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Entries in cooking (29)

Sunday
Feb242008

The sweet smell of Caramel

When I was a small boy, every year it would be a festival or a function, be it a marriage, baby shower, birth announcement, or some such thing, where the old ladies would gather in the kitchen and make some sweets and savories that make your mouth water, just thinking about it!

A couple of bricks would be placed, clay plastered around and before you knew it, the stove was ready! They would have charcoal and "varaati's" (dried flats made of cowdung and straw) as the fuel. The extra large vessels reserved for the special occasions would be gathered from the "paran" (attic) and the ladies would go about the preparation process.

The chilies were sundried, the rice soaked and dried off on large towels, the trips to the mill to powder chillis, rice, lentils and even sugar(yeah, these were days before electric dry and wet grinders were there in every household!), the impatient waiting to see the goodies take shape!

Usually kids were not allowed into the kitchen area during these times. My grandmother always made an exception for me, simply because I would watch and ask her a million questions! Somehow between my grandmother and my grand aunt, who was referred to by every kid in every generation as "Ambulu Mami" , they would actually take time and explain things to me, probably because they were bored, or amused at my curiosity. Incidentally, Ambulu mami, was my grandma's aunt, but just a few years older than my grandma, so they were more like sisters!

They would take turns stirring the jaggery paste to make "vella paagu" aka caramel and then put peanuts, cashewnuts or split roast peas (pottu kadalai) and pour it into a large tray which had clarified butter spread on the surface.

At this point, the two ladies who had spent almost an hour stirring the syrup with the giant ladles with bored looks, would act like they just got an overdose of adrenaline. There would be a frenzy of activity, where they tested the temperature of the rapidly cooling mix with their fingers. In a motion that reminds you of gymnasts powdering their hands before going on the rings in the Olympics, the two of them would powder their hands with a mix of rice flour and powdered sugar and rip out small globs of this hot mix and roll it into little balls.

They had a small time window before the whole thing would solidify into a hard mass. "Reheating the mix would deteriorate the taste!", they would tell me. Sometimes they would put the plate (taambaalam) over a vessel with hot water to keep it from solidifying so fast. I am sure there is a lot of science behind the various phases of sugar syrup and the temperature vs. hardness response to rapidly cooling sugars, but this was definitely more art than science!

There is something to be said about making stuff and eating it, as opposed to just buying it and eating it. My grandmother is too old. My mom is going through surgery after surgery. Making all this stuff at home is definitely lost with the new generation, be it with San, my sister or Sister-in-law. They are all good cooks, but they would not venture past the usual rasam and sambar, to make laddus, or Jaangiris or even the therati paal.

"That is too labor intensive. Why spend all that time when I can go to Grand Sweets or Sri Krishna sweets and just buy it?" would be the question. In all fairness to the fair ones, they just don't have the motivation! They can all make the pongals, payasams and vadai's for the special occasion, but that is where it stops. My mother-in-law is still old school and she can do non-standard stuff and sometimes we talk about somehow capturing these things for posterity! She is probably the last of the dinosaurs, if you exclude me from the list.

Call me old school, but eating is just part of it. I would always long for the semisolid "Mysore pak" that is still bubbling on the stove than eat the cold solid pieces a day later. Same goes for Kaju Kathlis or Badam Halwa. Taking in the smell, the texture of what is cooking is a whole different deal. Somehow I feel Jr. and the little one are missing out on this.

It has been raining heavily here for the last two days. Wanted to get back in the kitchen and make something out of the normal. So went about making pottukadalai urundai's. Brought back lot of memories! San was definitely amused. She even videotaped the stuff. However, Jr. was just more interested in the eating than in the making. Who knows, even having a kitchen stove might become an alien concept two decades from now and the microwave will replace the stove!

Maybe there is no point to passing on these tricks to the next generation?


Here are the finished "yummies"...


