Showing posts with label Special Occasions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Special Occasions. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2010

Sweet Saffron Rice and Awards


Sometime for no special reasons & without knowing we forget our traditions. Similar is the story with this dish, till this date I never made Sweet Saffron Rice, not that they are complicated or anything but somehow I never made it. Last week while talking to my Mom she told me that's it's Basant Panchami make sweet yellow rice, that's how we refer it in our family. Basant Panchami is a festival to celebrate the first day of spring(basant) and also celebrates the birthday of  Saraswati : Goddess of knowledge and arts. Yellow color of the energy giving Sun has a lot of importance in regard to this festival, the coming of Spring after a long and arduous winter, the mustard fields in bloom are a bright yellow, exuding the warmth of an imminent season of Basant or Spring. In north India people celebrate this special day with religious activities and also by wearing kesari(yellow/saffron color) clothes and making yellow color foods.

So, here you go Mom I did made sweet yellow rice on the basant panchami for the first time. And the sweet aroma of desi ghee, cardamons and saffron is really incomparable. My mom usually put thin slices of dry coconut(available at Indian grocery stores) for garnish, but I didn't used as I didn't had any.

What U need :
  • 1/2 cup basmati rice soaked for around 20-25 minutes.
  • 4 Tblsp. of sugar(add more if you like it really sweet).
  • 2 green cardamons(elaichi), seeds taken out & crushed.
  • 2 pinch of saffron(kesar) soaked in 2 Tblsp. of warm milk.
  • handful of raisins(i used dry cranberries).
  • handful of slivered almonds, toasted.
  • 1 cup of water
  • 1 Tblsp. of clarified butter(desi ghee)
What to do :
  1. Drain rice.
  2. Heat ghee in a heavy bottom pan, add cardamons and rice. Stir so that rice get coating of ghee.
  3. Add raisins, sugar, saffron along with the milk and water.
  4. Cover & cook the rice on medium, till all the water evaporates.
  5. Garnish with toasted almonds & coconut(if using).
Note : If you don't have saffron, 2-3 drops of yellow food color can be used. Also once the rice are cooked, taste them for the sweetness, if needed add more sugar while they are still warm.

Time for Awards: My first regular visitor on this blog was SE of Denufood, she was the one who passed me my very first award and here are couple of more awards from her, Thanks dear for sharing them and being so nice and regularly not only visiting but taking time out to write few lines on each single post.

Rules for accepting the Kreative Blogger award :

1) Thank the person giving the award
2) Copy the award to your blog
3) Place a link to their blog
4) Name 7 things people don't know about you
5) Nominate 7 bloggers
6) Place a link to those bloggers
7) Leave a comment letting those bloggers know about the award

I would like to share these awards with :
1) Sidhhi of Cooked Dil Se....
2) Sowmya of Creative Saga
4) Supriya of Redchillies
5) Sage of  SageCuisine
6) AshKuku  of Asra....Ashaon Ka.....
7) Gulmohar of Collaborative Curry
I just noticed my most of the blogger friends have name starting with "S" and now the list of 7 things people don't know about me :
1) Would love to have my own kitchen garden one day, till then I'm planting my herbs and veggies in the pots.
2) Can't watch T.V without reading some magazine or doing some crochet along with it.
3) Love fried foods, thanks to not properly ventilated kitchens here I don't fry often.
4) Love to start my day by taking all the veggies for the whole day, out of the fridge. Looking at the basket full of fresh veggies(though sometime they r in the fridge for almost a week) makes me happy.
5) Love to end my day doing some crochet/knitting even if it is for 10 minutes.
6) Not a health freak but believe everything in moderation is good.
7) I'm not an environmentalist but do my share in reducing, reusing and recycling. I try to use my own grocery bags but still end up with lot of produce bags as we mainly use fresh produce only. Below is the picture of plastic bag dispenser I made using used produce bags.
                          

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Here it's called Stuffing, Back Home it was called Bread Poha

Before we move to today's recipe....what is this Fruit or Vegetable ???

Now for the recipe, nope it's not using the produce from the above pic, but it's the recipe from our thanksgiving dinner, something so important that you can't think of having a turkey dinner without it....it's stuffing.

