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Friday, August 31, 2012

Pineapple Upside Down Cake

Pineapple Upside Down Cake (Pics by June Carvalho)

MY last post for this month is a pineapple upside down cake that I made for tea earlier this evening...saved a few slices of fresh, ripe, sugary sweet pineapple for this cake. It does look a little bit like a burnt offering doesn't it, but actually the the burnt looking edge is nothing but a creamed mixture of butter and treacle that I spread on the base of the cake pan...gives a wonderful caramel taste besides preventing the pineapple from sticking to the base.

What you need:

7 pineapple slices, fresh or canned
230 gm flour
230 gm sugar, powdered
125 gm butter 
3 eggs
1/2 tsp vanilla essence
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp mixed spice powder
A pinch of salt
5 tbsp milk
Cherries and green
tutti-frutti to decorate

To spread on the base:

1 tbsp treacle ] To be creamed 
1 tbsp butter  ] for base layer

First cream the treacle with the tablespoon of butter and spread it on the base of a 9 x 9 inch square cake pan.  Arrange 5 of the cored pineapple slices in the four corners and centre of the pan. Place a cherry in the centre of each pineapple and sprinkle some tutti-frutti in between the slices. Chop the remaining pineapple slices into bits.

Sieve flour with baking powder, spice powder and salt. Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy, adding the eggs one by one, beating them in. Add the essence. Mix.

Fold in the flour a little at a time, along with the pineapple bits,  mixing alternately with the milk, till it's all moist and put into the prepared pan. Spread evenly, with a slight depression in the centre. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 170 degrees C for 35 minutes or until cake tester comes clean.

Cool and invert onto serving plate.

PS:  The batter was a little too much to fit into this heart-shaped pan. I got four cupcakes from the surplus batter. These proportions are just right for a 9" x 9" square pan.


Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Lemon Delight

Lemon Delight (Pic by June Carvalho)

I'VE adapted this lovely  pudding recipe from a 1968 edition of the cookery book An Encyclopedia of World Cookery by Elizabeth Campbell that my husband had picked up for me nearly 20 years ago from Select Book Shop on Brigade Road, a shop that's renowned for its collection of rare and out-of-print books. This thick, hard-bound copy, with yellowed pages, is a veritable treasure trove of recipes from all over the world, classified according to the countries of their origin. The author's introductions to each country's specialties make for interesting reading, not to mention the recipes, which have me salivating as I thumb through its pages. The only drawback is that the book contains no photographs, so you're left to imagine for yourself what an unfamiliar dish might look like when you're trying it out for the first time.

Lemon Delight  (Pic by June Carvalho)
This pudding is listed as Lemon Sponge Pudding under recipes from Canada. Indeed, it is like  a sponge layer on the surface but the surprise element is that beneath the sponge cake-like layer lies a beautiful, moist, yellow custard. The pudding can be baked in individual ramekins or in a larger baking dish, but what's really important is to place the baking dish in a pan of hot water and then bake. The gentle cooking process in a water bath ensures a soft-textured, self-saucing pudding, with a refreshing, lovely, tangy flavour. Two lemons may be used as per the original recipe for a stronger flavour, but I've found that the juice and zest of one lemon strikes the right, delicate balance of sweet and tang.

Lemon Delight (Pic by June Carvalho)
What you need:

50 gms plain butter
250 gms powdered sugar
4 eggs
1 pinch of salt
550 ml milk
50 gms flour, sifted
Juice and rind of 1 big lemon 

Beat the butter and sugar. Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs. Beat the egg yolks and add to the creamed mixture. Add lemon rind, flour, milk, salt and juice in that order.

Beat egg whites stiff and fold in gently.

Set dish in a pan of hot water and bake at 180 degrees C for 30 to 40 minutes or until golden brown on the top. Serve warm or cold.




Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Mangue Cocktail

THE other day, in the process of taking an inventory of my tidy stash of wines and spirits, I rediscovered some long-forgotten bottles, their seals intact, lying at the back of the shelf. One of those was Mangue, a mango liqueur by Marie Brizard. I tried to sip it by itself but didn't quite relish it. Maybe my relationship with sweet, ripe mangoes is better than with a liqueur from it.

The next obvious thing to do in order to put the clear, orange liquid to good use, was to browse the Net for cocktails using it.

This mango liqueur cocktail is what I stumbled upon...it resulted in a beautiful, golden, neat, nice, long drink which I found really refreshing. There was a delicate blend of a multitude of flavours ranging from mango, bitters and vodka to tonic water. Absolutely lovely!

Mangue Cocktail.  (Pic by June Carvalho)

What you need:
60 ml vodka
30 ml Marie Brizard Mangue
2-3 dashes of Angostura bitters
Schweppes tonic water (chilled)
Ice cubes
Lime wedge for garnish (optional)

I half-filled a Collins glass with ice cubes, poured the vodka, followed by the mango liqueur, followed by dashes of the bitters, eventually topping it with chilled tonic water. Stuck a swizzle stick in and savoured it sip by sip till the very last drop!

Quite a stiff one that was. Halve the ingredients for a smaller one.












