Showing posts with label Kerala Christian Recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kerala Christian Recipes. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 December 2021

Plum Wine Recipe



Hello everyone, How are the Christmas preparations coming along? I hope at least some of you have tried some wine this year. If you are on the lookout for recipes for baking Christmas Cakes & Cookies you can search my older posts.... Since Christmas is around the corner, I thought of posting a new wine recipe 
that I tried recently.... Hope you guys include some of my recipes in our Christmas and New Year Menu…Do let me know if you guys try anything from my blog…..Wishing you all a happy & healthy holiday season with your loved ones!



 

Plum Wine 

Ingredients:

Plum – 1kg

Sugar- 1.25 kg (you can add only 1kg if you like dry wine)

Lime juice of 1 lime

Yeast- ½ tsp

Water- 4 liters 

Method:

  • Wash plums well, Wipe water from each plum very well and chop roughly and keep aside
  • Boil the water and sugar keep aside to cool down slightly.
  • In a big bharani / bottle add chopped plums and hot sugar water and lime juice, stir well.
  • When the mixture becomes lukewarm, sprinkle yeast on top and mix well after 5 minutes. 
  • When the mixture cools down completely, tie the bottle with a clean cloth or close with lid little loose. 
  • Stir this mixture every day for 5 minutes.
  • After 20 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
  • Keep this again for 7 days untouched. After 7 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use. 

 Check out Tips for Making Homemade KeralaWines

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Wednesday, 8 December 2021

Carrot Wine / Carrot Whisky

Enjoy this Christmas Season with Carrot Wine!!!

Wine makes every meal an occasion, every table more elegant, every day more civilized. ~ Andre Simon, "Commonsense of Wine"



Carrot Wine

Ingredients:
Carrot -3kg
Orange -2 nos
Lime -2 nos
Sugar -2kg
Raisins -300 gms (chopped)
Whole wheat - 1/2 kg
Water -5 liter
Yeast - 1 tbsp

Method:
  • Clean & chop the carrots and boil with 5 liters of water.
  • Transfer this to a bharani or a big glass bottle and add lime & orange juice & peel. (Cut the orange & lime in half, and extract the juice, using a citrus fruit juicer. Remove the orange peel and scrape off any white pith from the inside. Chop up the peel and mix it with the carrot mixture).

  • Then add sugar. When the mixture becomes cool, add raisins, whole wheat and yeast.
  • Tie the bottle with a clean cloth and keep aside the mixture for 3 weeks.
  • Stir this mixture everyday for 5 minutes.
  • After 3 weeks strain the mixture to a clean bottle and keep this mixture again for 3 more weeks untouched.
  • After that slowly strain the upper part to small bottles and use.
  • The peach colour of this wine will change to a richer whisky colour with aging!
Note:
  • All the utensils & bottle should be clean & dry. If there is water the wine will become sour.
  • Don't fill the bottle to the brink. Always leave 1/4 bottle empty.



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Thursday, 5 August 2021

Panikoorka Wine / Mexican Mint Wine / Indian Borage Wine

Panikoorka, is popularly used in South Indian states to treat coughs and colds in children. The herb is also used to treat a variety of health problems in both children and adults. This plant is known as Indian Borage, Mexican Mint or Cuban Oregano. In Kerala, regionally, Panikoorka is also known as Karpooravalli, Navara, Kanjikoorka etc. In Kerala, people say that you should grow the panikoorka plant in your house if you have children.

I was never successful in growing this plant here when my son was small. Two years back I bought a couple of plant stems from back home and luckily it started growing well. I tried adding these leaves in many dishes in place of oregano & mint and was pleasantly surprised with the results. We also enjoyed fresh lemonade with panikoorka leaves in it. Then the idea of making wine with panikoorka leaves struck me and when I tried it, it came out super tasty. Do try wine with these healthy leaves and let me know whether you liked it.


