacks featured in one of his many lists & reminders. I made this for him last evening.

‘Sleepover Cake’…or so it’s come to be called!

I love the combination of chocolate & pistachio nuts…by way of taste, as well as colour! Just because DH happened to go to Dubai for a day & saw these nuts…& thought the mad baker would love to try something with them. Of course I would…no problem! With opportunity knocking in the form of a sleepover, I wentover & used them right away!

The recipe is my own…a simple cake which is moist, delicious & versatile! Check out the mocha walnut version here.

Ingredients:

Butter-100 gms
Sugar – 1 1/2 cups
Eggs – 4
Vanilla Essence- 1tsp
Flour – 1 cup
Whole wheat flour – 1/2 cup
Cocoa – 1/2 cup
Baking powder – 1 tsp
Baking soda – 1/2 tsp
Salt – 1/8 tsp
Yogurt – 6 tbsps
Cream – 3 tbsps (25% fat)
Juice of 1/2 lime
Chocolate-chips – 1/2 cup
Pistachio Nuts – 1/2 cup/chopped

Out of the oven late in the evening…smelling good!

Method:
  • Preheat oven to 180 deg C. Line, grease & flour bottom of 8” spring form ring tin. Grease & flour the sides.
  • Sift the dry ingredients together. Keep aside.
  • Mix the yogurt + cream + lime juice in a small bowl. Keep aside.
  • Beat the butter + sugar well until light and fluffy.
  • Beat in the eggs & vanilla essence.
  • On low speed, beat in the dry ingredients alternatively with yogurt and cream mix…in 3 goes.
  • Stir in the chocolate chips and chopped pistachios.
  • Put the batter into the tin and level out. Sprinkle with flaked pistachios & chocolate sprinkles if desired.
  • Bake for approximately 60 mins, or till the tester comes out clean.
  • Cool in tin on rack for 10 mins, remove sides of spring form tin, & cool on rack for 30 mins.
  • Remove from base, handling gently as it’s quite delicate while warm.
  • This cake is delicious and moist when fresh out of the oven!!
    Note: Check after about 45 minutes. If you find that the top is browning too fast, loosely place a sheet of foil over the top.

ARTISTIC INSPIRATIONS…STRAWBERRY CHOCOLATE SWISS ROLL

“Find something you’re passionate about and keep tremendously interested in it.”
Julia Child
ARTISTIC INSPIRATIONS OF THE CHOCOLATE KIND!

Its amazing how simply you can get inspired from foodies on the wonderful web. And most certainly distracted too. Doughnuts of every kind have been doing the rounds & I have scribbled recipes endlessly trying to zero in on the one I was to make this morning. I had one from Susan’s, another from Aparna’s & a 3rd from Madam Chow…but I got terribly distracted at the bazaar & picked up fresh strawberries instead of yeast! Perils of an overactive mind!

‘What’s for dessert’?

DH’s voice last night rung in my head! Hmmmmm…the kids had been on my case to make a strawberry swiss roll (requested the daughter) & a chocolate one (pleaded the son)! How about both…a 2-in-1…like my friend in babushka land mentioned the other day! So I did a strawberry sponge with strips of differently flavoured creams.
ALL ROLLED UP & WAITING TO BE DRESSED…
Roll now ready, I thought I would drizzle melted chocolate over it or a ganache…but got inspired by something I had seen on Art You Eat…chocolate art by both Arfi & African Vanielje. So here’s what’s for dessert tonight…An artistically inspired swiss roll served with a strawberry whipped cream!
Light, airy, beautiful…
I love the idea of a swiss roll. Minimum ingredients, no recipe pages needed after you make it a couple of times, baking time of 10 minutes, & dress it or don’t…it tastes great both ways. Play around with flavours; my next one is probably going to be a coffee sponge with a mocha filling!

Ingredients:

Eggs – 3
Castor sugar – 1/2 cup
Flour – 1/2 cup
Strawberry essence – 1 tsp
Filling:
Whipping Cream – 200ml
Strawberries – 200gms (Reserve 5-6 for serving)
Castor sugar 3-4 tbsps (adjust according to tartness of berries)
Dark chocolate for topping
Method:
  • Preheat the oven to 180 degrees C. Line, grease & dust a swiss roll tin.
  • Beat the eggs, essence & sugar till mousse like (almost 10 minutes).
  • Lightly fold the flour in 3 goes in figure 8 movements (so as no to release the air bubbles).
  • Gently turn into prepared tray & bake for 10-12 minutes till light brown & spongy.
  • Turn onto a kitchen cloth sifted with castor sugar. Remove lining & roll the cloth into a firm roll.
  • Leave to cool. Unroll only once cooled.
  • Chop up about 150 gms of strawberries.
  • Beat the cream with castor sugar till it holds peaks. Spoon a line in the centre of the roll & grate chocolate over it.
  • Mix the chopped strawberries into the remaining cream, & spoon over the rest of the roll. (see picture). Don’t spoon in too much cream or it will ooze out. Reserve left-over cream.
  • Gently roll back, taking care not to squeeze the filling out. Place onto serving platter & sift castor sugar over it.
  • Drizzle over with dark melted chocolate. Chill well.
  • Hand blend remaining cream with essence & a drop of red food colour (optional) to make strawberry cream. Adjust sugar according to taste.
  • Slice & serve with strawberry cream & sliced fruit.

