Showing posts with label Pickles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pickles. Show all posts

Cranberry Tokku

How to make Cranberry Tokku, Easy Cranberry Pickle, Cranberry Relish
I started blogging in a time when the internet world had taken to blogs burgeoning everywhere like little mushrooms enticed by rains. There was an unfaltering gush of novel, unexplored cuisines, recipes, ingredients and more, all brimming on various sites with their evocative photographs and stories, each compelling and competing by themselves to make a mark on the space. I'd viciously eye those berries and stone fruits that would pop up randomly every now and then, in seasons and festivities, their crimson reds, navy blues and sunlit ambers marrying blissfully into butter, sugar and flour to settle into marvelous looking desserts - desserts that could trigger hunger at odd hours of the day and post hefty meals; leaving me much in envy of being unable to get my hands on them back in time, while the world around rejoiced in celebration with such food.

That said, what did not make much of an appearance on the web space were fresh, glossy, scarlet red cranberries. There were several recipes out there that had them in scones, breads and cakes, mostly used in dried form, the kind of ones that are drowned in sugar and shriveled to douse the tart flavor. For a while, now that these are easily accessible in India, I too made my convenience with using the dried varieties in our favorite mincemeat recipe that sat bathing, cramped up with other dry fruits and weighed down by nuts in a heady spiced rum concoction for months before being brought out to be baked into Christmas Fruit Cake.


I had never seen fresh cranberries in the past till I came to the US. With dried cranberries available on ease, it was what it was known to me. For several years till lately, I was tricked into assuming that cranberries were akin to karonda, or karvanda (as known in Kannada), the tart-sweet Indian berries commonly used erstwhile in Indian pickles. I was excited about cranberries being karvanda, for two reasons.

One, I had never seen a karvanda bush, nor tasted its fruit in ripe, however I grew up hearing my dad often commend his love for these extinct pickling fruits, reminiscing how he missed watching his mother and grandmother collect the tart green berries off the bushes that grew in their backyard while the summer set in, of how they let them mature in brine for weeks, hand pounded the fresh spices and amalgamated them for months in sun to be pickled. Those were his memories, far and few, raved and deemed. For me, in rare times that I met a marinated young karvanda berry eye to eye, it was always camouflaged, heavily absorbed in red spices, and tart from being infused with bite sized mangoes pieces, served as delicious pickles alongside other dishes in odd occasions of weddings or family gatherings. Hardly an acquaintance to delineate something about.

Yet, those who grew up in the North of India may spin you tales of their childhood spent twiddling around the karonda (as they call it) bushes in the backyard of their aunt's, grandma's or friend's home, plucking them and popping it to their mouths with puckered face; karonda being more popular in the North of India than in the South where I grew up.


For second, Karavanda wasn't popular in generation of our times by any means; at least, it wasn't regarded high as the imported peers were. No one told us how good they were, no magazines or food channels professed it high, nor did our Sunday markets run its produce, probably because a lot of our Indian population was either disinterested to honor it or the ones like me, had hardly known it by trait. For a long time I did not know what it was called in English, or if it did exist in the lexicons of English circles. On the other hand, we had newspapers and magazines that constantly spoke of how fab cranberries were in beating the beast out of cancers and UTIs, tipping off cranberries to be our very Indian karavanda, and how our long forgotten fruit had captured attention in the West and that it may be touted as a superfood, pronto. Internet added to that fad with burst of knowledge.

My assumptions may have been misleading me, but thankfully I know today that karonda is karonda and cranberry is cranberry. Both live in separate worlds, with different identities, in their own identities that can't be swapped. It took me a trip to Nantucket in summer to realize this. That's where I saw the process of cranberries being grown and harvested, much unlike the trees that my grandmother harvested from, but bog flooded and cragged from vines. I came back home with a bag full of organic cranberries to turn them into a desi relish!


That brings me to this interesting recipe I have to share with you today. A mod-western ingredient with a traditional twist. The east meets west kinds. An old wine in a new bottle. This cranberry chutney, a dip, or more traditionally a thokku. Its very Indian at heart, its spices and the flavor - piquant, tart and delicious in a tiny blob on the side to any dish. You drag a lump of it with your fingers and mix along with steaming hot rice or simply scoop a small portion with your roti or dosa and relish it. Its makes a kicking dip to tortilla chips or even khakras, and that's exactly how I've zinged up over the past couple of evenings alongside my tea.

Cranberry Tokku

INGREDIENTS

2 cups fresh cranberries
5 tbsp. vegetable oil
2 tsp. red chilli powder
1 tsp. fenugreek seeds powder
1 tsp. asafoetida (hing)
1 sprig curry leaves
Salt to taste

DIRECTIONS

Heat vegetable oil in a kadai/ wok. Add mustard seeds and fry till it begins to splutter.

Next add the red chilli powder, fenugreek powder and the asafoetida into the oil and fry for 5 seconds. Do not allow spices to burn.

Add the torn curry leaves and fry for few seconds till they turn crisp.

Reduce the flame and add the fresh cranberries. Stir them in to coat all the spices. Cook till they pop and begin to reduce in volume. Using the back of spatula, gently mash them. Add in salt to taste and stir continuously until the cranberries soften, reduce in volume, and begin to lump, and the oil begins to separate.

Remove from heat and allow to cool completely. Store in air tight ceramic or glass containers.

