 The next few posts of mine will be some old dishes that I had saved as drafts but not posted. Some of them are even as old as last year, and now comes the time to post them all....
The next few posts of mine will be some old dishes that I had saved as drafts but not posted. Some of them are even as old as last year, and now comes the time to post them all.... Now we should get it fixed over the weekend, and till then no way of clicking food pics. I don’t even have my other old camera here and may be if I get it, I can click some in the next week. So till then, no new recipes to post. But well, I have loads of them in drafts and will be posting them one by one!
Now we should get it fixed over the weekend, and till then no way of clicking food pics. I don’t even have my other old camera here and may be if I get it, I can click some in the next week. So till then, no new recipes to post. But well, I have loads of them in drafts and will be posting them one by one! This one is a dish I had tried out sometime last year, but hadn’t posted. Here it goes....
This one is a dish I had tried out sometime last year, but hadn’t posted. Here it goes....| Carrot Baby corn Masala | 
| Preparation time : 10 min Cooking time : 15 min Serves : 4  Ingredients: Carrots - 2, cut into 1’ x ¼’ pieces Baby corn - 8-10, cut into 1’ x ¼’ pieces Onions - 3 medium sized, chopped Tomatoes - 2 medium sized, chopped Green chilies - 2, slit Garlic - 6-8 flakes Almonds - 12-15, soaked in water for sometime Cooking oil - 1 Tbsp Salt - ½ tsp or as per taste Ginger Garlic paste - ½ tsp Coriander powder - ½ tsp Garam masala powder - ½ tsp Red Chili powder - ½ tsp Kitchen king masala - ½ tsp Method: • Heat 1 tsp of oil in a pan and saute half of the cut onions till golden brown• Add the cut tomatoes and cook till done • Once cool enough to handle, add soaked almonds and grind to a puree • Heat the remaining oil in a another pan, and add ginger garlic paste and slit green chilies • Add the remaining chopped onion, and stir till golden brown • Now add the chopped carrots and baby corn and cook till tender. Sprinkle a little water if needed. • Add red chilli powder, garam masala powder, kitchen king masala and coriander powder • Now add salt and the ground paste and bring to boil • Add water if the consistency is too thick and boil for 3-4 min, stirring intermittently. • Switch off the flame and garnish with chopped coriander • Serve it with rotis/phulkas/chapathis. Tips n Tricks: • Do not overcook the veggies, let it be slightly crispy | 
 

 When you’re making it, the flavor of the methi and dal is just tantalizing. I recently made it myself too in a large quantity and saved it in the fridge for a couple of days. It tasted good when mixed with rice and packed for lunch too.
When you’re making it, the flavor of the methi and dal is just tantalizing. I recently made it myself too in a large quantity and saved it in the fridge for a couple of days. It tasted good when mixed with rice and packed for lunch too.  Some people call it matodi palya and some call it matwadi palya. I am not sure why the name of it is so, but whatever the name, it is one must-try dish. It takes in very few ingredients and easy to make too. Here’s the recipe....
Some people call it matodi palya and some call it matwadi palya. I am not sure why the name of it is so, but whatever the name, it is one must-try dish. It takes in very few ingredients and easy to make too. Here’s the recipe.... 
 A hot cuppa chai and these hot cookies make a good evening snack on a weekend.
A hot cuppa chai and these hot cookies make a good evening snack on a weekend. Here’s how to make them....
 Here’s how to make them....
 These seeds taste good when cooked with veggies and added in sambhar, which we do quite often. Other than that, this season, since the quantity of the seeds was more, we had to make something else to use it up, so here is a gojju with jackfruit seeds. It does taste good, with rice or chapathis.
These seeds taste good when cooked with veggies and added in sambhar, which we do quite often. Other than that, this season, since the quantity of the seeds was more, we had to make something else to use it up, so here is a gojju with jackfruit seeds. It does taste good, with rice or chapathis.



 A similar situation has given rise to this South-Inidianised form of parathas! My inlaws, esp my MIL, likes her south Indian form of cooking with lot of coconut and stuff, rather than garam masalas, ginger garlic pastes and so on! And since we all love parathas, and she too wants to have it but in her form, she has tweaked it so much that it hardly resembles the actual paratha in taste, except that it has stuffing of aloo in atta dough! She uses the famous south Indian aloo palya - that we serve with Masala dosa, to make these parathas. And the accompaniment here is the very familiar
A similar situation has given rise to this South-Inidianised form of parathas! My inlaws, esp my MIL, likes her south Indian form of cooking with lot of coconut and stuff, rather than garam masalas, ginger garlic pastes and so on! And since we all love parathas, and she too wants to have it but in her form, she has tweaked it so much that it hardly resembles the actual paratha in taste, except that it has stuffing of aloo in atta dough! She uses the famous south Indian aloo palya - that we serve with Masala dosa, to make these parathas. And the accompaniment here is the very familiar 