Team-BHP > Shifting gears


Reply
  Search this Thread
524,856 views
Old 23rd October 2022, 08:09   #2041
Senior - BHPian
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Delhi
Posts: 2,597
Thanked: 2,888 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by rajeevsulu View Post
If you powder it, it could be a lot more bitter. Tear it up and use it as suggested above. Thevaroma when you tear the curry leaves is heavenly!
Curry leaves are a variety of Neem, hence they are a bit bitter. At the same time they have a lot of medicine value, hence we normally eat them. The powder will be even more bitter.

Depending on what you are cooking, you can leave the leaves on the stem. That way you need not sift through for individual leaves, but take the whole stem out.
Aroy is offline   (3) Thanks
Old 23rd October 2022, 09:20   #2042
BANNED
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Kolhapur
Posts: 1,725
Thanked: 1,909 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by pjbiju View Post
I would suggest chopping up the curry leaves and using them. This would make it impossible for you to pick and discard them.
But I want to pick & discard them. I don't like leaves in my mouth while eating my food, though I like the flavour they bring. Hence looking for a compromise.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroy View Post

Depending on what you are cooking, you can leave the leaves on the stem. That way you need not sift through for individual leaves, but take the whole stem out.

This sounds like a good idea - are there some foods where there this method is suitable & some where it isn't?

Last edited by carboy : 23rd October 2022 at 09:21.
carboy is offline  
Old 23rd October 2022, 09:59   #2043
Senior - BHPian
 
dailydriver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: Roadeo-City
Posts: 1,239
Thanked: 7,119 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroy View Post
Depending on what you are cooking, you can leave the leaves on the stem. That way you need not sift through for individual leaves, but take the whole stem out.
Quote:
Originally Posted by carboy View Post
But I want to pick & discard them. I don't like leaves in my mouth while eating my food, though I like the flavour they bring
Off Topic!

You can call me a freak, but curry leaves are something that won't get left behind in my plate, EVER.

I relish chewing them, be they be part of gravies, pulaos or sabjis: the seasoned, crispy leaves present in namkeens and mixtures are extra delicious!

I know to each palate it's own, but still !
x x x
Interesting discussion, please continue.
dailydriver is online now   (2) Thanks
Old 23rd October 2022, 10:21   #2044
Senior - BHPian
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Delhi
Posts: 2,597
Thanked: 2,888 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by carboy View Post
But I want to pick & discard them. I don't like leaves in my mouth while eating my food, though I like the flavour they bring. Hence looking for a compromise.




This sounds like a good idea - are there some foods where there this method is suitable & some where it isn't?
Suitable :
. Curries. You can use the stem with leaves and the just take it out.
. Kadhi, same as above.

Not feasible
. Tempering. This needs leaves to be fried.
. Upma, tedious but doable.
. Dhokla, needs the leaves.
Aroy is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 28th December 2023, 21:28   #2045
BHPian
 
Join Date: Dec 2021
Location: Mumbai
Posts: 148
Thanked: 741 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

THE EASIEST CHOCOLATE CAKE RECIPE



Hello fellow cooks/wannabe cooks/master chefs

Just sharing a recipe for the probably the most fuss free chocolate cake in the world. If you have a food processor, you can literally get this done in 10 minutes - ok, maybe for first timers half an hour

But there is no fancy creaming/reverse creaming, no sifting dry ingredients and then adding it to the wet ones and worrying about over-mixing etc.

Just literally throw everything into a food processor, blitz it twice, pour into a pan and bake for an hour. And that's that. And trust me, even without adding the chocolate syrup at the end, the cake tastes amazing.

I've made this countless number of times - it was the first cake I taught myself - and it's a favourite every time I make it.

https://www.nigella.com/recipes/quad...late-loaf-cake

Just toggle the 'metric/cups' switch near the ingredients and it will not need you to measure all ingredients with a kitchen scale but using cups instead.

Here's the video of Nigella Lawson making this cake. It really is as easy and simple as it looks.



Those with kids - it's the perfect recipe to get the little ones into action.

