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Sweet and sour, salt and spice, every experience needs to be coupled with a complementary, often contrasting experience in order to bring out the best of both. Likewise, a chaat platter must be finished off with a rich dessert in order to complete the enjoyment. And, what better mithai can you choose than our ever-popular Gulab Jamun! This recipe tells you how to make authentic Gulab Jamun, not with any readymade mixes, but with special hariyali mava, which gives the traditional sweet its rich mouth-feel and intense flavour.
Fit for a festive day, but made without much sweat! Who can resist crisp, perfectly roasted almonds coated in chocolate? Cool well, and treat yourself to these crunchy delights, or wrap them up in attractive papers and gift them to a dear one. Ensure that the almonds are well roasted so that they remain crisp. Making almond rocks in the microwave retains the aroma of chocolate, without any charring or unnecessary morphing of the flavour. It is as good as melting the chocolate in a double-boiler.
If you love tacos, wraps and just veggie-loaded snacks, you will love this stuffed dosa too! The Stuffed Moong Sprouts Dosa is a filling breakfast that provides a good wallop of protein (for healthy cells), calcium (for healthy bones) and iron (for haemoglobin). It is also an innovative and tasty way to consume left-over sprouts, fortified with veggies like cabbage and carrot and flavoured with peppy chaat masala!
The thandai smoothie is a fruit-less smoothie with a rich and festive feel. Since the thandai syrup is based mainly on spices, this smoothie is generally liked more by adults than kids.
Kids love exotic dishes from around the world – and so do we! So, what’s stopping you from preparing these delicious Chilli Bean Quesadillas to enjoy as an evening treat, along with a cup of hot Tea or a Milkshake ? This Mexican treat is not only tasty but also quite satiating. The filling, made with readily-available ingredients like canned baked beans and cheese, is quick and easy to prepare. You just need a couple of minutes to prepare the Quesidillas with a dough of plain flour and maize flour. You can breeze through the rest of the procedure, and there, your tasty treat will be ready in a jiffy! Serve it immediately on preparation, or the quesadillas will get soggy.
Who doesn’t like chivda! It does comes as a shock to diabetics that they can’t have deep-fried, oily chivda, but this recipe is sure to put the smile back on your faces. Here, we first make baked nachni sev and temper it to make tasty Baked Nachni Chivda. The use of lemon juice, garlic paste and other flavour enhancers in the nachni dough gives the sev a delectable flavour, which is further enhanced by the tempering. We have suggested a small but satisfying portion size, which is within the norms of a diabetic diet.
Rich creamy kulfi topped with falooda and rose syrup is a dessert which finds a place at every Indian buffet counter. Kulfi is our very own Indian ice-cream made from thickened and reduced milk flavoured with saffron and cardamom. Falooda is fresh cornflour "sev" (vermicelli). Kulfi falooda are almost synonymous and make perfect dessert mates. You will find ready dried falooda in the market which has to be rehydrated before use. But of course, nothing is as good as making it yourself!
The potato song is inseparable from the cuisine of goa and neighbouring regions along the western coast of india. This simple yet aesthetic dish blends with the idyllic and scenic environment along the coast!
We present authentic Tandoori Paneer Tikka in all its glory, albeit grilled conveniently in an oven rather than in a tandoor. Succulent paneer pieces, marinated in a pungent mix of masala powders, ginger, garlic, curd and most importantly kasuri methi, gets an irresistible aroma and a nice blend of spicy, bitter and sour flavours that tease yet delight the taste buds excitingly.
The combination of cutlets and spaghetti makes this starter quite sumptuous, while the tomato sauce provides all the flavours you need to by-pass a separate accompaniment. Overall, the Cutlets in Tomato Sauce with Spaghetti is a winner when it comes to preparing a tasty yet different starter, which has something to offer everybody – be it the snack lover, the spaghetti freak or the diner who dwells on tangy thrills.