Notes:

* You can add a tablespoon of jaggery to balance the tart incase you do not like the sour taste of the thokku.
* Fenugreek powder is bitter on its own, however when fried in oil it imparts a lovely flavor to the dish. It's the heart of this thokku and hence do not skip this ingredient.
* If you plan to store this over the counter for couple of days, its important you do not skip the amount of oil suggested. However, incase you plan to make a smaller quantity that will be consumed in a day or two, you can reduce the oil content. Oil helps in longer shelf life of any pickle.
* If you don't like heat, reduce the amount of chilli powder. We love our pickles spicy, so you may find the red chilli powder on slightly higher side. The heat of the chillies is also dependent on the kind of chilli powder you use. Hence use it judiciously.

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How to make Lemon Chilli Pickle | North Indian Nimbu Mirch ka Achaar
Two little sparrows visit us everyday. Just a customary visit, but we've become friends with them. I wonder why they did not visit us today. May be they have migrated to another place. Or retreated elsewhere. Or they just sniffed a sixth sense.

The sky turned dark and stodgy this morning. They stayed that way all day long; dull and gloomy. They could put any happy soul into depression. A stark contrast to the burnished blue and buoyant clouds of yesterday. The peppy hues of blues faded to somber shades of greys, blurring the horizon. As the clouds collided, they tore the skies up to a dreary downpour, like it was meant to mourn.

The wildflowers we tucked into the vase last evening sighted a battered slop. They wilted from crisp yellows to dregs of pale browns. Quite unusual, as they last nothing less than three days before the next change. This morning they too weren't in a mood. It seemed so. They had paled so much, they were beyond caring.

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We crept last night under the duvet hoping for a night longer than ever. For a day, we did not wish to come of. To witness an evening crammed with anxiety and emotions. We wished the day would never come, an evening we would never want to be in. Just the way we had wished about six months ago when D left from India to the US. I barely slept counting hours by minutes.

I woke up this morning with a heavy heart that felt like being weighed in tonnes, outweighing my body. With a pounding head, of a hangover from the deprived sleep and shorter breaths of anxiety. The water would barely go down the throat. It choked and felt wretched at every thought of this evening.

The day raced by quite quickly, much sooner than any other day. There was more silence in words and more action with bag packing. An unbalanced state of affection and emotions floating through the length of it. Our suitcases were packed and so were our tickets. Evening, we left home to airport. To fly back from this home and to be in another. Back to India - to a home we built together lovingly six years ago. Like birds migrating continents, my daughter and I are heading back to India after being here in US for three worthy months with D, every bit of it thrilling and memorable. D will stay back in US and continue his stint.

No tears though. We promised ourselves, we would not cry and make a scene. We've been taught that crying is a sign of melancholy and weakness. And we will live up to it. We will swallow the lumps in our throat. We are not the ones to depart with a twinge of guilt or pain. But positively and hopefully. We will bid a happy bye, give tight hugs and smile our way through as we depart. We will remind ourselves, once again - this distance is just a stretch of space that will get shorter with time. And soon we will be together again.

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As you read this, we may be standing in our queues going through security checks or soaring high up in the skies flying through continents. D will head back home in an empty car and the toddler's seat for his company. Our home will welcome him with our sounds resonating from the stuffs we've left behind. The sounds, that will echo from small joys we sought together while we were around.

From beneath the carpet floor that creaked each time we trod on, or the little one bunny hopped on it, reminding of how we taught ourselves to be gentle on it.

From the clitter-clatter of the vessels from the once-busy-kitchen. Now it's just his space.

From the photographs of us, the naughty three hanging on the wall, grinning ear to ear.

From the carton of half a dozen mangoes, of which only two are left behind - our mandatory family time of sitting around it every night; me peeling and chopping, the papa and daughter forking through it over tons of laughter, play and endless frolicking.

From the doll that the little one has left behind for her papa. She didn't want her papa to be all alone. Her doll, as she says, will now give him company.

From the jars of this lemon pickle I made for D last week. Homemade, just as he loves them alongside with his dinner. A taste that will bring him back to our home in Bangalore.

They will all speak to him, in silence; our essence lingering around in tits and bits, here and there. Almost in everything and everywhere. Ditto the way we felt about six months ago. Distance is terrible, it can be a crippling thing. But we remind ourselves, its just a matter of time; a stretch of space that will get shorter with time. And soon we will be together again.

Lemon Chilli Pickle_4

Lemon Chilli Pickle | Nimbu Mirch ka Achaar

INGREDIENTS

10 Lemons
5 green chillies
1/2 cup salt
2 tbsp. split yellow mustard seeds
1 cup mustard oil
2 tbsp. of red chilli powder
1 tbsp. dry roasted fenugreek seeds, ground
1 tsp. of asafoetida
2 tbsp. lemon juice

DIRECTIONS

Wash the lemons and green chillies. Pat them dry with clean kitchen napkin. Slit each lemon into 6-8 wedges. Similarly chop the green chillies to 3-4 rounds each. Rub them with salt and keep aside for few minutes for them to absorb salt.

Heat the mustard oil till its smoky. Add the split yellow mustard seeds and stir in. Add the chilli powder and asafoetida powder and mix well. Then add the salted lemons and green chillies and stir them well.

Place the vessel back on heat and cook on low flame until the lemon tenders slightly. Stir in the dry roasted and ground fenugreek seeds, and cook for 5 more minutes.

Remove the pickle from fire and add lemon juice. Allow to cool completely uncovered at room temperature. Transfer into clean, dry glass jars or ceramic barni. Use only dry spoon to serve the pickle.

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