And those a bit more adventurous - just 'feed' the cake with rum (pour it into the cake using the small holes instead of the chocolate syrup) for a massive boozy kick on New Years

Let me know if you have an questions. Amateur cook here but willing to learn - sharing is learning! Here's a picture of one of my first attempts at making this - decorations are my improvisations. And there is a doughnut shape since I made it in an old fashioned cake pot (before I figured out an oven)

Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs-img_4446.jpg
Evyas is offline   (4) Thanks
Old 2nd January 2024, 12:35   #2046
Senior - BHPian
 
alpha1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: LandOfNoWinters
Posts: 2,152
Thanked: 2,863 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by sumeethaldankar View Post
Guys which is a reliable brand of packaged rice flour to use for creating bhakris?
Nope, don't use packaged flour for rice/jowar/bajra bhakris.
For shelf life purpose the packaged flour gets processed, additionally this flour is usually sitting in the shelves for months before consumption - when you make the dough you can easily see that packaged flour will result in flakier, dryer dough that will not hold together and your bhakris will fall apart during the heating on tava.
Better option is to get the grains ground by your own. Or visit the local chakki, they usually keep freshly ground flours available.


In fact the above holds true even for wheat (huge difference between packaged and freshly ground wheat), however gluten in wheat covers up for the substandard experience of processed & packaged old flour.
alpha1 is offline   (2) Thanks
Old 4th January 2024, 08:23   #2047
Senior - BHPian
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Delhi
Posts: 2,597
Thanked: 2,888 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by alpha1 View Post
Nope, don't use packaged flour for rice/jowar/bajra bhakris.
.....................
Better option is to get the grains ground by your own. Or visit the local chakki, they usually keep freshly ground flours available.


In fact the above holds true even for wheat (huge difference between packaged and freshly ground wheat), however gluten in wheat covers up for the substandard experience of processed & packaged old flour.
Even we get the flour from local Chakki. The difference between packaged and chakki Atta is tremendous. The rotis are softer and parothas crispier. We get other flours as and when needed

If you need a little bit of flour, grind it in the mixer. We often do that when a cup or two is required.
Aroy is offline  
Old 4th January 2024, 09:50   #2048
BHPian
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: bang
Posts: 892
Thanked: 3,216 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by carboy View Post
Can Kadipata powder be used as a substitute in recipes which require Kadipata leaves. I pick out & throw away all the leaves before eating any dish which has the leaves. I was wondering if using powder is an alternative?
Karuveppilai (Tamil) or Karibevu (Kannada) is the first thing i eat when presented with a dish. It's what adds flavor to the dish but then again every one to their opinions. The problem i see is that when you use these leaves it does not stain the dish in its entirely but when used as a powder it would soak the dish fully.

If the taste of curry leaves is not palatable to you then mixing it in the dish would make the entire dish unpleasant. So, tread with caution.
srini1785 is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 15th April 2024, 08:48   #2049
Team-BHP Support
 
Sheel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Purnea (Bihar)
Posts: 9,874
Thanked: 14,910 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Any suggestion on good Asafoetida? Something which can be purchased off Amazon / Flipkart? Or any other link / website?
Sheel is offline  
Old 15th April 2024, 11:06   #2050
Distinguished - BHPian
 
ABHI_1512's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: Calcutta
Posts: 1,032
Thanked: 12,171 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheel View Post
Any suggestion on good Asafoetida? Something which can be purchased off Amazon / Flipkart? Or any other link / website?
The one from Everest brand is what I use and found it good enough for my requirements, should be found online.
ABHI_1512 is offline  
Old 15th April 2024, 11:08   #2051
Senior - BHPian
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Delhi
Posts: 2,597
Thanked: 2,888 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheel View Post
Any suggestion on good Asafoetida? Something which can be purchased off Amazon / Flipkart? Or any other link / website?
From a You tube podcast I learnt that Hing costs around Rs.6,000 per kg. This is for resin imported for further processing. After the resin is bought by manufacturers they dilute it with food grade powders and sell it in various packs.

So the Hing that you buy for say Rs.50 for 50 grams is actually diluted at least 1:10 ratio. I have tried all sources and in general the more expensive it is the better (or purer) it is.

