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North Indian

Zarda – Pakistani style Sweet Rice

March 4, 2023 By Asha Shivakumar

Zarda or Sweet Rice is a favorite dessert that’s simple to make and addictive. It is  sweetened rice with sugar, toasted nuts.  Colorful, flavorful with spices and perfect for parties or festivals.

Zarda or Sweet Rice #zarda #riceJump-to-Recipe

I grew up with parents who had friends from different cultural backgrounds. It wasn’t intentional, it just happened.  Having friends who are culturally different from you allows you to develop an insight into their lives. It shows you how their practices or beliefs are different from yours, and yet, how it leads to their growth. It teaches one to accept differences and to build an understanding that no religion or culture is better than the other but that each has its unique features. One has to learn from them and inculcate the good in them, if possible. Multiculturalism becomes an important concept to inculcate in today’s world of globalization where more than ever, the chances of people living and interacting with racially and culturally different people than their own are heightened. The main advantage of having friends from different ethnic backgrounds and cultures is that it promotes multiculturalism within individuals,andfood. …

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Filed Under: Dessert, Dinner, Entertaining, Festival Food, Fruits, INDIAN SWEETS, North Indian, Rice, Sweets Tagged With: dessert, pakistani zarda, Sweet, sweet rice, zarda, zarda pulao

Nawabi Daal Kheema/Chicken Mince with Legumes

November 26, 2022 By Asha Shivakumar

Daal Kheema or chicken mince with legumes is a Nawabi rich dish which combines two unusual ingredients that work so well with each other. It’s delicious, perfect to entertain and will transport you to a Delhi Nawabi kitchen.

Nawabi Daal Kheema/Chicken Mince with Legumes #mughlaidishes #indianchickenrecipesJump-to-Recipe

For hundreds of years, the Indian city of Lucknow has been famous for its opulent cuisine traditions, which are still practiced by a few chefs. Until the British arrived on the scene, Lucknow and the surrounding area were controlled by Nawabs. Incredibly wealthy, each Nawabi ruler had a team of chefs, who competed to create the most sumptuous meals. Theirs was a luxurious style of cooking — heavy on cream and oil, marinated meat and innumerable spices.

Thankfully a handful of recipes remain and the chefs have left some traditional and well loved recipes. When the Mughal empire crumbled the chefs and cooks were left to fend for themselves, they set up shop in the open market areas of Old Delhi and a love affair was sealed.

The Nawabi food is  exotic. It had to be unexpected.  Nawabi cuisine were riddle dishes. At one 19th-century feast, cooks used sugar, honey and other sweets to create an entire riddle meal. Desserts masqueraded as entrees like kebabs, curries and even whole fish. Even a simple, everyday dish would use, shall we say, instead of three or four spices, every day, it would change and would include 30 odd spices, condiments with flavoring agents. But what would always be essential there is an aromatic spice, which is dominant. … It is, again, like music.

Now, the Nawabi lifestyle is no more.

Our good friends mom comes from a royal family in Delhi. Their khandani Bawarchi(family chef) would make authentic nawabi food. She is passionate cook and a treasure cove of stories. Whenever she comes to visit her son in US, we are lucky to be invited to her place for dinner. I am very grateful to have eaten the amazing food. Even more thankful to have some recipes that she’s shared with me. This is the simplest of dishes I’ve learnt from her. Although, this recipe is a toned down version, easy ingredients, it does not lack in flavor. While it might not stand up to the chef or my aunt, it is extremely delicious.

Do try it out!! So good!

…

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Filed Under: 30 min meals, Chicken, CURRY, Entertaining, Entree, Goat/Mutton, Indian, Non Vegetarian, Non-Veg, North Indian, North Indian Tagged With: chicken, chicken mince, chicken recipes, daal kheema recipe, dal kheema, kheema, party dishes

Figs and Nuts Gujjia/Sweet Samosa – Sugar free

October 16, 2022 By Asha Shivakumar

Gujjia, aka sweet samosa is such a delicious treat that’s crispy on the outside stuffed with sweet yummy filling. This is a sugar free fig and nuts gujia that is so addictive.

