Who says cooking is difficult? Of course there was one time when I too used to think cooking is a fractious job. I would dread at the thought of cooking alone when mom was ill or away, in high-school or college days. I would occasionally cook well too, but that would have taken an epoch. I would take hours to chop vegetables get things ready and check and re-check the recipe some zillion times, and still make some mistake and get nervous how to fix it and so on and so forth.
I feel like laughing thinking of those days. There has been a world of difference now. I can now say confidently that I can cook a good meal for about 20 people in a couple of hours. And if something goes wrong I can easily be sure to get it fixed. And the proportions too will quite be apt.
And also guessing the ingredients and method for a food that I taste somewhere and later trying it out myself is another thing I like and enjoy.So this time it is White beans masala that I wanted to try out without looking into any recipe but just taking guesses. And it did turn out to be quite tasty. We just loved it with simple Ghee rice. It would be good with chapathis / rotis too.
Here’s the recipe...
I feel like laughing thinking of those days. There has been a world of difference now. I can now say confidently that I can cook a good meal for about 20 people in a couple of hours. And if something goes wrong I can easily be sure to get it fixed. And the proportions too will quite be apt.
And also guessing the ingredients and method for a food that I taste somewhere and later trying it out myself is another thing I like and enjoy.So this time it is White beans masala that I wanted to try out without looking into any recipe but just taking guesses. And it did turn out to be quite tasty. We just loved it with simple Ghee rice. It would be good with chapathis / rotis too.
White Rajma Masala |
Preparation time : 10 min, apart from soaking time Cooking time : 20-25 min Serves : 4-5 Ingredients: White Rajma (Bean seeds) - 1 cup, fresh/dried; Soak overnight if using dried Tomato - 3 medium sized Onion - 2 medium sized Green chilies - 2-3 Ginger - 1” cube Garlic - 5-6 cloves Garam masala powder - 1 Tsp Red chili powder - ½ - 1 tsp, depending on taste Kitchen king masala - ½ tsp, optional Jeera powder - ½ tsp Coriander powder - ½ tsp Oil - 1 tbsp Salt - 1 tsp, as per taste Sugar - ¼ - ½ tsp Coriander leaves - 1 tbsp, chopped Method: • Soak rajma overnight if you’re using dried ones. I used fresh ones so didn’t have to soak, and the cooking time was less too. • Pressure cook rajma with enough water for 3-4 whistles, or till well cooked • Boil tomatoes in water till tender, cool and make puree • Heat oil in a pan • Add chopped onion and sauté for 2 minutes • Crush ginger and garlic and add the paste and continue to sauté till the onions turn translucent • Add all the spice powders and mix thoroughly so that no lumps are formed • Mix in tomato puree, salt and sugar and bring to a gentle boil • Add the boiled bean seeds, and water if necessary to maintain a gravy consistency • Let it boil for 5-10 minutes, till the bean seeds absorb the taste and flavors from the gravy • Garnish with coriander leaves and serve with rotis/chapathis/ghee rice Tips n Tricks: • Cook the bean seeds just tender enough for the right taste |
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