Panikoorka Wine / Mexican Mint Wine / Indian Borage Wine

Ingredients:

Panikoorka Leaves - 4 to 5 cups firmly packed

Sugar - 1 ¼ kg

Water - 3 ½ liter

Lemon juice - ½ cup

Lemon zest of 2 lemons

Yeast - ½ tsp

Method:

  • Thoroughly wash panikoorka leaves and chop and place it in a big vessel.
  • Bring half of water to a boil and pour boiling water over panikoorka leaves.
  • Mix and cover the vessel with a lid and stand for around one hour.
  • Strain the panikoorka liquor into a sterilized fermentation bottle / bharani.
  • Boil the remaining water and pour boiling water to the strained panikoorka leaves and wait for another one hour, strain into the bottle and discard the leaves.
  • Add all the other ingredients to the bottle like sugar, lemon juice, lemon zest and yeast.
  • Stir the mixture well until all the sugar has completely dissolved.
  • Cover the bottle and stir the mixture every day for 21 days.
  • After 21 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth into clean and dry bottles and use.
  • After 21 days you can consume the wine, but it will be little cloudy and not very clear. If you allow the panikoorka wine to stand for couple of months you will get a very clear wine like in the picture.

My Panikoorka Plant 

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Sunday, 28 March 2021

Tomato Wine Recipe

By now you all know how I love to experiment brewing wine with different fruits or vegetables… Trying out Tomato Wine recipe was in my mind for quite some time and so I made this a year ago… I was curious to know how the taste & colour would turn out… surprisingly the wine tasted nice. It is quite a strong wine… it has a slightly fruity taste and does not really taste like tomatoes… I really love the golden colour… do give it a try and let me know how you guys liked it 😊 



Tomato Wine

Ingredients:

Red ripe Tomatoes - 1 kg

Raisins - 175gm

Sugar - 750gm + 250 gm

Water - 3 litres

Yeast - ½ tsp

Lemon zest & lemon Juice from 1 big lemon (You can substitute it with orange zest and orange juice if you wish)

Method:

  • Boil water and 750 gm sugar and cool it till lukewarm.
  • Wash & pat dry the tomatoes. Finely chop or mash tomatoes with a potato masher.
  • Add tomatoes & raisins to the warm sugar water.
  • Mix well and add yeast, lemon juice & lemon zest. Be very careful not to add any white pith of lemon or orange with the zest.
  • Mix all the ingredients well and keep it in an earthen jar (Bharani) or in a glass jar, cover it and leave for 21 days, stirring daily.
  • On 22nd day, strain the mixture through a cheese / muslin cloth.
  • At this stage if the wine is not sweet enough for your liking, you can add rest of the 250 grams of sugar mix well and keep it again in a clean dry Bharani / glass bottle for another 21 days.
  • Strain on the 22nd day bottle and use.
  • The taste will be more flavourful if you wait for it to age for two to three months after bottling.

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Friday, 25 December 2020

Grape Wine with Yeast

May the miracle of Christmas fill your heart with warmth and love

Merry Christmas!! 



I had shared a Grape Wine recipe without yeast many years ago. This one is a traditional grape wine recipe with yeast and wheat. Addition of caramelized sugar gives this wine a nice colour and a subtle smoky flavour too, which my husband really enjoys. You do not have to caramelize the sugar very dark for wine as you do for cakes… just caramelize the sugar to light golden colour otherwise the wine will taste bitter! 



Grape Wine with Yeast

(Recipe Source ~ my sister-in-law)

Ingredients:

Black grapes with or without seeds - 2kg

Sugar 1 ¾ kg + ¼ kg for caramelizing (total 2kg)

Wheat  - ¼ kg (wash & sundry the wheat)

Yeast - 1 tbsp

White of one egg

Water - 4 ½ litres

Method:

  • Boil water and cool it till lukewarm.
  • Wash, drain and pat dry the grapes. Brust the grapes slightly with hand or with a potato masher or with back of a spoon.
  • Dissolve yeast in a little lukewarm water.
  • Beat the egg whites well.
  • Mix well all the ingredients along with 1 ¾ kg sugar and keep it in an earthen jar (Bharani) or in a glass jar, cover it and leave for 21 days stirring daily.
  • On 22nd day, strain the mixture through a cheese / muslin cloth.
  • Add ¼ kg sugar caramelised and keep it in jar for another 21 days.
  • Strain on 22nd day and use.

