TRIFLE TALES…OF VISITING BLOGGERS & SWEET THINGS!

“All work and no blog makes a blogger a dull worker.”

A few days ago I had a visitor. She called one day to say that it was high time we met since we lived in the same city, & she was landing up that weekend! Her name is Nachiketa, she blogs from Delhi, & is quite the crazy baker! She is one get up & go girl, with an infectious level of enthusiasm & energy. I think I was like that a decade ago. She’s been following my blog for a while, is passionate about baking, & equally passionate about learning. She works as a senior product manager, is full of beans, and blogs @ The Variableis as variable as the name suggests. A finger in every pie, & time for everything … for family, for friends, for acting in theatre, for entertaining her little 2 1/2 year old niece, for baking cakes after getting back home at 9pm, for visiting Chandni Chowk in Old Delhi on a Sunday, for lovingly taking care of her car… & of course for pursuing her baking hobby!She arrived with baskets of things, bits & bobs related to baking, silicon ware her brother had got from Melbourne, decorating sets her aunt had sent … she had a ‘plan’!! And here I was thinking we would just sit & chat, but what arrived the previous night by email was an ‘agenda’!! Yes, you heard right, here was a lady with a mission & she meant business! We set the ball rolling quite as soon as she arrived, & did manage to achieve a load that day. Somehow threw together a low scale lunch as well…
So what did we do? She wanted to learn how to bake bread which didn’t happen because there was no electricity most of the morning. Thankfully I had baked an artisan loaf earlier in the morning, so we sat & looked at it, discussed it, looked at the dough in the fridge etc. Then we immersed ourselves into cookbooks & more cookbooks. I shared with her the little I know about taking pictures, the light box, editing in Picasa, making collages etc.

We had a hurried lunch of grilled chicken, penne in a mushroom sauce, a corn salad in buttermilk ranch dressing, & garlic artisan bread. Dessert was a delicious strawberry yogurt panna cotta which surprisingly set very well. I was unsure because I had eyeballed amounts due to the lack of time, but it was ‘goblet– licking’ good!

Post lunch we hit the kitchen. She really wanted to get a window on decorating cakes & cupcakes. I had made a batch of vanilla cupcakes the previous evening to give us a platform for practice! The good girl had baked her version of a Zebra cake & brought it for my kids, but she wanted to frost it first. Here’s what I taught her to do…like it?

Made a ganache to top the cake with. I eyeball amounts of cream & chocolate for ganache now. Threw in about 200gms of dark chocolate & about 150ml of 25% low fat cream into a saucepan, melted everything over low heat, strained it & then let it cool. We covered the cake with the ganache once cooled & of good spreading consistency. Too thin & it will just flow off, too thick & it’ll be lumpy, & sometimes take crumbs off. We did the sides first & then the top, smoothed it out with an offset spatula & voila … we had a platform to decorate! I thought I’d teach her the easiest & quickest way I know to decorate a cake in literally five minutes. I took a bar of dark chocolate at room temperature & grated some chocolate curls out of the medium slots. Put them in the fridge to harden up. Next put about a tbsp of thick whipped cream in a baggie, snipped off a corner, started off making a spiral from the centre outwards, & them marbled it. (You can see step-by-step pictures in a much earlier post here). Once that was done, we sprinkled the edges with the grated chocolate. The lady wanted a strawberry on top. So I sliced it fine, left it attached at the base, fanned it out, & placed it in the centre! The cake looked so good when it was ready, & tasted fab too. Nachiketa had added some coffee & cinnamon to spice up the flavours & extra chocolate too … all in all, it was YUM!! The kids had seconds, & tried, without luck, for 3rds!!

Next we attacked the cupcakes as the day was rapidly coming to an end. We used the left-over ganache, after softening it in the microwave for 10 seconds, & inaugurated her new decorating set to frost these. Take a look!It was fun!! We did a cut-out butterfly on one, piped zizzags on another etc, & then used sprinkles to top them off. Another 5 minute excercise because we were short on time.
I had some batter left over after making a dozen cupcakes, some cream from making the ganache, some ganache, & some strawberry coulis + jam from the panna cotta. I baked the left-over batter in a square baking pan, & made a layered trifle pudding the next day. I cut out flowers with small flower cookie cutters that Nachiketa sweetly had given me, & layered the trifle.

Will post the trifle & yogurt panna cotta recipe soon … both part of my strawberry overdrive! Oh yes, and there’s some frozen strawberry yogurt coming up too!! Sweet dreams!

SIMPLE HOME STLYE LAMB CURRY / TAMATAR GOSHT…FOOD FOR THOUGHT!

“What is patriotism but the love of the food one ate as a child?”
Lin Yutang

SIMPLE HOME-STYLE LAMB CURRY…Tamatar Gosht!

Food nostalgia is something I am sure all of us hold dear. My mother was, & is still, a marvellous cook, & is famous for her traditional meals like lamb/chicken curry, biryanis etc. People would flock to our place during festivals to grab a bite. Strangely for me, I have few memories of what I ate as a child. The fault lay with me of course, as I was a distracted soul, with little interest in what I ate. Hardly worthy for someone who has such a HUGE interest in food now…though the problem lingers. The interest now lies in the making & not as much in the eating.

Lamb Curry with tomatoes…Tamatar Gosht

Blog about a dish that recreates a memory for you….thus spake the Skinny Gourmet. As Erin says, ‘ Proust had his madeleines, but we all have something. Food is evocative. It has the power to transport us, to connect us to times and places past. This dish is for her evocative event!It is with joy that I look at the kids relishing every mouthful they eat…& am glad food will evoke strong childhood memories for them when they grow up. To do me some justice, two dishes I do remember are Gosht Do Piaza (lamb stew with onions) which I have posted earlier, & this simple home-style lamb curry,Tamatar Gosht (tamatar meaning tomatoes)…the tastes of which still linger & come alive whenever I make either. Both are simple, robust & full of flavour…perfect for a cold winter day! On days when I don’t want to plan ahead & make elaborate meals, this home style lamb curry suits me fine; coming to my rescue, as it uses staples from my larder!

Ingredients:

Lamb – 500gms / cut into pieces (on the bone)
Whole garam masala – Green cardamom -3/Cloves -5/Whole pepper – 7/Cinnamon – 1 stick
Onions – 4 / 2 sliced fine & 2 cut into large pieces
Tomatoes – 3-4 / chopped
Ginger – 1″ piece
Garlic – 5 cloves
Yogurt/curd – 1/2 cup
Coriander powder – 3 tsp
Turmeric powder – 1/2 tsp
Red chili powder – 1/4 tsp
Garam masala powder – 1/2 tsp
Salt to taste
Green chilies – 2-3/to taste/optional/deseed if you want the dish less hot
Fresh coriander leaves for garnishing

Method:

  • Grind the 2 onions (the ones cut into large pieces) + ginger + garlic to a paste.
  • Heat oil. When hot, add the whole garam masalas. Roast till they splutter.
  • Add finely sliced onions & brown, followed by lamb. Roast well.
  • Add the yogurt & roast on high till the sides leave oil.
  • Add the ground onion paste & roast till the sides leave oil, followed by the dry spices.
  • Add the chopped tomatoes, roast again.
  • Now add about 1/2 a cup of water & salt to taste; cook under pressure or over slow heat till lamb is tender.
  • Open only once its cooled down a bit. Add slit green chilies & fresh coriander & simmer for 5-7 minutes.
  • Serve hot with rice, naan, chapatis, tandoori rotis etc.

Meeso on my mind…

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