Showing posts with label Indian Veg Salad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Veg Salad. Show all posts

The Good Things in April

So much happened in April. So much. I decided to focus on all the good things, mostly family, friends and celebrations.

We kicked off April with Holi celebrations at Boulder Balvihar. Not my favorite festival but I do enjoy taking pictures of everyone else, especially the little ones.

HoliTriptych-1
Happy kiddos at Holi!

I have never made puran poli, the sweet treat that is traditionally made for Holi. I wanted to but since my plate spilleth over, I put it on the back-burner yet again. I didn't make thandai either, even though we had really enjoyed it last year at this time. And, you know what? It didn't matter. That's not to undermine the importance of food during festivities and the stories that go hand-in-hand; instead it's more like celebrating on our terms rather than doing all the right things and being miserable as well as stressed at the same time. The special Holi prasad at Boulder Balvihar more than made up for all the fun treats that I did not make.

Holi 2013
Some of my friends really get into the act!

Kaachi-paaki, easy-peasy

No peas in this one. But easy it is.

Kaachi-paaki, literally translated from Gujarati, means uncooked-cooked. Or raw-cooked. That's what this sabji is all about. It's partly cooked to retain the inherent flavor of the vegetable, in this case cabbage, as well as a fresh crunch. For best results, the cabbage needs to be shredded very fine so that the fiery tempered oil can coat every strand of the vegetable. I usually buy a bag of Angel Hair Coleslaw and ignore the fact that some brands also contain carrots. When I am in one of my moods though, I do spend some time slicing the cabbage into fine strands with a sharp knife.

Kaachi-paaki

Cabbage salad


  • 1 packet Angel Hair Coleslaw
  • 1-2 tbsp oil
  • 1/2 tsp mustard seeds
  • 1/2 tsp cumin seeds
  • pinch asafetida
  • 7-8 kadipatta
  • 2 green chillies, sliced vertically and deseeded
  • 1 tsp urad dal
  • salt to taste
  • 1-2 tbsp fresh lemon juice
  • cilantro to garnish, if you like


  1. Heat oil in a large pan
  2. Add mustard seeds and when they start to pop and splutter, add asafetida. Keep a splatter screen ready to prevent a mess on your stove.
  3. Add cumin seeds, curry leaves, green chillies and urad dal. Lower the heat and fry till the urad dal turns golden in color but without burning any of the other seasonings.
  4. Turn up the heat, add the coleslaw, salt and lemon juice and toss quickly till the coleslaw is nicely coated in the oil. The more time you spend on this, the less crunch you get.
  5. Take the pan off the stove and garnish with cilantro, if you are using it. Allow the flavors to meld and serve with hot rotis or eat it by itself! It's great warm or cold.

Notes:
  • Use more green chillies to up the heat. You can slice them vertically to blend with the cabbage. I avoid this because it gets too spicy for Medha.
  • I have made this with dried red chillies as well and it is just as good.
  • Add as much lemon juice as you like. I tend to make this a little on the sour side, sometimes adding as much as the juice of half a lemon.
  • Depending on the amount of crunchiness you like, adjust the time you spend tossing the coleslaw on the stove. I've had it several ways: less crunch, easy to chew and less noise at the dinner table! More crunch, more noise, more flavor! We like it crunchier.
  • With Angel Hair Coleslaw, this Kaachi-paaki takes about 5 minutes to make!


Try it with red cabbage, too! And yes, I buy Ready-Pac shredded red cabbage if I can find it.

Trivia: This is what we had for dinner exactly a year ago today. (And, several times every month since it's so easy to make and a real favorite with us.) It's kind of interesting how my photo archives are more focused on food and landscapes than on portraits! I need to fix that! Or do I?

Update: I am sending this to Kalyn's Kitchen for this week's Weekend Herb Blogging, which calls for recipes and/or informative posts featuring any herb, plant, vegetable, or flower. Veggie, it is. Cabbage.

Hindu Temple of Colorado, Sheep's Eyes and Carrot Salad

Not much in common, those three things in the title of this post. But I was never well-known for being relevant!

After having the Lemont Temple become an integral part of our lives, I was disappointed to learn that the nearest Hindu Temple was over an hour away in Littleton, Colorado. But we made the trip in any case last month. As we approached the temple, my husband asked me to look around for it but there was no temple in sight. At least not anything that looked even remotely like a temple. The Hindu Temple of Colorado looks nothing like the photos on their web site. Those are all pictures of temples in India and I find that rather misleading. The temple is actually a simple unassuming building off South Wadsworth Boulevard in Littleton. The pictures below are what it really looks like.

