Friday, March 30, 2007

Recipe for Orange Peel Chutney....

The other day I mentioned an Orange peel chutney that my mother had made. I got quite a few requests to share the recipe. Well, here it is. My mother tells me that her father the late Dharmananda Swami of village Chennitala, Mavelikara (Kerala) had taught her this. My grandfather was a swamiji who had many disciples visiting him. But once a week he would enter the kitchen and cook many tasty dishes for everyone in the Ashram. Cooking was a passion with him. And my mother, Ponnamma Vasudevan Nair, is quiet a specialist in making mouth watering dishes. She seems to have inherited this passion from her father. The other day she made some cauliflower pickle in mustard oil and it was really tasty. So tasty that none of it is left. So without wasting much time here is the recipe she made me write down:

Orange Peel Chutney
Ingredients:
1) Orange peel cut into small pieces - One cupful
2) Onion finely chopped - 3 Table spoons
3) Tamarind (a quantity equal in size to a small lemon)
4) Cooking Oil of your choice - 4 table spoons
5) Chilly powder and salt - to taste
6) Crushed jaggery - 1 table spoon
7) Methi (Fenugreek Seeds) - 1 teaspoon
8) Rai (Mustard Seeds) - 1 teaspoon
9) Hot water - 2 cups
10)Curry leaves - 8 to 10 leaves
11) Coriander powder (dhania powder) - 2 teaspoons

Method:

Soak the tamarind in two cups of hot water.

Heat the oil and add the fenugreek and mustard seeds.

When they crackle, add the onions and stir till light brown.

Add the orange peel and fry it lightly so that its rawness goes.

Add the coriander powder and stir.

Add chilly powder and curry leaves.

Stir and pour the Tamarind juice into the mixture.

Add crushed jaggery and salt.

Bring to a boil. You can boil this for upto 5 minutes.

Cool the chutney and put into a jar and refrigerate.


Last, but not least:

Say thanks to my mother

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Saturday, March 03, 2007

When a tree explodes in colour.... (From Mhow (MP), India)

"I think I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree Poems are made by fools like me But only God can make a tree" - American poet Joyce Kilmer (1886-1918)
(Kilmer was killed in the trench warfare of World War One)


Spring is in the air. The Semul or silk cotton tree (Salmalia malabarica or Bombax malabaricum) is on flower. And so is the mango. "Aam kay ped par mor aaye hain" I overheard a young girl tell her grandfather. And the most beautiful of all is the Flame of the Forest or Dhak, Palas, Bastard Teak, Parrot Tree, Porasum (Tamil) , Khakda (Gujarati) as it is also known. The battle of Plassey was fought near a forest full of these trees. And I have seen villages named Palasiya in Madhya Pradesh. I recommend a google search for all those of you who are do not live in areas where this tree grows naturally. I remember boiling the flowers and making colour for Holi when I was a child and my Dad was posted in Mhow. Today, the fourth of March, is the day when people throw colour on each other. Let me see if I can collect a few flowers.




A naturalist from Pune had once written an essay on this tree in Bittu Sahgal's Sanctuary magazine and he had claimed to have seen more than twenty species of birds on this tree in a short time span of 3 or 4 hours. I love the feel of the trifoliate leaves when they are green, it is like touching suede. I have often seen squirrels and parrots eating the seeds from the pods. I used to collect these pods, one had to get to them when they fell down before the squirrels did so. Even succeeded in making some of them sprout but they died and I felt heartbroken.



I remember taking some photographs of a clump of these trees from a moving train while travelling from Indore to Jabalpur almost ten years ago. I wish a serious effort is undertaken to make this tree more popular. Whenever I see the Flame of the forest on flower I remember these words of the poet Ezra Pound :"The difference between a gun and a tree is a difference of tempo. The tree explodes every spring."

Yesterday I went around town on a moped with a young man named Shyam who I borrowed from a photographer's studio and who was wielding a digital camera. We were taking pictures of a small stadium and on the way back we took a few pictures of a Flame of the Forest tree. I am including them in this post so that all of you can also enjoy this sight.



p.s. In the first picture you can see a male purple sunbird. A parakeet was also sitting on this tree but we disturbed it so it flew away. Maybe we will have better luck next time.

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