But on this particular weekend, I was all "I want Kerala food, coconut all the way". I usually shop for my vegetables for the week on Sunday evenings but that weekend, I headed off bright and early, ok 11am to be precise, on Saturday and guess what I saw first thing I stepped into the vegetable section.
This beauty right here. I am no pumpkin lover but erissery has always held a soft spot in my heart. Mom doesn't make it that often, actually. She makes pumpkin koottu more often, with dal. But erissery is a quintessential part of the Onam Sadya and I realised I haven't even tried it myself yet. That idea and this pumpkin combined, and the rest is history ;)
I couldn't resist more pictures of the pumkin. It was bright orange-yellow and smooth spotless on the outisde. Since this was during Chinese New Year, vegetables in Singapore supermarkets were fresh and mostly from China.
Ok now onto the Mathanga Erissery Recipe. Mathanga is pumpkin in malayalam, by the way.
This beauty right here. I am no pumpkin lover but erissery has always held a soft spot in my heart. Mom doesn't make it that often, actually. She makes pumpkin koottu more often, with dal. But erissery is a quintessential part of the Onam Sadya and I realised I haven't even tried it myself yet. That idea and this pumpkin combined, and the rest is history ;)
I couldn't resist more pictures of the pumkin. It was bright orange-yellow and smooth spotless on the outisde. Since this was during Chinese New Year, vegetables in Singapore supermarkets were fresh and mostly from China.
Ok now onto the Mathanga Erissery Recipe. Mathanga is pumpkin in malayalam, by the way.
What I Used:(serves 4 as a side)Pumpkin / mathanga - 3 cups, peeled and cut into 1" cubesGrated coconut - 1/2 cup (fresh works best but you can use frozen too)Cumin / jeera / jeerakam - 1 tspGreen chillies - 2, or to tasteTurmeric powder - 1/4 tspFor temperingMustard seeds - 1/4 tspUrad dal - 1 tspGrated coconut - 4 tbsp
Shallots - 3, slicedRed chillies - 3Curry leaves - a fewCoconut oil - 2 tsp (or any other oil you have)How I Made It:1. Boil the pumpkin in 1/4 cup water with salt and turmeric, until soft. This should take about 7 to 10 mins.2. Grind coconut, green chillies and jeera to a paste with requred amount of water. Add this to the cooked pumpkin and keep fire on sim. Adjust water if the curry is too thick at this stage. Add spoonfuls at a time so that it doesn't get too watery. If curry is too watery, then let it boil or add 1 tsp of rice flour mixed in 2 tsp water. Cook until desired consistency is reached, add salt and keep aside.3. Heat oil in a pan and add the mustard seeds. When they pop, add the urad dal, shallots and red chillies. Fry until the dal turns golden brown and the shallots turn transparent. Tear curry leaves and add to this. Mix well and pour directly over the cooked pumpkin curry.4. In the same pan, add the 4 tbsp coconut and fry on low heat till crispy and golden brown. Mix this into the curry and serve with steamed rice and pickles. Adding the fried coconut in the end is very important for the flavour of the curry so don't skip this step!
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