Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Hummus with a Twist- An Indian Israeli!

Blame it on my infatuation with Kasol (touted as Mini Israel of India) or fascination with things Arab-Lebanese (don't insist on knowing the exact items on the list), HUMMUS becomes the first dish that appears here in the list of experiments. For those not really conversant (as I was till a few years ago) with the dish, it is a dish made of chickpeas (or सफेद चने), olive oil and Tahini (a paste of sesame seeds). It makes a great dip with roasted or tandoori meat/chicken or even cutlets and patties.  As a food, it is a great add on to Lebanese dish of Falafel (that is fritters loaded with chickpeas  and served with pickled salad and Hummus, usually wrapped in a Pita bread or Taboon). For lesser mortals like me, it makes a good spread inside a plain chapati or a slice of bread.

The well established way of creating Hummus is as under (Blue is what is accepted internationally; Red is what I chose to have; Black is the undisputed part).....

1.   Ingredients 
      a.       White Chickpeas Canned (soaked for a few hours, boiled in minimum water) - 2 Cups (reason for variation is my preference against processed foods)
      b.       Tahini Readymade Paste (White sesame seeds, powdered through dry grinding ) - 1/2 Cup (1/4 Cup) (Reason is same as above; homemade Tahini can be made by roasting the sesame seeds and then blending with some olive oil.But I chose to simply grind the seeds dry. Quantity reduced to check too much of chalk-like texture/flavour that comes with higher quantity of sesame seeds).
     c.        Extra virgin olive oil - 1/4 cup (does no harm!).
     d.        Garlic cloves peeled - 02 (06) (Two is too less and anything more will depend upon your own taste preference; six worked well for me).
     e.        Salt (Sea/black salt) to taste (wanted to break the blandness). 
     f.        Pepper, freshly ground - half (one) teaspoon (depends on tolerance level)
     g.       Paprika (dry red chilies - 4 to 5, freshly ground) (Didn't have Paprika at home since I no longer order Pizzas that would have enabled me to stock up a sachet or two of the condiments that come along☺☺☺)
    h.       Chopped fresh parsley for garnish.
    j.        (Did you notice the 'i' missing? Ask me the reason separately). Cumin Powder - 01 teaspoon.
    k.       Fresh lemon juice of One (Two) lemons (adds the extra zing).

2.     Preparation.
     a.     Standard Way (using processed food ingredients).....Everything, as above except  parsley leaves, goes into a food processor. Run well till a smooth paste is churned out. If required, add some water (the one left in the can)
     b.     My Way......Soaked the chickpeas overnight. Shifted these into a pressure cooker and boiled for 30 minutes on low flame and with water just enough to cover the peas. The trick, I discovered, lies in making sure that peel or skin of the chickpeas must get as soft as its core or else the end product would be coarse and grainy. Since I didn't use Tahini, I dry ground the pepper, sesame seeds and dried chilies first and then put everything in a bigger jug for grinding. With olive oil in, there was no need to add any water (so drank the leftover water from the pressure cooker as a cold soup, straight up!). But please note that I had made no attempt to fully drain the water from  chickpeas while shifting these from the cooker to the blender jug; I kept on casually scooping chickpeas while allowing whatever little water that came on board every time the ladle was put into and pulled out of the pressure cooker. Just about a minute and half of machine work and there it was - soft, creamy Hummus with a tinge that suits my taste buds better than its purely international but bland counterpart.

3.      The End Result....
(Don't see the parsley garnishing? Well, I did not have any and it was too late to buy it. In any case, with demonetization on, small change is bit of a problem!)

Some More Recipes.....HERE

Introduction to this Particular Blog

I am no great cook; my culinary skills are simply not enough to enable me to invent some recipe or two. But I love to eat and as I expect some real handful of spare time in the days to come, I have decided to try my hand on these experiments - experiments with existing recipes so as to give or add, what our Czia calls, a twist. I eat everything and no cuisine is 'no-no' for me. Yes, since 2011, I have turned a 'fish veg'. Yep, probably, I have invented a term, if not a recipe, here! I have been abstaining from mutton and chicken simply because of lack of urge to consume flesh in such forms. Eggs, fish, sea food and veg stuff are all OK.
Modus operandi is gonna be simple. I will try and bring in some change(s), whether in the ingredients ie both in terms of ratios and composition or in the cooking process, with the stated aim of getting the dish(es) closer to my Indian taste buds. Also, some of the recipes that appeal to me here and there, I may try to prove it right or otherwise in my own hearth. And that is what it would be. Please don't expect wonders or some path breaking innovations! If you are ok with ok stuff by a not so ok a chef, it would be ok to scroll through otherwise it may be ok to say 'ok, bye, bye' right here!

Happy eating!

The List is Here.....

HUMMUS - An Indian Israeli..... please click HERE

MIRCHI-BAINGAN SALAN - Ms Hot+ Mr Cool! ..... please click HERE.

MUTTER-MOOLI-GAJAR- An Extra Marital Affair.....please click HERE.

MACHCHLI MANCHALI- The 'Just Happened' Fish recipe

SPRING ONIONS IN GRAM FLOUR - Pyaz Basanti..... please click HERE.



Our Travel Tales are HERE