This pepper rasam recipe is quick and easy to make and is one of my favorites. I like to just drink it sometimes, especially when I have a stuffy nose and head, but, it makes a nice simple meal with rice and sides like simple potato side or snakegourd side or snake beans and zuccini side.
Ingredients
4 Tbsp tamarind concentrate
1 medium tomato, diced
2 Tbsp canola oil (or ghee, i find ghee tastes better)
2 Tbsp chopped cilantro for garnish
4-5 curry leaves, chopped, chiffonade (optional)
1 Tbsp whole black pepper
4-5 dry red chilies
4-5 garlic cloves
2 tsp cumin seeds
2 tsp brown sugar
salt to taste
water as needed
tempering:
1 tsp mustard seeds
1 tsp cumin seeds
Preparation
- in a mortar and pestle, pound the cumin, black pepper, dry red chilies and garlic into a fairly smooth powdery paste
- if using fresh tamarind, shell it, soak it in hot water and extract pulp, discard seeds strings and skin, if any
- in a cooking pot, heat the oil/ghee and add the tempering*, when mustard seeds stop spluttering, add the pepper paste from step 1 and the tomatoes and sautee for a minute or so till the spices bloom
- add about 4-6 cups of water, tamarind pulp/concentrate, brown sugar, salt to taste; let it simmer till tomatoes are cooked well and the rawness of the tamarind is gone; amount of water determines how thin or thick the rasam turns out
- off heat, garnish with cilantro/curry leaves; serve warm with basmati rice, or as an appetizing soup
* traditionally, tempering is done last, in a separate tempering "ladle" of sorts and poured over the hot dish and allowed to sizzle; this works best, even tastes a little better; but, doing the tempering first has become a short-hand procedure for some of my cooking as I find it more convenient
lovely! Comforting to see the exact same method that I use as well. Little under the weather yesterday...came in handy!
ReplyDeleteI sometimes avoid the red chilli if I want to go low on the spice.
Mostly paired with veggie kootu or any coconut based cabbage or beans dry curry. It's a regular item once-a-week. Made milagu rasam y'day.