To Caramelize Sugar~ Heat ¼ kg sugar in a pan stirring continuously. When it becomes light golden brown add 1 cup hot water and boil. Cool and then mix it with the wine.

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Wednesday, 25 November 2020

Pomegranate Wine / Mathala Naranga Wine

 


Hello everyone, It’s been a long time since I have posted any new recipes... Hope you guys are fine and safe... How are the Christmas preparations coming along? I hope at least some of you have tried some wine this year. If you are on the lookout for recipes for baking Christmas Cakes & Cookies you can search my older posts.... Since Christmas is around the corner I thought of posting a couple of wine recipes I tried recently.... Hope you guys can make it just before Christmas or New Year celebrations....

Pomegranate Wine / Mathala Naranga Wine / മാതള നാരങ്ങാ വൈൻ 

Ingredients:

Pomegranate -1 kg / (6 - 8 numbers)

Sugar – 1 kg

Water – 3 ½ litres

Lemon juice and zest from one lemon

Orange juice and zest from one orange

Cloves -4 nos

Cinnamon – 1 x 2” piece

Yeast – ¾ tsp

Method:

  • Cut pomegranates into half and remove all of the fruity seeds into a bowl. Be sure not to include any of the pomegranate's pith or skin, as this can cause the wine to taste bitter. Crush the pomegranate seeds slightly in the mixy or with a handheld blender or with a potato masher.
  • With a citrus peeler or vegetable peeler thinly peel the orange zest and lemon zest without the white part. Extract the juice from the orange and lemon and keep aside.
  • Boil sugar and water in a big vessel. When the mixture begins to boil switch off the flame. Add all the ingredients except yeast to the boiled water.  
  • Mix thoroughly and allow the pomegranate mixture to stand for an hour or so, until it is lukewarm.
  • When the mixture becomes lukewarm, add yeast and mix well.
  • Transfer the mixture to a sterilized glass bottle / bharani, cover it and leave for 20 days stirring daily.
  • After 20 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
  • Keep this again for 7 days untouched.
  • After 7 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use. 

 Check out Tips for Making Homemade Kerala Wines

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Monday, 11 November 2019

Kiwi Wine


How to make Kiwi Wine


As usual I am back after a long hiatus :D :D There are many things which kept me busy ignoring this space of mine. Now that many of my readers & friends started asking me why there are no updates here, I thought I have to find some time to spend here….. after all Christmas is around the corner, here is a wine recipe for all of you to try..… A friend of mine was requesting for this Kiwi Wine for the past several years… I made this wine almost a year back and with aging, the sweetness of this wine reduces significantly and become a very dry wine… So if you prefer sweet wine please add more sugar after fermentation…


Kiwi Wine

Ingredients:

Kiwi – 1 kg
Water – 3 ½ litre
Sugar – 1 kg (250 gm more if you prefer very sweet wine)
Yeast – ¾ tsp

Method:
  • Peel and mash kiwi with a potato masher.
  • Boil sugar & water and add boiled water to the mashed kiwi and mix well.
  • When the mixture becomes lukewarm add yeast and mix well and transfer the mixture into a sterilized bharani / bottle.
  • When the mixture cools down completely tie the bottle with a clean cloth or close with lid little loose.
  • Stir this mixture every day with a clean and dry spoon.
  • After 21 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle. You can add more sugar at this time if you prefer sweeter wine.
  • Keep this again for 21 days untouched. After 21 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use.

Check out Tips for Making Homemade Kerala Wines



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Wednesday, 23 January 2019

Strawberry Wine & Celebrating 11 years of Food Blogging!


 How to make Strawberry Wine

11 years ago, through a very dear college friend of mine, I was introduced to the ocean of flood blogging. Since then it’s been a beautiful journey learning may other aspects of cooking, different cuisines and finally into cake decoration. Many fellow bloggers become very dear friends, I interacted with many lovely readers and was acknowledged by some leading publishers too…. I had never thought that a spontaneous decision to start a blog would bring me so far. It was all because of my dear readers whose continuous encouragement took me so far, whereas many fellow bloggers of that time have completely disappeared from the blogging field! Thank you so much for the love, support and trust you guys have given me…

I had planned to post this Strawberry Wine for New Year, but the first post of the year got delayed this far :D... I made this wine exactly a year ago, that’s how I got this crystal clear colour. When you make the wine it will be really red in colour but with aging the colour changes like this one has…. It’s Strawberry season in this part of the world and it’s a really good wine, so try to make use of those beautiful strawberries while it is in season!