Here are some links

https://www.amazon.in/Crystals-Glute...08HD52R7L?th=1

https://www.simhas.in/strongest-asafoetida
Aroy is offline   (2) Thanks
Old 15th April 2024, 11:30   #2052
Senior - BHPian
 
DCEite's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: NCR
Posts: 3,542
Thanked: 3,160 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheel View Post
Any suggestion on good Asafoetida? Something which can be purchased off Amazon / Flipkart? Or any other link / website?
Quote:
Originally Posted by ABHI_1512 View Post
The one from Everest brand is what I use and found it good enough for my requirements, should be found online.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroy View Post
From a You tube podcast I learnt that Hing costs around Rs.6,000 per kg. This is for resin imported for further processing. After the resin is bought by manufacturers they dilute it with food grade powders and sell it in various packs.

So the Hing that you buy for say Rs.50 for 50 grams is actually diluted at least 1:10 ratio. I have tried all sources and in general the more expensive it is the better (or purer) it is.

Here are some links

https://www.amazon.in/Crystals-Glute...08HD52R7L?th=1

https://www.simhas.in/strongest-asafoetida
I was surprised when I read the labels on commercial Hing poweders in market. All of them contain "Wheat flour/Refined wheat flour" as an ingredient. I am not sure why it is used, but perhaps its a binding agent.

The best Hing you could get would be the pure Hing granules. Seach for "Hathras Hing" and you will get some information on this. This is pure hing without any adultration, but it will not be in powdered form, but in form of small hard granules. Ofcourse before cooking they will need to be crushed using a pestle and mortar.
DCEite is online now   (3) Thanks
Old 15th April 2024, 19:19   #2053
Senior - BHPian
 
alpha1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: LandOfNoWinters
Posts: 2,152
Thanked: 2,863 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroy View Post
From a You tube podcast I learnt that Hing costs around Rs.6,000 per kg.
Thats a great piece of info for reference.
Commercially available high powder is at ~Rs 1000-1500/kg
Quote:
Originally Posted by DCEite View Post
I was surprised when I read the labels on commercial Hing poweders in market. All of them contain "Wheat flour/Refined wheat flour" as an ingredient. I am not sure why it is used, but perhaps its a binding agent.
But you will note that different brands have different % of flour. (Most hovering around 70%, but others have far lower)


Last edited by alpha1 : 15th April 2024 at 19:20.
alpha1 is offline   (3) Thanks
Old 15th April 2024, 20:19   #2054
BHPian
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Bangalore
Posts: 739
Thanked: 2,911 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Ingredients are listed in the descending order of proportion. So in the example above, we are still not sure of the actual hing content. Specially, the content of edible gum in both cases could be the variable with the hing content remaining more-or-less the same. All we know for sure, is hing content is under 17.5% in the first one and under 30% in the second one - mathematically.

Last edited by sachinayak : 15th April 2024 at 20:21.
sachinayak is offline   (2) Thanks
Old 15th April 2024, 20:38   #2055
BANNED
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: HP21
Posts: 792
Thanked: 987 Times
Re: Recipes / Discussions on cooking from Team-BHP Master Chefs

Quote:
Originally Posted by Aroy View Post
From a You tube podcast I learnt that Hing costs around Rs.6,000 per kg. This is for resin imported for further processing. After the resin is bought by manufacturers they dilute it with food grade powders and sell it in various packs.
Sir,

Do consider visiting Khadi Gramodyog Bhavan near regal cinema in CP Delhi. As you enter the store, turn right from T point ( from near billing counter) and towards your extreme left, you will find a whole shelf with good quality Hing in old Paste way. it's double packed to ensure freshness. IMO, Any hing in Power form is just a waste of money. I typically source from them and mix a packet in 750 ml water glass bottle. Mixing hing this way something that i learned from our old community cooks who serve during big functions in our native. Serves me well for daily cooking in the house.

Last edited by .sushilkumar : 15th April 2024 at 20:48.
.sushilkumar is offline   (4) Thanks
Reply

Most Viewed
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Team-BHP.com
Proudly powered by E2E Networks