Monday, September 10, 2007

Rice with Bele Saaru & Badanekayi/Ennegayi Palya - A Kannadiga Lunch!

I enjoy cooking for Regional Cuisine of India the most, mainly because it gives me an opportunity to take a peek into some really cool names of vegetables, dishes and even ethnic recipes. I loved researching for Karnataka recipes and as always settled for something easy, yet something I would want to cook again cuz it turned out really well.

Here is our Sunday lunch - a simple Kannadiga one!



I. Bele Saaru

The lovely Karnataka style sambhar with a unique sweet flavour contributed by jaggery. The consistency is supposed to be thicker than rasam but thinner than normal sambhar, but since we like it on the thicker side, I made it that way. I am especially proud of the fact that I made the saarina pudi from scratch (like I have mentioned a lot of times already :D). Forgive me, but making curry powders from scratch is a huge deal for me :D


What I Used:

Toor dal - 1/2 cup
Tamarind paste - 2 tsp
Jaggery powder - 2 tsp
Saarina pudi - 2 spoons
Turmeric powder - 1/4 tsp
Chilly powder - 1/2 tsp
Green chillies - 3
Drumsticks - 1
Salt - to taste
Curry leaves - one strand

How I Made It:

1. Pressure cook the dal with turmeric powder, drumsticks cut into long pieces, green chillies and sufficient water.

2. Once the excess pressure has left the cooker, adjust the consistency by adding water if necessary. Then add the tamarind paste and jaggery and mix well.

3. Temper mustard seeds, curry leaves, saarina pudi, chilly powder in some oil and when it emits a nice smell, add into the above mixture. Mix and serve hot with rice.

Basic recipe courtesy.

II. Bandanekayi/Ennegayi Palya

This is a simple brinjal curry, with a lovely hot & sweet flavour that I thoroughly enjoyed. I know brinjals are not the most popular vegetales around but I like it when its stir-fried in oil. This particular dish goes well with bele saaru and rice.


What I Used:

Ennegayi/brinjal - 5 medium
Onions - 2
Garlic paste - 1 tbsp
Curry leaves - one strand
Jeera powder - 1/2 tsp
Chilly powder - 2 tsp
Hing - one pinch
Tamarind paste - 1 tsp
Jaggery powder - 1 tsp
Turmeric powder - 1/4 tsp
Oil - 2 tbsp
Salt - to taste


How I Made It:

1. Cut the brinjals into cubes and soak them in water with little salt.

2. Heat the oil and add jeera, hing and then onions.Fry a little and then add chilli powder. Fry again before adding the brinjals, tamarind paste, salt and jaggery.

3. Cook keeping the pan covered. When the brinjals are done, add the garam masala, fry for another minute and remove from fire.

4. Serve hot with rice and bele saaru. Atleast, that's what I did :)

Basic recipe courtesy.

I am sending this to RCI: Karnataka, in case you hadn't guessed already. Thank you for hosting, Asha. Good luck with the round-up. I know your inbox is full already :)

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