Sunday, June 26, 2011

Cookery School : True-blue Chicken Biryani



Quite a few weeks ago (yeah, I am not the most prompt of bloggers!), one of our colleagues at work, Allie (or Mother Goose Allie, her being very mature and maternal toward the rest of us immature overgrown kids) was gracious enough to teach us her speciality - chicken biryani. The time was a lazy rainy Saturday afternoon after work, and the venue was, like for all cookouts, Agent J's bachelor pad.

This was the Real McCoy of biryanis - made in the authentic Muslim style and not a Punjabi/Udipi reinvention. The day before the cookathon saw us prepping for the big day - we shopped and marinated the chicken overnight in the fridge. This cut down on the cooking time considerably and let us sit down to an enormous - no, ginormous - lunch at the fashionably late hour of 4:00 PM (the travails of working half-day on Saturdays, I tell you...)

Imagine this ....pouring rain, overcast skies and a cold breeze outside the window ..... and inside, gently uncurling wafts of chicken-scented steam, a BIG pot of DELICIOUS piping-hot biryani and the most congenial company you can wish for. What a way to spend a gloomy rainy Saturday!

Biryani is the ultimate party dish - its taste is a sure-fire crowd-pleaser, it tastes best when made in a large quantity, just one dish on the menu generally suffices when that dish is biryani (if you can order in some dessert), AND there's an element of drama in uncovering the big pot of rice for that first waft of chicken, basmati rice and spices.

So round up your friends, cook up a big pot of biryani and have a great time!

Here is Allie's recipe for amazing chicken biryani:

Ingredients:

For the marinade:

1.5 tablespoons ginger paste

1.5 tablespoons garlic paste
1.5 tablespoons green chilly paste
400 gms thick yoghurt / curds
1.5 tablepsoons Kashmiri red chilli powder

1.5 tablepsoons garam masala (powder)
1 teaspoon turmeric powder

salt, to taste


2 whole chickens, cleaned and cut in approximately 10 pieces each (dont' use offal meat like livers/hearts tec)

1/2 kg potatoes, peeled and halved
1/2 kg birasta or deep-fried onion slices (1/2 kg after frying - if you dont get the readymade version, you'll have the painstaking job of thinly slicing 1 kilo of onions and deep frying them in oil till really crisp - track down the readymade version at Muslim caterers/grocers)
Khada (whole) garam masala - mix of 2-3 cloves, 2-3 cardamom pods, 1 inch stick cinnamon, 3-4 black peppercorns, 1/2 teaspoon coriander seeds
(dhaniya), 1/2 teaspoon cumin seeds (jeera), 2-3 bay leaves
two handfuls mint (pudina) leaves

2 handfuls coriander leaves, chopped

1 kg Basmati rice

Lots of oil - for frying the potatoes and cooking the chicken

2-3 small tomatoes, chopped
salt, to taste

1 big pinch saffron (kesar) dissolved in 2 tablespoons warm milk - optional

3 tablespoons ghee - optional


Method:

Clean the chicken pieces thoroughly, and score cuts on the pieces for the marinade to penetrate inside.

In a BIG vessel, dump in the chicken pieces and add the ingredients of the marinade.
Crush in one-third of the fried onions as well.
Mix well, using your
hands and rub in the marinade into the pieces of chicken.
Taste the marinade- it should be slightly saltier and spicier than is normal. Adjust the seasoning if required.


Cover the vessel with a lid, and refrigerate overnight or for at least 2-3 hours. Overnight is better.

Cook the basmati rice with 2 bay leaves and 2-3 teaspoons of oil in more than the usual amount of water (normally we use twice as much water as rice).

Once the rice is half-cooked, drain away the excess water. This process of par-boiling ensures that the grains of rice stand separate and not clump together
in one sticky mass.


Fill a frying pan to upto 2 inches with oil. Put it on the stove till the oil gets hot.

Add the potato halves and fry till lightly golden and dark golden-brown around the edges.