Figs and Nuts Gujjia/Sweet Samosa - Sugar free #gujia #diwalisweetJump-to-Recipe

Sweet Samosa is what we call this at home.  For as long as I was India, the only  version I knew had dried coconut, sooji and nuts. The other with khoya dipped in sugar syrup.  Once I ventured into a whole new world, learnt new recipes, I realized there’s so many more delicious fillings that work great for Gujia. Gujjia is a must make dish for Diwali at home. Mom made hundreds a week before Diwali and stored in large steel containers. They were addictive and you could never be satisfied with one.

Although I love the traditional kind my mom makes, I enjoy making a lighter version. There’s nothing healthy or light about deep fried crispy goodness, but hey, If you prefer, air fry it. I’ve done that and it works great too.

Today I share one of my new favorite ways to make gujiya. Filled with cashews and sugar free figs, I think you will love this fig gujiya. The stuffing is made out of cashews and almonds, ground together with figs. It makes for a delicious stuffing that is healthy and no sugar added since the figs add the texture and sweetness….

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Filed Under: Almonds, Baking, Coconut, diwali, Entertaining, Festival Food, Fried Foods, Indian, INDIAN SWEETS, North Indian, Nuts, Sweet, Sweets Tagged With: Diwali, diwali sweet, diwali sweet treats, gujia, gujjia, healthy diwali treats, healthy treat, samosa, Snack, sweet samosa

Rajasthani Rassewali Moth Curry with Ridgegourd

September 17, 2021 By Asha Shivakumar

This Rajasthani Rassewali Moth Curry with Ridgegourd is a tomato-ey spicy homestyle recipe that is inspired by a potato dish from Rajasthan.  This Moth Dal recipe makes the perfect plant-based Indian meal! Rich, fragrant, and packed with protein for a meal you can feel good about and it’s authentic tasting. 

Rajasthani Rassewali Moth Curry with Ridgegourd #Indiancurry #rajasthanicurry

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To make your decisions wisely, you should have a clear mind. For a clear mind, you need to focus on you and take breaks every once in a while.

We all have gone through our struggles in the last many months. The range varies. We have also come/coming out of it stronger and better than ever. For one what the pandemic has taught me is: what I missed and what I didn’t, what’s important and what is not….

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Filed Under: CURRY, Dinner, Entree, healthy, HEALTHY COOKING, Indian, Lunch, North Indian, North Indian, Veg, Vegan, VEGETARIAN, Weeknight Meal Tagged With: Curry, Easy Curry, healthy curry, healthy recipes, Indian curry, moth beans, moth beans curry, Rajasthani curry, Rajasthani dish, Rajasthani Rassewali Moth curry, rassewali curry, ridgegourd curry, Vegan curry, watery curry, weekday curry, weekday recipe

Rajasthani Onion Besan Paratha

May 1, 2021 By Asha Shivakumar

Rajasthani Onion Besan Paratha is truly a treat. Crispy and spicy, they go well with a side of yogurt or boondi raita. It puffs up, blisters beautifully and the stuffing of onion and besan is out of the world tasty. This will transport you to an authentic Rajasthani home.

Rajasthani Onion Besan Paratha #onionparatha #paratha

While the world knows about naan and almost every food blogger has a recipe, that’s not a flatbread we make often in Indian homes. Rotis, chapathis or parathas is the common flatbread we make. Stuffed parathas are a treat on weekends. And they are probably my favorite, stuffed Rajasthani onion besan paratha comes on top.

Paratha

Parathas are made out of whole wheat flour, folded and cooked on a griddle. Stuffed paratha dough is slightly most softer than a chapathi dough and it’s popularly stuffed with potatoes, radishes, you think of it, you can stuff it.  Onion Parathas are very popular to the region of Rajasthan. It’s slightly more spicier than the normal stuffed parathas. They are cooked on a thick griddle, but if you have a tandoor, nothing like it. The tandoor fills the inside of the flat bread with air pockets and bakes them to perfection.

Don’t be deterred by the number of ingredients in the recipe—although the process may look time-consuming, parathas are actually quick to make.  Cook it on low and make sure to crisp them up. How crisp you make them, however, is up to your taste….

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Filed Under: chickpea, Dinner, Entertaining, Indian, Indian flatbread, Lunch, Lunch Box, North Indian, North Indian, South Indian, Spicy, VEGETARIAN Tagged With: besan paratha, flatbread, indian flatbread, indian recipes, indianfood, north Indian recipes, onion paratha, Paratha, parathas, roti, stuffed paratha

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