Hindu Temple of Colorado
It's a charming temple with one large hall in which all the idols and deities are worshipped. The Acharyaji has a very soothing voice and it's a treat to listen to someone who can really sing as opposed to someone who thinks they can sing. I say that because in Chicagoland there were more of the latter than the former!

There is a Bal Vihar every Sunday from 10 am to 11 am in the basement, where Acharyaji teaches religion as well as the Hindi varnamala. He then leads a puja sponsored by a local family in the main hall upstairs. Anyone can sponsor the puja. The sponsor makes a donation of whatever amount they wish and organizes lunch for that day. By 1 pm, everyone comes back down and settles down on white sheets that are spread out in the area where the Bal Vihar is held. You sit knee to knee (and sometimes even very large thigh over your knee) in close proximity with people you've never met before. Very soon bowls of sheera or some special prasad are passed out. You keep passing it on to the person next to you until everyone down the line from you has a bowl in hand. Then come the plates stacked with food. It's kind of tricky passing these down and I was amazed that there weren't any mishaps.

When we went there were at least 200 people because the puja had been sponsored by someone who was rather popular and it also happened to be the day that most people who don't come to the temple decided to put in an appearance. Apparently it isn't this crowded on most Sundays. It was what I would call a total community experience. I think it was very good for my daughter. The food was free, courtesy of the sponsor and it's quite amazing how they manage to feed everyone even though they don't know how many people will show up.

We'll probably go to this temple only once a month as it's a little far for us. I won't do the lunch again even though I think it's a great lesson in community for my daughter. Some of the people were there just for the food and I found the attitudes a little disgusting. I can't understand why "free food" makes people lose all sense of propriety and behave like they have never seen food before.

The temple is about 10 years old and the trustees are looking for an alternate site where they can build a temple that looks like a temple. They are seeking involvement from Hindus in the Denver area in whatever way possible. So if you live in the Denver area and are willing to get involved, the Hindu Temple of Colorado will welcome you with open arms. The Calendar of Events has their address and phone number as well as that of Acharyaji.

Carrot Salad tossed with peanuts

Gajjarachi koshimbir

  • 3-5 medium size carrots, grated
  • 1/3 cup uncooked peanuts
  • 2 tsp oil
  • 1/4 tsp mustard seeds
  • pinch asafoetida or hing
  • 1 dried red chilli, broken in two pieces or 2 hot green chiles
  • 1/2 tsp of urad dal
  • 3-4 kadipatta leaves
  • 1/4 tsp sugar
  • dash of lime
  • salt to taste
  • A few cilantro leaves, chopped
Carrot Salad tossed with peanuts

  1. Put the grated carrots in a serving bowl
  2. Roast the peanuts using your preferred method. I do it in the microwave in two 1-minute sessions.
  3. Allow the peanuts to cool and then husk them to get rid of the outer skin
  4. Pound the peanuts to a coarse powder using a mortar and pestle. I let large chunks of peanuts remain instead of slaving over it to bring it to a powder of same consistency.
  5. Put the peanuts in the serving bowl on top of the carrots
  6. Heat the oil
  7. Add the mustard seeds and when they start spluttering or crackling, add the hing
  8. Add the red chilli and kadipatta leaves and turn the gas off. The oil tends to splatter all over the stove during this step so it helps to have a lid handy to keep the clean-up down to a minimum.
  9. Add the urad dal and allow it to sit for a while in the oil to get nice and crunchy but watch that the red chilli does not get burnt in the process.
  10. Pour this oil over the peanuts
  11. Add the sugar, salt and dash of lime and mix everything together.
  12. Garnish with chopped cilantro and your gajjarachi koshimbir is ready!

This can be served as soon as it is made or it can be chilled and served cold. I prefer it chilled.

What was that about the Sheep's Eye, you ask? No I didn't forget! My 7 year old dissected a sheep's eye in her school yesterday. She identified the iris, the cornea, the schlera, the vitreous body, the lens and the optic nerve. She doesn't much care for the little boy who sits next to her and she was quite delighted when he got grossed out and refused to go anywhere near the sheep's eye. She chose not to wear gloves, much to the distress of a certain doctor in New Jersey who had waxed galore about the dangers of not wearing gloves during such an experiment.