It's typically made with bread croutons, some veggies, nuts & dry fruits. You can either fill the big bird with it (which I don't like) or another popular way is you cook it separately and serve it as side dish (it's called dressing when cooked separately). This time when I cooked bread stuffing, it reminded me of bread poha my Mom makes with lots of veggies & nuts, though it's not exactly same but has many similarities. I ate the leftovers for the next day breakfast & loved it.

Ingredients :

  • 2 cups bread croutons(check notes for making your own)
  • 1/2 cup chopped carrots
  • 1/2 cup chopped celery
  • 1/2 cup chopped granny smith apple
  • 1/4 cup or more roasted & chopped almonds & walnuts
  • 1/4 cup chopped apricots
  • 1/4 cup raisins plus dried cranberries
  • 2 Tblsp. of unsalted butter (or U can use all evoo instead)
  • 2 Tblsp. of evoo(extra virgin olive oil (or you can use all butter instead)
  • 1 Tblsp. of evoo for sauteing the vegetables
  • 1/2 cup of vegetable stock or water ( I used turkey stock)
  • salt as per taste
  • black pepper as per taste
  • 1 tsp. dried parsley

Method :

  1. Heat butter & oil in a big heavy bottom pan. Add bread croutons to it & toss them to get coating of butter. Cook them on a med. heat for about 5-7 minutes, stir them in between. When they start to turn brown, take them out of the pan. If you don't have big pan do it in two batches using 1 spoon of butter & oil each, for each batch of croutons

  2. In the same pan heat 1 Tblsp. of evoo & add celery, carrots & apples. Cover and cook them till they get soft, if needed add little stock or water at a time.

  3. Once the veggies are soft add croutons, nuts & dry fruits. Also add salt, black pepper and parsley. Mix everything & add 1/2 cup of stock/water. cover & cook for couple of minutes.

  4. Turn of the gas. Let it sit for sometime before serving.

  5. This can be served as a side dish or can also be eaten as a snack or breakfast by itself. You can also top it with fresh cilantro(instead of parsley) & sprinkle some lemon/lime juice before serving. If you like you can also add other veggies like peas, bell pepper, green beans etc.. My mom makes bread poha version with some tomatoes in it.

Note : to make your own croutons, take 5 slices of 2-3 day old bread, preferably french bread or any hardy bread. I use whatever kind I have at home. This time I used multi grain bread. Cut the slices into 4 stripes & then further cut each strip into 4 pieces. Spread them onto cookie sheet & toast in the oven 350 degree F for roughly 10 min. or so. Shake them in between, once they turn crispy they are done. Remember if croutons are not crispy stuffing will turn mushy.

For Vegan version instead of butter evoo can be used.

This dish is quite healthy as I used multi grain bread to make croutons plus it has lots of veggies, nuts & dry fruits. Specially with all the other flavours going on kids can't figure out that it has multi grain bread in it(so no complaints). I'm sending this to WYF-Speciality event as I cooked it specially for Thanksgiving dinner and I'm also sending it to Yasmeen's HealthNut Challenge-3 : Healing Foods as it contains all the healthy ingredients from carrots to apples & almonds to cranberries. Last but not the least it goes to Radhika & Sudeshna's Food for 7 stages of life : Kids Event.

And yes, before I sign off did you guys guessed what the name of the fruit in above pic is. It's persimmon, known to the ancient Greeks as "fruits of the Gods". Saw it in the local Chinese farmer market, there were two varieties, one was sold in the pack of 6 or 8 that looked more like round tomatoes. The one I got was sold loose, so I got just one to taste, later checked on the wiki it's called "Hachiya". It was too(when I say too I really mean tooooooo) sweet, pulp inside had similar texture like ripe mango pulp but it was too sweet (we, in fact he only ate one bite, ate it just raw) may be I should have made milk shake with it.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving - Turkey Dinner

Hope you all had a nice & wonderful Thanksgiving with your family & friends. Here's what we had......"Tandoori Turkey" with orange-pineapple sauce with side of creamy Au Gratin Potatoes & nutty, fruity stuffing. No recipes today only some pics.