Food art…the swiss roll was my canvas!!

A slice I wish I could have shared!

Thank you, all great folk, who have written such wonderful comments. Especially for Ben, who always has a slice reserved for him, & for Pat, who’s got the fork ready!

TOMATO-CARROT SOUP…DELICATELY FLAVOURED WITH STAR ANISE

“Men are like soup: you always want to have one on the back burner, just in case.”
Unattributed feminist quote
Tomato-Carrot Soup with Star Anise
Tried my hand at a tomato-carrot soup this morning, flavoured delicately with a spice that has intrigued me endlessly over the past few days. None other than the pretty star anise ! A nice & gentle vegetarian soup, beautifully flavoured & great for the winter chill that has descended upon us. This is an adaptation of a soup my mother makes almost everyday in the winter months.Star Anise…the pretty spice!
Star anise plays a key role in the slow cooked dishes that characterize Eastern Chinese cuisine. Its licorice flavor enhances red cooked dishes. It is also the secret ingredient in many Indian stews and curries. And yes…literally…’No croutons required’!!
Ingredients:
Tomatoes – 8-10 medium / quartered
Carrots – 2 / chopped roughly
Onion – 1 / quartered
Garlic – 2 cloves
Red Lentil (Masoor dal) – 1 tbsp (optional/I add it to increase food value)
Star anise – 2 flowers
Salt to taste
Butter – 1 tbsp
Freshly ground white pepper
Method:
  • Put all the vegetables + lentils + star anise in a cooker or pan with salt & about 2 cups of water.
  • Cook until soft.
  • Remove the star anise (reserve for garnishing if you like) & run the soup in a blender . Strain.
  • Take some butter in a pan & saute the white pepper for a minute. Turn the soup into the pan & simmer till it comes to a boil. Serve with a drizzle of cream & freshly ground pepper.

Warm soup for the soul…pipe a heart on top & you’re all set for V-day!!

No Croutons Required‘ a new monthly food blogging event alternately hosted by Lisa’s Kitchen and Tinned Tomatoes. Each month the host will invite bloggers around the world to submit a vegetarian soup or salad recipe, sometimes with a theme, sometimes not. The theme for February is simply vegetarian soups…which fits me in quite warmly! My entry’s on its way…

HEARTY ALMOND SHORTBREAD…How deep is your love?

“I am still convinced that a good, simple, homemade cookie is preferable to all the store-bought cookies one can find.”
James Beard
Almond Shortbread Hearts…delicious to the last crumb!

These are one of those cookies that disappear before you can say Jack Robinson! Very easy to make, non-demanding or challenging, & above all, full of taste! Great cut-out cookies! Perfect hearts for Valentines!

Nutty, Buttery & Crisp…goodness in every bite!

I made hearts & flowers since I love the flowers too, but you can make an assortment of graduated hears if you like…or heart cut-outs in larger cookies! These are cookies I make just at the whim of it. Not involved or bothersome, these are nutty ‘n’ buttery … a treat to have. I practically took under an hour to make these; some for a friend, & between the DH, the kids & their friends, the rest vanished! Boxed some for a friend with a quick card on top…

Ingredients:
Butter – 100gms
Castor Sugar – 5 tbsps / ground in coffee grinder
Flour – 1 1/2 cups
Almonds – 1/2 cup / ground in coffeee grinder with skins on
Almond Essence – 1 tsp
Extra castor sugar for sprinkling on top

Simple indulgence…

Method:

  • Preheat oven to 190 degrees C. Lightly grease 2 cookie sheets.
  • Beat the butter & almond essence with 5 tbsps of castor sugar. ( I do it by hand).
  • Mix in the flour & ground almonds together to make a firm dough.
  • Chill for 30 minutes if the dough is soft.
  • Roll out to 1/8″ thickness & cut out desired shapes. Sift castor sugar lightly on top.
  • Bake for 12-15 minutes till golden brown.
  • Leave on cookie sheets for a minute & then cool on racks.
  • Drizzle with melted dark chocolate.
  • Store in an airtight container. These keep for upto 2 weeks.
  • Note: Makes about 2- 21/2 dozen cookies.

How deep is your love?

Pooja read this somewhere…” Spend your life such a way , so that when you get old you will have nice memories to cherish about “ & says, “Let us try to add one more such memorable day to our life and share here with others”. Onto building memories, this one is off to Pooja’s at ‘My Creative Ideas’ for her Valentine’s event.

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