During dinner, my daughter announced that her piano teacher asked her whether she had washed her hands today. My antennae went up and I remembered the wise doctor's words.
Me: Well? Had you?
Her: Yes! Mrs. Wilson washed all our hands. But there was so much black stuff that it wouldn't wash off and look it's still there under my nails!
Me, leaping into the air: We need to go to the bathroom now!

I washed her little hands in warm water, clipped her nails and kept washng her hands till most of the black stuff was gone. Lord knows what else she ate with those grubby hands. And I hate to think of what the piano teacher thinks of me as a parent!!

Happy New Year 2004

I can't believe I haven't posted for more than 3 months. I have been busy busy busy. What have I been doing? I wish I knew! Cooking? Definitely! A family has to eat delicious Indian food, you know!! Sigh! This reminds me of a conversation that took place in my living room the other day...

The Lagaan CD was being played for the millionth time and once more. As 'Ghanana ghanana' died down, my daughter decided to let loose the questions that were building up in her mind.

Her: Why did the people in the song want it to rain? Because they wanted to get wet and then sing in the rain?
Hubby: Kind of...but they really wanted it to rain cos they needed the water for their crops.
What is it with these IIT folks? Why can't they talk to a 5 year old in a language that she might understand?!!!
Her: Daddy, what are crops?
Hubby: Crops are the plants you grow. Like corn, rice, wheat, beans, sugarcane...all those people in the song are farmers and they grow crops.
Her: So they grow crops because they did not have food to eat?
Hubby: They keep some of the crops for food and they sell the rest . They grow crops for a living.
Ayayay! Living? Does she even know what living is???
Her: Daddy, what does for a living mean?
Arrrrghhh! What is he up to?? What is he even thinking??
Hubby: A living is what you do to earn money...
Me (to the rescue): Like your class teacher. She teaches for a living. Your bus driver. She drives the bus for a living. They get money for doing that and so they can write checks and pay their bills and buy food to eat.
Her: Daddy, what do you do for a living? Are you a father?
Me: He does not get paid to do that, sweetie. So that's not his living. He works with computers and does programming so he's a computer programmer and that's what he does for a living.
Her: I get it!! The farmers grow crops for a living. Daddy programs computers for a living! Mumma, what do you do for a living!! I know! I know! Mumma's a cook!! A really really good cook!!

There was no point getting worked up, especially when it was followed by so much heartfelt and genuine praise. Oh well!!

I happened to be making a very refreshing beetroot salad at the time....so without further ado, here's the recipe:

Beet Salad in yogurt
Spice level: A little zing is always nice.

  • 1 bunch of beetroot, boiled
  • 2-3 tsps of oil
  • 1/4 tsp mustard seeds
  • pinch asafoetida
  • 1/8 tsp cumin seeds
  • 1/8 tsp urad dal**optional
  • 1 thai chilli or long hot pepper, de-seeded and split down its length**optional
  • 4-5 curry leaves
  • (kadipatta)**optional
  • 1/4 tsp juice of freshly grated ginger
  • 1 cup low-fat yogurt
  • salt to taste

  1. Peel and grate the boiled beetroots. (Discard the leaves. I have no clue what to do with beetroot leaves. I save them every time thinking that I will try cooking them but by the time I get to them, they look awful and very uninspiring)
  2. Heat the oil in a small pan.
  3. Add the mustard seeds. When they start crackling, add the asafoetida. If the oil gets very hot, simply turn the heat off completely.
  4. Add cumin seeds
  5. Add the hot peppers/chilli and the curry leaves. Watch out for splattering hot oil. I usually toss these in and cover the pan quickly to avoid the splatter and an oily mess.
  6. Add the urad dal. (White lentils)
  7. Take the pan off the flame and add the grated beetroot to this yummy flavored oil or the other way around.
  8. Add the salt.
  9. Squeeze the juice out of the ginger and add just the juice.
  10. Add the yogurt and mix well.
  11. Chill well before serving.

It's really a delight. I grew up hating beetroot. Its very color put me off. Plus it was always so tasteless. I wondered what the adults found so inspiring in something so bland and yukky. It's an excellent source of iron. It is noted for being more easily assimilated by the human body than man-made forms of iron. I remember making this salad very frequently to help boost my Mom's low hemoglobin numbers.

Try it! According to the health experts and nutritionists, the more natural color you have in your diet, the healthier it is. The color of this salad is a rich vibrant deep pink. It's gorgeous to look at and invigorating for the taste buds!! Indian Food Rocks! It does!!