Swapna’s Cuisine wine recipes


Strawberry Wine 
Ingredients:
Fresh Strawberries - 1kg
Sugar - 1.25kg
Water - 4 litres
Yeast - 1/2 tsp

Method:

  • Boil the water and keep aside to cool down slightly to lukewarm. 
  • Wash the fresh strawberries well. Wipe water from each strawberry very well and chop it finely and keep aside. 
  • In a big bharani / bottle add sugar, chopped strawberries and lukewarm water, stir well. Sprinkle yeast on top and mix well after 5 minutes. 
  • When the mixture cools down completely tie the bottle with a clean cloth or close with lid little loose. 
  • Stir this mixture every day for 5 minutes with a clean and dry wooden spoon.
  • After 20 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
  • Keep this again for 14 days untouched. After 14 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use. 
Check out Tips for Making Homemade Kerala Wines


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Sunday, 23 December 2018

Banana Wine / Pazham Wine


May this Christmas fill your hearts with warmth, peace and joy! Have a Holy and Blessed Christmas!

how to make Pazham wine

Hi everybody,
Hope all of you are ready for Christmas celebrations with family and friends. Here we are also set for Christmas.
Banana wine is one of the most requested recipes. When I made it first time, a long time ago and with a completely different recipe, we didn’t like it at all. After that I never tried it but after all your requests I thought of trying it again with a new recipe and this time the wine came out really nice. I used the small palayan kodan bananas which we get in Kerala for this recipe and that is the best one to make banana wine. But if you don’t know this kind of banana or this variety is not available in your place, you can use any kind of bananas.


Kerala Pazham wine


Banana Wine / Pazham Wine
Ingredients:
Palayan kodan Pazham (small variety ripe banana) - 800 gm
Sugar - 600gms + 250 gm*
Water - 2 ½ litre
Strong black tea made with 7 table spoons of tea leaves and 500 ml water
Yeast – ¾ tsp
Lemon juice – 2 tbsp

Method:
·         Boil 2 ½ litres of water and keep it aside to lukewarm.
·         Make strong tea with 500 ml water and almost 7 table spoons of tea leaves. Strain the tea and keep it aside to cool.
·         Mash the bananas and 600 gm sugar in a food processor. Mix it with lukewarm water.
·         In to this add the strained strong black tea, lemon juice and yeast. Mix everything well and transfer the mixture to a sterilized glass bottle / bharani, cover it and leave for 21 days stirring daily.
·         After 21 days, strain the mixture through a cheese / muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
·         Do a taste test and if you feel like sugar is less you can add the rest of the 250 gm sugar and mix well.
·         Keep this again for 21 days untouched. After 21 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use.  

Note:
I only added 600gms of sugar in the beginning. But after fermentation I felt the sugar is very less and added another 250 gm of sugar after straining. So if you like sweet wine you can add the total 850 gm of sugar in the beginning itself.

Check out Tips for Making Homemade Kerala Wines


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Monday, 16 April 2018

Cherupayar Wine Recipe / Green Gram Wine Recipe / Mung Bean Wine Recipe/ / Mung Dal Wine


Cherupayar Wine Recipe  / Green Gram Wine Recipe  / Mung Bean Wine Recipe


Are you surprised or intrigued to read today’s recipe name? Even I was amazed when I got a request from one of my readers, for germinated green gram wine. It was the first time I was hearing about green gram wine and never in my wildest thoughts had I ever imagined of making wine with green gram / cherupayar. But he assured me that someone in Kerala makes the wine from germinated green gram and whoever had the wine said it is one of the tastiest. He requested me to ferret out the recipe from some source. The idea circled in my head for several days and I searched all my recipe collection and over the internet too without any luck. This forced me to put on my thinking cap to develop my own recipe and experiment. So I made a small quantity of wine without germinating the green gram / cherupayar and guess what, it was a huge hit!!! This wine is one of my best experiments and whoever has tasted it so far have told me it is one of the best and tastiest wine! I will definitely try with germinated green gram next to see the difference in taste.... If you love homemade wine do try this recipe and let me know the result; I am sure you will love it :) :) 