Tendli or ivy gourd is found almost all over the country. In fact, it is available even abroad, under the name of gherkins. But, every community has a favourite way of cooking it. Telugu people make stuffed tendli curry, while tamilians cook it with a simple tempering. The konkan people like to match it with fresh, raw cashews, while the Maharashtrains like it with rice. Rice and tendli are cooked with assorted spices and grated coconut, resulting in a sumptuous meal. You can even try making this with brinjals instead of tendli. Serve hot garnished with cashewnuts, and simply tuck in to this Maharashtrian special.
Au gratin is a continental dish, traditionally made with fat-laden white sauce and cheese. Here we have made the white sauce using low-fat milk, and to your surprise, we have used fibre-rich oats for thickening it! The Oats and Vegetable Au Gratin is also chock-full of colourful veggies, which are high in fibre, iron and vitamin A. Serve this healthy delicacy immediately and fresh with whole wheat garlic bread to make a sumptuous meal.
A delectable accompaniment ready in minutes! carrots and capsicum, sautéed lightly with mustard seeds and tossed in a spicy masala—that’s it! remember that the crunchiness of the vegetables is the unique selling proposition of gajar marcha nu sambhaariyu. So, never overcook the veggies, and consume it fresh before the crispiness sags away! it tastes best when made fresh and can be stored for 4 to 5 days when refrigerated.
Soups can either be kind or kindling, and this one is of the latter style! Pepped up with oregano and chilli flakes, this spicy soup features an iron-rich combination of rajma and Mexican salsa. Blanched and finely chopped tomatoes make the soup super tangy, and also impart a lasting good mouth-feel. The Spicy Salsa Bean Soup is indeed a fitting prelude to a heavy meal.
gehun ki Bikaneri khichdi recipe | Rajasthani gehun ki khichdi | wheat and moong dal khichdi | with 35 amazing images. gehun ki Bikaneri khichdi recipe | Rajasthani gehun ki khichdi | wheat and moong dal khichdi is a daily fare in Rajasthan. Learn how to make Rajasthani gehun ki khichdi. To make gehun ki Bikaneri khichdi, clean, wash and soak the whole wheat with enough water in a deep bowl overnight. Drain and keep aside. Clean, wash and soak the yellow moong dal in enough water in a deep bowl for 2 hours. Drain and keep aside. Blend the wheat to a coarse paste in a mixer without using any water. Keep aside. Heat the ghee in a pressure cooker, add the cumin seeds, green chillies and asafoetida and sauté on a medium flame for 30 seconds. Add the coarsely crushed wheat and yellow moong dal and sauté on a medium flame for 2 minutes. Add the salt and 3½ cups of hot water, mix well and pressure cook for 6 whistles. Allow the steam to escape before opening the lid. Serve immediately. Rice not being native to Rajasthan, the people there prefer to use wheat, bajra and jowar even for making typical rice dishes like khichdi and raab. Rajasthani gehun ki khichdi is one such innovative khichdi recipe adapted to use wheat. Hailing from Bikaner, as the name suggests, the gehun ki Bikaneri khichdi is a wholesome and nutritious combination of wheat and moong dal that has a fabulous flavour despite employing minimal spices! The traditional use of ghee in the tempering and the aroma of crackling jeera in it is truly enticing. The coarse wheat, spiced with only slit green chillies, when cooked gives a meal that warms your soul. This wheat and moong dal khichdi is a perfect winter comfort food. Enjoy this sumptuous khichdi with curds, ghee and a spicy mango pickle. Tips for gehun ki Bikaneri khichdi. 1. Whole wheat is difficult to cook and so has to be soaked overnight. If you want to make for dinner, ensure you soak it to for at least 10 to 12 hours. 2. Blend the soaked and drained wheat into a coarse mixture only. This will lend a good texture to the khichdi. 3. Serving the khichdi is very important, else it might thicken with time. 4. You can also add ¼ tsp of turmeric powder before pressure cooking. Enjoy gehun ki Bikaneri khichdi recipe | Rajasthani gehun ki khichdi | wheat and moong dal khichdi | with step by step photos.
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