Take the potatoes out, drain on tissue paper.

In a big (the biggest you can find) vessel/pot, add the 5 tablespoons oil.
Add the khada garam masala and saute for 2-3 minutes.

Add the tomatoes and stir till the tomatoes are softened
.


Add the marinated chicken pieces along with all the marinade and give it a good stir. Keep stirring every 10-15 seconds or so else the chicken will stick to the bottom of the pot.
Add another one-third of the fried onions (crush them lightly before adding them to the pot).



Add the fried potatoes and stir well.
Cook for 10-15 minutes, stirring regularly. till the chicken is 3/4ths cooked.


Take off the stove, and divide the cooked chicken and potatoes into 2 (or 3) large pots/handis. This mixture should take up a little more than one-third of the
volume of the pot.

Fill the pots till the top with the cooked rice.



Sprinkle mint leaves and the last one-third of the fried onions on top of the rice.
If you wish, you can add a swirl of the saffron-in-milk and a few spoons of ghee as well.



Cover the pot with a lid that is secure (not too many gaps for the steam to escape)

Switch on the stove, put a tava (griddle) on the flame. This spreads the heat over a larger area rather than the concentrated flame of the stove.
Load the pot of rice and chicken onto the griddle, let it cook for a further 20-25 minutes on a low flame.

A glorious bouquet of aromas - spicy chicken,
delicate Basmati, ghee, mint, kesar (if you have added it) shall waft your way once the biryani is ready.

Take the pot off the stove, and serve - the almost-plain rice (from the top of the pot) in one large communal plate and the spicy chicken-and-potato mix (from the bottom of the pot) in another. When you make biryani in such a large pot, there's no way you can combine both the layers in one single serving. :)

People can help themselves in their individual plates from both these communal plates, and eat and eat and eat.

Food heaven, here we come!

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Quick-fix meals : My Own Chicken Fried Rice

The testimony to this recipe being really quick (and really easy) is the fact that there are no photos of work in progress while making it.

Confused?

Flash back to yesterday morning when I woke up bleary-eyed after a late night at work. The words that greeted me were not "Rise and shine! Here's some freshly-squeezed orange juice for you!" but, "There's some rice left over from dinner, and I have got out those mini chicken sausages from the freezer. You can make fried rice for your lunch if you wish."

The faintest glimmer of an idea flickered to life in my sleeeeeeepy brain and I dragged myself to the kitchen to put it into action. So sleepy was I that I didn't even bother taking any photos as the dish took shape, even after it started looking rather promising. Now, any dish which gets invented and executed in such a state of sleep deprivation and energyless-ness HAS TO, by necessity, be quick and simple, right? :)

I had not the slightest plan to feature SUCH a quick-fix recipe on the blog - but the rave reviews this dish got at lunch time from my foodie colleagues made it imperative that I document it! So here it is is, in all its glory:

My Own Chicken Fried Rice

Ingredients:

2 cups cooked rice - fluffed out with a fork
5-6 mini chicken sausages (cocktail sausages) - I used tandoori flavoured ones, but any spicy normal-sized sausage/leftover kebab will do.
1 egg
1 small onion, chopped fine
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 a capsicum, chopped the same size as the onion
1-2 green chillies, chopped (optional)
chilli sauce, vinegar (optional), salt - to taste
1 tbsp oil


Method:

Heat half the oil in a frying pan, and add the sausages (don't bother thawing them completely) While they are being fried, you can chop the onion, garlic, chilli and capsicum.

Once the sausages look golden-brown and start splitting at their sides, pull them out of the pan. Add the rest of the oil to the sausage-flavoured oil+juices in the pan, bring the heat up, and add the onion, garlic and green chilli. Stir for a minute.

Add the capsicum, and stir for a couple of minutes

Add the vinegar, salt and chilli sauce. I used Nando's Peri Peri sauce which was hot-and-sour so I didn't use vinegar.