Cherupayar Wine / Green Gram Wine / Mung Bean Wine
Ingredients:
Cherupayar /Green gram / Whole Mung Bean – 250 gms (1 cup)
Sugar- 625 gms
Lime juice and zest of 1 lime
Yeast- ¼ tsp
Raisins- 50 gm, chopped
Water- 1 ½ liters 

Method:
  • Wash green gram and keep it in a strainer to drain it completely for at least 1 hour.
  • Boil water and sugar and keep it aside. Add chopped raisins, lemon zest and lemon juice to the hot water and mix well.
  • When the mixture becomes lukewarm, add washed and well drained green gram / cherupayar and stir well, sprinkle yeast; mix well and transfer to a sterilized bharani / bottle.
  • Tie the bottle with a clean cloth or close with lid little loose. 
  • Stir this mixture every day for 20 days.
  • After 20 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
  • Keep this again for 7 days untouched. After 7 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use. 
Check out Tips for Making Homemade Kerala Wines

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Tuesday, 12 December 2017

Pineapple Wine Recipe

How to make Pineapple Wine

How are the Christmas preparations coming along? I hope at least some of you have tried some wine this year. If you are on the lookout for recipes for baking Christmas Cakes & Cookies you can search my older posts.  Today’s recipe for Pineapple Wine is one of the most requested recipes by my readers. The best part of this wine is that you can use every part of the pineapple to make the wine, the skin, the centre core and the flesh, there is no wastage at all. I must warn you that Pineapple wine is considered to be one of the strongest wines, so please be careful while consuming :D :D   


Recipe for Pineapple Wine

Pineapple Wine
Ingredients:
Pineapple - 2 kg (around 2 big pineapples)
Sugar -2 kg
Water - 4 ½ litres
Yeast - 1 tsp
Orange juice from 3 Oranges

Method:
  • Wash the pineapple, cut off the top and bottom of the pineapple and chop them into small pieces including the skin and the centre core.
  • Add sugar and water to the pineapple pieces and give it a nice boil for 5 minutes.
  • When the mixture is lukewarm add yeast and the orange juice from 3 oranges.
  • Mix everything well and transfer the mixture to a sterilized glass bottle / bharani, cover it and leave for 21 days stirring daily.
  • After 21 days, strain the mixture through a cheese / muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
  • Keep this again for 21 days untouched. After 21 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use.  


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Wednesday, 11 October 2017

Rambutan Wine

Homemade Rambutan Wine

As usual I am back after a long hiatus ;) ;) If you are a regular reader you would know by now that if I intend to take a short break, it usually drags on for weeks :D
Since Christmas is around the corner, here is a Rambutan wine recipe for you to try. Rambutan is one of my favourite fruits and there are couple of trees in my father’s backyard. When Rambutan is in season, Appa freezes it and keeps it along with passion fruit pulp for me to take it to Kuwait J This is a sweet wine and if you prefer less sweeter wine you may only need to add 750 gms of sugar. Do try this if you get hold of Rambutans and let me know....

Rambutan Wine Recipe


Rambutan Wine
(Recipe adapted from Vanitha)
Ingredients:
Ripe Rambutan - 100 nos
Sugar - 750 gm to 1 kg
Water – 3 litre
Yeast – ½ tsp
Cloves / Grambu – 8 nos
Cinnamon stick / Karuva patta – 1 x 2” piece
Egg white – 1

Method:
  • Using a small paring knife, peel away the outer shell of rambutans and put the flesh with seeds in a big clean sterilized bharani / bottle.
  • Boil sugar & water and add boiled water to the Rambutan and mix well.
  • When the mixture becomes lukewarm add yeast, cloves and cinnamon stick and mix well.
  • Beat an egg white well and add to the above cooled rambutan mix, stir well to combine everything.
  • Tie the bottle with a clean cloth or close with lid little loose.  
  • Stir this mixture every day for 20 days.
  • After 20 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/ muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle.
  • Keep this again for 7 days untouched. After 7 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use. 