Aromas of Goa


YESTERDAY I had the good fortune of accompanying my friend Eslinda to Christ College, where she was to showcase a selection of Goan cuisine to students of the hospitality management course. Eslinda needed no hand-holding from me, but only to demonstrate a couple of vegetarian dishes, which she felt were really not her forte, just like most Goans in whose culinary dictionary, the word “vegetable” rarely finds mention, unless you comb it well with a powerful magnifying lens!
A line-up of hearty Goan dishes. (Pic by June Carvalho)

The Goan meat and seafood dishes a la Eslinda, were cooked to perfection with the authenticity lent by the use of the golden-hued Goa palm vinegar and fiery looking Kashmiri red chillies in the pork vindaloo and the recheiado paste tucked into the insides of the mackerel. Apparently, the red chillies are not as angry as they look, only lending an appetizingly rich red to the gravy, without making it unbearably spicy. I thought the chicken cafreal needed to look a little greener, but had no complaints about its taste. The red prawn curry (barely visible at the top end in the pic above) was excellent and teamed up very well with rice. To end on a sweet note were pan rolls with a coconut and jaggery filling.

The students were given a print-out of the recipes and were divided into teams to handle each dish at different work stations in the huge kitchen equipped with, among other paraphernalia, enormous gas stoves that hissed away, heating the bottoms of gigantic vessels.

Our initial apprehensions belied, the task of preparing around 60 portions of each dish seemed effortless and got done well within the stipulated time in a kitchen bursting with energy, a melange of aromas and generous lashings of fooling around as young students are wont to do. All in all, it was a good learning experience, not only for the students whose curriculum demands exposure to Indian regional cuisines, but also for the two of us who got a peek into the functioning of an industrial kitchen and a small taste of high pressure cooking.

Later we were invited to dine at their training restaurant, along with their faculty. The food was nicely plated by the students. They are still learning. The faculty members appreciated the hearty fare, one of them adding that a xacuti and a sorpotel would have made it a superlative experience. To which I would have liked to add: "Helloooo! A drop of cashew feni too!" but reminded myself in time that it was a cooking demo. And that we were sitting. In a mock restaurant. In a college. In landlocked Bangalore. And not...as wishful thinking might permit...on the sands of Betim or Benaulim!  

Here are some of the recipes that were prepared that eventful morning. More will follow as soon as I have the time to upload them...which also includes a few vegetables.
  

FISH RECHEIADO

“Recheiado” at first sight can confuse your sense of pronunciation. It is simply pronounced “rechad”, the "ch"  sounding like the "sh" in "sheekh" or "shammi kebab" with all those in-between vowels remaining obscure and the ending “O” remaining so silent that you hardly acknowledge its presence. But it’s this uniquely Goan fish fry that you’re after, so forget the disconnect between spelling and pronunciation. If you can say “rechad” without batting an eyelid, I'd say you’re fit to tuck into it. 

Fish Recheiado (Pic by June Carvalho)
What you need: 
[For four mackerals or white pomfrets]

For “rechad” paste:

12 red chillies
8 peppercorns
¼ tsp cumin seeds
12 flakes of garlic
2 tsp coriander seeds
½ tsp turmeric powder
½ tsp sugar
Marble sized ball of tamarind (soaked)
½ cup Goa vinegar
Salt to taste

Oil to fry.

For the coating:

Half a cup of gram flour (besan) mixed with about two tablespoons of fine semolina and seasoned with a  little salt and turmeric powder.


What you do:

Soak the “rechad” paste ingredients in the Goa vinegar for about 10 minutes and grind to a fine paste using the same vinegar in which it was soaked.

Scale and clean the fish. Smear a mixture of salt and lemon juice on the inside and outside of the fish and keep aside. With a sharp knife, slit the fish from its back on both sides and fill the cavity with the “rechad” paste.

Coat with the gram flour and semolina and shallow fry on both sides, in hot oil till crisp on the outside. Garnish with onion rings and lime wedges and slide from pan to plate.

PRAWN CURRY 

What you need:

1 cup prawns peeled, deveined, washed
2 green chillies
2 medium onions, sliced
1 tomato cut into quarters
1 200 ml tetrapak coconut milk
1 tbsp coriander seeds
1 ½ tsp cumin seeds
6 cloves garlic
4 dry Kashmiri red chillies
4 peppercorns
½ inch piece ginger
½ tsp turmeric powder
1 tbsp tamarind pulp
Salt to taste
2 tbsps oil

PS: You can also extract fresh coconut milk from two cups of grated fresh coconut, ground in three cups of warm water. Strain and use.

What you do:

Marinate the prawns in salt and a dash of turmeric powder.

Grind all the ingredients [except the green chillis and one of the sliced onions] to a fine paste.

Heat oil in a pan, fry the sliced onion and green chillies till translucent. Now add the curry paste, stir around a bit and add 1 cup of water and bring to a boil. Drop the prawns into it, add the quartered tomato and simmer for five minutes. If the gravy is too thick, add a little more water to obtain the desired thickness. Remove from heat and keep covered till serving time. Serve with rice. For 4 to 6 persons.