Break open one egg, and stir the contents in the pan till the egg has scrambled

Add the rice. Give it a just one or two brisk stirs, don't keep mixing the rice once its in, else the grains will break (cooked rice is fragile!)

Slice the sausages into bite-sized chunks. Add to the rice, give it one final mix-through, taste, adjust the seasoning and turn off the flame.

The rice will improve in flavour in a few hours' time - the egg, sausage and chilli needs time to permeate the rice and make it delicious. So it is an ideal lunch box dish that you whip up in the morning but eat it hours later at lunch time!

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Rainy Evening Nirvana : Batata Wada Reinvented!




Its been raining on and off - more on than off, I am glad to report - in Mumbai since the last few days. Its heart-achingly beautiful weather - dark grey skies, soft, soft drizzles, wispy misty clouds - all of them making the perfect backdrop for the fiery brilliance of the of the Gulmohar in full bloom.

And what better way to improve perfection than piping-hot Batata Wadas, strong sweet adrak chai (tea brewed with ginger) and comfortingly sweet mango sheera? :) That was the menu of a recent Sunday evening spent in the company of extended family and Marathi golden oldies on the stereo.

Though Dad is a Batata Wada fanatic, I am more partial to Mom's reinvention of the BW.

The Classic Maharashtrian Batata Wada


Mom's Batata Wada Bhajis

While the classic Batata Wada consists of a ball of spicy mashed potato dipped in chickpea batter and deep fried, Mom's Batata Wada Bhajis up the ante on the crunchiness index, with the spiced potato mash mixed right into the batter to make a homogenous mess and deep fried to get crisy, crunchy golden morsels.

Apart from the higher cruchy batter-to-soft filling ratio as compared to the BW, these bhajis (fritters) are also easier to make and less labour- and time-intensive. No making balls of the filling-dipping them in batter to get an even coating-frying them in small batches, just mix the spicy potato mash into the batter, and drop bite-sized clumps into the hot oil. Fry large batches at a time - and eat piping hot with sour-spicy-sweet mint-and-raw mango chutney. With a cup of Mom's special tea, it cant get any better!

Mom's Batata Wada Bhajis

Ingredients:
2-3 large boiled potatoes, peeled and coarsely mashed
1 large onion (red), chopped finely


3-4 fat cloves of garlic, chopped fine/minced

1/2 inch piece ginger, chopped finely

2-3 (as many as you like) green chillies, chopped medium-fine

(Alternatively you can replace the above three by 1 tbsp ginger-garlic-green chilli paste)


A handful of coriander leaves, chopped

salt and sugar and lemon juice - to taste


1 cup chickpea flour (besan)

salt, red chilli powder, turneric powder - a pinch each

1 tbsp oil - heated till near-smoking point

water

Oil for deep frying


Method:

Mix the potatoes, onion, ginger, garlic, chillies, lemon juice, salt and sugar. Taste and adjust seasoning - it should be a tad saltier/hotter than the ideal, since it has to
season the batter as well.

Mix the hot oil, chickpea flour, salt, turmeric, red chilli powder and water to make a thick batter. Some peopl use soda bi carb to make the batter light and crunchy, but,
apart from it being not good for you, it is unnecessary as well.

Heat the oil for deep-frying in a large kadhai (wok) till really hot. Test-fry a tiny amount of batter - the oil should start spluttering and bubbling around the batter.




Mix the potatoes mix into the batter and stir well to incorporate the two evenly.

Drop small clumps (teaspoon-sized) of this mix into the oil. They HAVE TO be small in size
since the batter has to be cooked through all the way. If you make really large dumplings, the batter on the outside will be burnt to cinderblock by the time the batter at the centre of the fritter is cooked completely.

Deep-fry till golden brown in colour


The hand that fries the bhajis rules the world. :P

Golden perfection!

Serve sizzling-hot with tangy mint-and-raw mango chutney, a cup of steaming tea to the background music of pitter-patter rain.

Nirvana is not elusive after all. :)
 
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