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Wednesday, 5 October 2016

Ethakka Wine Recipe / Ripe Plantain Wine Recipe

Kerala ripe Plantain Wine

It’s been a long time since I have posted a new wine recipe. Today’s wine is with Kerala Ethakka / plantain and it is a sweet wine. I have used one orange and two grapefruits in this recipe. If you cannot find grapefruit, you can substitute it with oranges. Please make sure to go through my earlier post “Tips on making Kerala Homemade Wine” before you attempt making wine at home, which will help clear lot of doubts and save your time and my time spent on clarifications!

Ethakka Wine / Ripe Plantain Wine
Ingredients:
Ripe Ethakka / Plantain - 3
Orange -1
Grapefruit -2
Raisins - ¾ cup
Water – 6 cups
Yeast – ¾
Sugar – 500 gms

Method:
  • Cut Ethakka / Plantain in small pieces. Put ethakka pieces in a large pan and 6 cups water and bring this to the boil and simmer for approximately 15 minutes. Strain and pour the mixture into a clean large pan, while the mixture is hot making sure not to squeeze the ethakka / plantain pieces. Discard the ethakka pieces.
  • Wash orange and grapefruit and wipe it with a kitchen tissue or clean cloth. Take out the zest from one grapefruit and orange with a citrus peeler or vegetable peeler. Add orange & grapefruit zest along with orange and grapefruit segments making sure not to add white pith or seeds, raisins and sugar to the hot boiled ethakka / plantain water.
  • In a small bowl, mix ½ cup lukewarm water, ¾ tsp yeast and ¾ tsp sugar and keep aside for 10 minutes. When the mixture becomes frothy add it to the cooled mixture and mix everything well.
  • Transfer the mixture to a sterilized glass bottle / bharani, cover it and leave for 21 days stirring daily. After 21 days, strain the mixture through a cheese/muslin cloth in to a clean dry bottle. Keep this again for 14 days untouched. After14 days strain the wine again, pour it in to clean dry bottles and use.
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Monday, 27 June 2016

Kerala Chicken Stew Recipe / Kozhi Stew

How to make Kerala Chicken Ishtew

Stew or Ishtew is a mildly spicy and creamy Kerala special delicacy which goes very well with appam,bread, puttu, chapathi etc. In most Kerala Christian families, Christmas or Easter breakfast is incomplete without appam and chicken or mutton stew. Stew has to be white in colour and you have to make sure not to brown the onion while sautéing. Cashew nut paste will enhance the flavor and make the gravy thick and creamy.

Kerala Chicken Stew Recipe / Kozhi Stew
Ingredients: 
Chicken - ½ kg (cut in to medium pieces, I used boneless chicken)
Potato - 1 small, cubed
Carrot - 1 small, cubed
Onion - 1, thinly sliced
Green chillies - 4, slit
Ginger - 1 tsp, finely chopped
Garlic - 1 tsp, finely chopped
Cinnamon sticks - 1 inch x2 pieces
Cardamom - 4
Cloves - 4
Black peppercorns - 1 tsp
Medium thick coconut milk - 3 cups
Thick coconut milk - 1 cup
Cashew nuts - 6 - 8 ground to a fine paste
Curry leaves - few
Salt - to taste
Coconut oil - 2 tbsp


Method:
  • Heat oil in a pan and add cinnamon sticks, cardamom, cloves, black peppercorns and sauté. Add onion, ginger, garlic and green chillies and curry leaves and stir fry until they becomes soft and translucent. (make sure not to brown the onion).
  • Add chicken pieces and stir fry for 2-3 minutes until the meat is lightly seared.
  • Add cubed potatoes and carrots, medium think coconut milk and salt, and cook for 15-20 minutes over medium heat until the chicken, carrot and potatoes are fully cooked.
  • Add cashew nut paste, thick coconut milk and vinegar, mix well and simmer for 2 minutes or until you get the required thickness.
  • Serve hot with palappam, vellayappam, Idiyappam, Puttu, Chapathi or bread.
How to make Kerala Chicken Stew

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Wednesday, 27 January 2016

Chemmen Mulaku Curry with Thenga Kothu / Kerala Konju Curry / Kerala Style Prawn Curry with Coconut Pieces

Chemmen Mulaku curry is a very easy to make Kerala delicacy. Prawns are cooked along with coconut pieces, kudam puli and masala. Shallots, coconut pieces and Coconut oil are a must for making this curry to capture the authentic taste. Coconut oil (pacha velichenna) poured on top of the cooked curry enhances the taste. A true Keralite will indulge this spicy prawn curry with rice; it is also one of my favorite prawn dish.


