Regional Indian Cuisine: Chocchori, A Favorite Bengali Vegetable Recipe

Friends:

My novel Oleander Girl, which I've been working on for a long time, is finally completed, edited, revised, and sold! The publisher is Free Press, an imprint of Simon and Schuster. I am really looking forward to working with them, especially as Martha Levin, the publisher, was my wonderful editor at Anchor Books when I began my writing career with Arranged Marriage and Mistress of Spices! Oleander Girl will come out in March 2013. I'll blog about more details once I have them, so watch this space.

So now I'm back to my sadly neglected blog, and ready to write on topics that people have asked me about. I thought I would start with a recipe from my part of India--Bengal. This is a staple dish which I grew up eating. As you might know, although people talk about Indian food as a category, the regional cuisines of India are quite diverse. In restaurants, you will usually be served a smattering of North Indian dishes, often from Punjab, or a few South Indian ones, often from Tamil Nadu. You will rarely find food from Bengal. So here's a dish for you. The 5 spice mix in the recipe, panchforan, is very typical of Bengal, and gives the dish its distinctive taste. This spice-mix is ayurvedically balanced and is supposed to be extremely healthy. Bengalis are also known for adding a little sugar at the end into their dishes, so you can experiment with that.

 

Bengali Chocchori


This is a mixed vegetable dish and can be made with all kinds of vegetables, along with some potatoes. Carrot, cauliflower, spinach. Sweet potatoes. Drumsticks. Broad beans. Green  beans. Banana squash. Chayote squash. Even bitter melon. Basically whatever's in season, and whatever you like. I made it with potato and 3 different kinds of squash--zucchini, yellow crookneck, and calabash.

Chop 4 large potatoes (don't peel--the peel adds a special authentic flavor)
Chop all the squash (8-9 of them; don't peel)
Chop 1 large onion, or 2 medium onions (white or purple--purple has a stronger flavor).

In a large pan, heat about 2 T oil (I use Canola, but any kind of vegetable oil will do), add one dry red pepper and 1/2 teaspoon panchforan. (Panchforan is a mix of 5 spices: cumin, fenugreek, mustard, black cumin and fennel--2 parts of cumin, one part of each of the others. You can mix about 1/2 a cupful and keep it in an airtight container for future use. Sometimes Indian stores will have it ready-mixed). When they sputter, add 1/2 the chopped onion. Brown onion, add chopped potatoes. Add salt, ½ tsp. turmeric and chili powder according to taste. (I add ½ tsp. chili powder, which makes it fairly spicy). Cook until golden-brown & almost done. May sprinkle with water to aid cooking and cover for a while.

While potato is cooking, in another pan, heat 2 T oil, add 1/2 teaspoon panchforan, and one dry red pepper. When they sputter, add rest of the onion. Brown onion; add squash. Add 1/2 tsp. turmeric, and salt and chili powder according to taste.(I put ½ tsp chili powder, which makes it fairly spicy.) Cook until golden-brown & almost done. May sprinkle with water to aid cooking and cover for a while.

Add the cooked squash into the potatoes. Add 3/4 tsp sugar ( you can add more or less according to taste) --white or brown. Mix in well. Cook for about 5 more minutes. Should be moist but not watery.  Serve with hot rice.

To make this into a complete meal, you can serve it with the following dishes, recipes for which are all on this blog: pakora appetizers (Dec. 4, 2009), yogurt chicken (May 13, 2010), and mango ice cream (March 10, 2009).

I'd love to hear from you. If you try the recipe, let me know how it turns out. If you have regional dishes of your own that you'd like to share with readers on this site, that would be wonderful. If you want to find a particular recipe, let me know. You can also post your comment on my facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/chitradivakaruni.

Indian Rice Pudding: a Recipe from Sister of My Heart & a Tribute to Mom

Friends,

Many of you have been discussing my novel Sister of My Heart on my Facebook page, and also telling me that you want more recipes, so I thought I'd combine them in this post! Additionally, it's a tribute to my mother, who passed away in 2010.

Do let me know if you like it, & if you have your own variations.

This recipe was published in a book titled Table of ContentsRecipes and Inspiration from Today's Top 50 Authors, eds. Judy Gelman and Vicki Levy Krupp. Check them out at www.bookclubcookbook.com


A Sister Of My Heart Special: Payesh  (Bengali Rice Pudding)

Inmy novel Sister of My Heart, when Anju and Sudha, the two cousins who are the protagonists of the book, are still little, their aunt, Pishi, cooks several special desserts for them. This one, payesh, is very traditional in Bengal, the part of India where I come from and where Sister of My Heart is set. It is also a dish that my mother was famous for. But whereas hers used to take a half-day to make, I've given you a shortcut recipe.

Makes 8 servings

Note: The payesh consistency should be fairly thick, and it may take a little longer than indicated to achieve this thickness. Keep in mind that the payesh also thickens as it cools.

3 cups half-and-half  (fat free or whole)

1 cup whole milk

3/4 cup basmati rice, washed & soaked for 1/2 hour

1 cinnamon stick

4 cardamom pods--peel & crush the seeds. Discard peel.

1 cup granulated sugar or brown sugar (according to your taste). More if you have a sweet tooth

1/2 cup raisins

1/2 cup chopped peeled almonds

Rose Petals (if desired)

1. In a non stick pan, bring half-and-half  and milk to a boil. Add rice (drain it first), cinnamon stick, cardamom. Cook on low, stirring often to prevent sticking, until rice is soft and milk thickened. (30 to 45 min). Some friends do this in a large container in the microwave oven, but I haven't tried it that way myself. (I tend not to use microwaves for cooking).

2. Add sugar, raisins and almonds. Cook on low heat another 10-15 minutes until the mixture is thick. (Keep in mind it will thicken more when cooling). 

3. Payesh can be eaten warm or chilled. Sometimes I sprinkle rose petals on the chilled version just before serving. If refrigerated, it keeps for 5-6 days.But probably it will not last that long because it is terribly tempting!

Like I said, I'd love some feedback if you try it out.