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Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Slow Cooker Watermelon Rind Relish (Puli Pachadi)


Slow Cooker Watermelon Rind Relish



Watermelon rinds being watery and edible and mild, it is used in quite a few Indian dishes. With its texture and taste bland enough like Ash gourd or Opo Squash or Chayote squash, it lends itself well to spicy dishes.


Slow Cooker Watermelon Rind Relish



Puli Pachadi is a thick south Indian concoction made with tamarind, jaggery, ginger, and chilies; with or without the addition of grated coconut. One such concoction is Puli Inji (Tamarind Ginger) which is one of my favorites, the way my mom makes it.

Borrowing the idea of Puli Inji, I added watermelon rinds - just the white portions that kids discard usually. Most of the work is done by the slow cooker. The labor-intensive part is to salvage the rinds and cut even chunks out of them for this recipe.

Add the water melon rinds to the slow cooker along with enough of tamarind paste, grape molasses, apple cider vinegar, white vinegar, Thai red chilies, whole black pepper, and salt to taste. Slow cook on low for about 5 hours till the liquids congeal and thicken to ooze concentrated flavor.

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Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Pan-Seared Yellow Eye Rockfish Infused with Hibiscus Tea and Tamarind

Pan-Seared Yellow Eye Rockfish Infused with Hibiscus Tea and Tamarind



Another small portion of the Alaskan Yellow Eye rockfish was in the freezer, caught by the other adult last summer.

For over half a dozen years now, I have been savoring hibiscus tea made with dried hibiscus flowers as my beverage of choice for a relaxing evening. I've used the thick steeped hibiscus tea for home-dyeing of small fabric projects with the kids.




While making the thick gravy-ish sauce/topping for the pan-seared yellow eye, I decided to incorporate some of the lovely flavor (and color!) of the hibiscus tea that I had steeping handily in the tea pot.

Some fresh baby kale leaves and arugula leaves from the home-garden was rubbed with a hint of olive oil and sprinkled with a dash of lime juice to make a quick side salad.

Ingredients
½ onion, diced
6-8 cloves of garlic, crushed
1 large tomato, chopped

½ cup thick rich hibiscus tea
1 teaspoon cayenne pepper powder
1 Tablespoon balsamic vinegar
1 Tablespoon tamarind paste
salt to taste

2 Tablespoons olive oil

fairly thin fish fillets, thawed and ready to cook

Preparation
  1. Grind the onions, garlic, and tomato to a coarse paste
  2. Heat a tablespoon of olive oil, add the paste, some salt, and saute
  3. Add some hibiscus tea and saute some more till the gravy is rich and aromatic
  4. Rub the fish fillets with salt, cayenne pepper, and tamarind paste
  5. In another pan, heat another tablespoon of oil and add the fish fillets
  6. Flip when bottom side is golden brown, and a dash of balsamic vinegar and hibiscus tea
  7. Cook till fish is done




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Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Bitter Gourd Bean Bites

Bitter Gourd Bean Bites


Sometimes  recipes come about because I am trying to use up bits and pieces, odds and ends, from the fridge before it is beyond salvaging.

Bitter Gourd Bean Bites


About half a cup of slow-cooked spicy beans and one large bitter melon were ignoring each other in the fridge. So, I decided to bring them together in this dish.

Instead of the beans, can use any leftovers like ground meat or mashed potatoes or even herbed goat cheese and feta.

Ingredients
½ cup slow-cooked flavorful black beans or pinto beans
1 large bitter melon
1 Tablespoon tamarind concentrate (sold as Sour Soup Mix in Asian stores)
1 Tablespoon chopped chipotle in adobo sauce
1 Tablespoon brown sugar
salt to taste
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil or olive oil

Cilantro and toasted sesame seeds for garnish

Preparation:
  1. Cut the bitter melon lengthwise in half, scoop out the pulpy innards with seeds, chop into bite-sized pieces, sprinkle some salt and allow to sit on a towel to drain for about 10 minutes
  2. Pre-heat the oven to 425°F
  3. Arrange the bitter melon pieces on a greased roasting pan; add a drop each of tamarind concentrate and adobo sauce chipotle; sprinkle some brown sugar and salt
  4. Bake in the 425°F oven for about 12 minutes
  5. Remove from heat, add a dollop of the bean-filling on each piece and cook for about another 4 to 5 minutes, turn off the oven
  6. Top with cheese if preferred and return it to the oven for the cheese to melt (with the oven off, the residual heat is enough to melt the cheese)
  7. Garnish and serve warm


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