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Friday, 18 December 2015

Chemmen Ularthiyathu with Thenga Kothu / Kerala Style Prawn Roast with Coconut Pieces


Kerala Style Prawn Roast

This is another version of the Prawn Roast I had posted earlier. Prawn is briefly cooked with coconut pieces and masalas and is then roasted in coconut oil. This is a famous dish of the "Shappu Kada" (Toddy shops) across Kerala. This dried and spicy prawn dish goes very well with rice and moru curry, as a side dish or as a wrap with chapathi and is also a great cocktail snack along with thengin kallu (coconut toddy), or with scotch or beer. Do try this for Christmas or New Year and let me know which way you liked it :) :)
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Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Old Fashioned Indian Doughnut Recipe

Kerala Christmas snacks

This is the first doughnut recipe I have tried in my life. Got this recipe from my mother in law. This was one of mummy’s signature snack recipes during my husband’s childhood days. Unlike the soft doughnuts we make these days, this one is hard in texture and can be stored for several days. I always felt these doughnuts are a "cousin" of VettuCake and Diamond Cuts we make back home in Kerala. Kids will love this snack and you can also pack it for those staying in hostels. It's also a great snack to give away during Christmas time!
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Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Chemmen Ularthiyathu / Kerala Style Prawn Roast with Tomatoes

Chemmen Thakkali Ularthiyathu

Prawn / Shrimp Roast is a famous Syrian Christian dish which can be prepared very quickly. Prawn is cooked in their own juices along with spices, tomatoes and a small piece of kudampuli (kokum). Prawns absorb all the flavours which give a nice spicy dry dish that goes really well with a bowl of steaming rice and morucurry, Palappam or chapathi


Kerala Style Shrimp Roast with Tomatoes


Chemmen Ularthiyathu / Kerala Style Prawn Roast with Tomatoes
Ingredients:
Cleaned Prawns / Shrimps – 250 gm
Onion – 1 medium, sliced (can replace with chumannulli / shallots)
Ginger paste – 2 tsp
Garlic paste – 1 tbsp
Tomatoes – 2 medium, chopped
Chilly powder – ¾ to 1 tsp
Turmeric powder – ¼ tsp
Coriander powder – 1 tsp
Pepper powder – ¾  tsp
Garam masala – 1 tsp
Coconut oil – 2 tbsp
Kudampuli / Kokum -1 small piece, soaked in ¼ cup of water
Curry leaves - few
Coriander leaves, chopped – 1 tbsp (optional)
Salt to taste

Method:
  • Heat oil in a pan, add sliced onion and fry until light golden brown. Add ginger paste and garlic paste and fry again for 2 to 3 minutes.
  • Add chopped tomatoes and curry leaves and sauté well.
  • Add the chilly powder, turmeric powder, coriander powder and pepper powder and sauté until oil separates.
  • Add kudampuli along with its soaked water, prawns and salt and sauté over medium heat until prawns are cooked and well coated with tomato mixture.
  • Sprinkle the garam masala and coriander leaves over the prawns and stir well and remove from heat.
Chemmen Roast



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Sunday, 23 November 2014

Nadan Mutta Roast / Kerala Style Egg Roast

Mutta (Motta) Roast is a very popular side dish of Kerala, which can be served for breakfast, lunch or dinner!.... A very simple, easy to make side dish usually served with Palappam, Vellayappam, Idiyappam or Puttu for breakfast or as a side dish for chapathi or porotta for dinner or as a quick fix when guests shows up unexpectedly :) :) … Mutta Roast is also a very popular item in “thattukada” or road side eatery ….  Mutta roast can be used as a stuffing to make Mutta Puffs :)…

Kerala Style Egg Roast


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