I have been thinking a lot of my Sachi Patti (Saraswathi!) and Ambulu mami since yesterday. Do not know why. Went through my old photos and actually dug out this one from the early nineties. The one on the left is Ambulu mami and the one on the right is my grandma.



Like I told San, you can learn to do anything as long as you have great teachers! I was gifted with two great teachers when it comes to making caramel and kadalai urundais!

.

Saturday
Jan192008

Rotidilla

Yes!

For the first time in my life, tasted a cheese quasedilla, at a Taco Bell during our Santa Barbara trip and I really liked it. At that time, I also relized that it was the Mexican equivalent of the aloo paratha, except the cheese takes the place of the Aloo.

For the last two weeks, have been wanting to try making a Rotidilla(A word I am copyrighting right now.. Google search shows zero results).

Today that dream has come true. San had some mini roti's leftover after the kids had their tiffin and ...

Behold, the Rotidilla!!!


Had to hold the video camera like a phone to take the video (San was busy minding the kids who were hell bent on peeking into the garbage container.. apparently a garbage container is more fun than toys, books, etc.)

Next week, will add some spice to the Rotidilla and try to use less cheese (we have to listen to the critics!). It is high time some one started mixing Cheddar Cheese and Sambar powder!

I have two kids who will volunteer to taste and give me feedback ...

.

Monday
Jun182007

Adai for Tiffin ?

An evening conversation after father's day celebration at the daycare between Jr. and me.

Me: didn't you say you were hungry at the function ? Daddy is going to make some Adai (south Indian crepe made from Lentil flour, red chilis and curry leaves). Do you want some ?

Jr. : Yes daddy.

Me : Here you go (and I give her a piece)

Jr.: This is so voraikkardhu (hot and spicy). I don't want it.

Me : (after tasting it) No, it is not! You have to eat at least one.

Jr.: No, I DONT WANT IT.

At this point I decided that the usual coaxing, cajoling, threatening etc. will not work. So I decided to take the same batter for 1 Adai and made 4-5 little adai's. They looked cute.

Me : I have a surprise for you. Come to the kitchen and see what I have made.

Jr. : (looks at it)You made baby adai's for me !? Give me one.



San who was busy feeding the little one, came back and was very impressed that I managed to get something inside Jr.

That "#1 DAD" medal that Jr. put around my neck at the daycare function.. I think I earned it!

:)

Sunday
Jan072007

Maggi - Dal Atta

It is no secret that I love noodles. My GaneshRam 777 Sambar powder flavored Top Ramen noodles was a favorite for fellow graduate students !

Recently, Nestle has gone on a dicovery path with newer additions to their Maggi noodles lineup.

The vegetable atta was great !

Now comes the Dal Atta aka Sambar noodles !


The ad. pretty much uses every stereotype for a sambar eating south Indian to the point of insulting you. But it still promises every non south Indian a guaranteed authentic sambar flavor. After seeing the advertisement for the Dal Atta, I had to try it !!

If there is one thing that will turn you off faster than the ad. for this noodles, it is the noodles itself !!

This thing downright sucks! I expected something remotely close to my own sambar flavored noodles, hoping to get a whiff of tamarind, cumin, coriander, fenugreek and mustard.. but it was disappointing.

Why ? After you cook the masala for the usual time and cook the noodles, the hot spices stand out. You get the same taste as you get in some restaurants, where they didn't take the time to cook the sambar fully and you think you are eating uncooked chili powder. It is always a challenge to make tasty sambar quickly. The faster you try to wing it, the worse it tastes.. I thought Nestle did some pre cooked magic to eliminate this problem, but was wrong.

So, here is a tip to salvage the situation, in case you bought a 100 pack box of this stuff !! (I buy noodles in boxes! lucky for me, I always do a trial run before I get my box). Add nearly 1 1/2 times the water for every pack, put the tastemaker in and let it boil till the water comes down to the usual 1 cup. Then cook the noodles.

You can also make it taste closer to sambar if you add a little asafoedita after the masala is cooked.

Better luck next time Maggi ..

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