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Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Herbed Garlic Pull Apart Bread





What you need?

All purpose flour: 2 cups
Sugar: 1 tbsp
Salt: ½ tsp
Oil: 3 tbsp
Instant yeast: 2 tsp
Lukewarm milk or water (for kneading): ¾ cup or as needed

For the garlic herb spread:

Butter (salted): 3 tbsp
Chopped coriander: 1 tbsp
Chopped mint: 1 tsp
Pepper powder: 1 tsp
Chilli flakes: 1 tsp
Basil (fresh or dried): 1 tsp
Finely chopped garlic: 3-4 pods

How to create it?

The garlic herb spread:
Bring butter to room temperature. Once the butter is creamy in the room temperature add in all the other ingredients and mix. The spread is ready.

The bread:

Since I used the instant yeast here I added it directly to the flour without proofing but if you are using dry yeast you’ll have to proof it first.

For proofing the yeast: mix the sugar with 1/4th of the lukewarm water/ milk in a bowl. Next add in the yeast to the sugar solution. Cover the bowl with a kitchen cloth and let it rest of 10-15 min. After 10 min your yeast mixture is proofed if you notice frothy bubbles. Now this is ready to go into the flour.

  • For those using instant yeast like me, take a deep big bowl, add in the flour.
  • Next add salt, sugar, oil and instant yeast. Mix them well.
  • Now pour the milk or water, little by little and knead into dough.
  • In the beginning the dough will feel sticky so don’t shy away from adding some more flour to ease your kneading.
  • While making any bread dough, the more you stretch the better it is as the gluten strands get stretched which helps the bread to rise. That’s why I prefer kneading it in a flat surface on the kitchen counter as it gives me lot of space for stretching the dough. 
  • After kneading for some good 15-20 min you’ll see the dough no more sticks to your hands. It means your dough is now ready to rise.
  • Rub oil all over the dough and let it rest in a greased bowl for 1 ½ hour. Do cover the bowl with a kitchen towel.
  • After 1 ½ hours your dough would rise to double.

  • Now take the dough out of the bowl and punch it gently to take out the air.
  • Lightly dust the surface with some flour and roll the dough into a square or rectangle shape of about 1mm thickness with a rolling pin.
  • Spread the garlic herb mixture we made before on top of the rolled surface.
  • Now with a sharp knife, cut the dough into ribbon like long stripes. Make sure all the stripes are of equal size.
  • Suppose you have made 5 stripes- stripe 1, stipe 2, stripe 3, stripe 4 and stripe 5.
  •  Now carefully pull out stripe 2 and place it on top of stripe 1, similarly pull out stripe 3 and place it on top of stripe 2, and likewise, stripe 4 goes on top of stripe 3 and stripe 5 will go on top of stripe 4.
  • So now we have placed all the stripes on top of each other.
  • Now cut the heap of stripes into equal square pieces and place horizontally into a greased loaf pan.
  • Cover the loaf pan with a kitchen cloth and let it rise again for 1 ½ hours.
  • Once the dough is double again, brush the top with milk and bake it in a pre-heated oven at 180 degrees for 25 minutes.
  • After 25 minutes your bread top will turn golden brown. This is the time to take it out of the oven and de-mold immediately into a cooling rack.
  • Unlike cakes, for breads de-molding should be done immediately or else the base will get soggy
  • Let the bread cool for 20 minutes in the cooling rack so that air passes through all the sides.
  •  Viola your bread is ready to be indulged!
[This bread tastes better when eaten fresh but you can store it in your fridge for 2 days. You can re-heat for 1 minute or so before eating]


P.S: Since I was running short of time so I couldn’t click step by step images. But soon I will update this post with the step by step pictures for better understanding of the recipe. Till then stay tuned! :) 

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Eggless French Toast


(serves: 1)



I love French toasts. Though all these years i have been making the egg version  but today i thought of giving my vegetarian husband a taste of this awesome breakfast recipe. And trust me, it tasted better than the egg ones. So whether you’re a vegetarian or not, try this amazing recipe and give your mornings a welcome toast! 

What you need?

Milk: ½ cup
Corn flour: 1 tbsp
Rice flour (i used it for extra crispiness): 1 tsp
Sugar: 1 tbsp
Vanilla essence: 1 tsp
Bread: 2 slices
Oil for frying

How to create it?

Take milk in a bowl




Add corn flour and rice flour


Then add the sugar


Next goes the vanilla essence 


Cut the bread slices diagonally and dip in the milk 


Grease pan with little oil and fry on both sides till the crust turns crispy golden brown


Your eggless French toast is ready. You can tea it with honey, maple syrup or just plain with tea. Have a good morning! :) 


 

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Lucknowi Baati Chokha

Baati is one dish with many versions. In Rajasthan it is savored as daal baati churma. In Bihar this rustic dish has found a delightful place in every heart as litti chokha. And in the nawabi town of Lucknow this   provincial cuisine transforms itself into Baati Chokha. On my recent visit to Lucknow I got to taste the lip smacking baati chokha that sells on the road side stalls like hot cakes...well no… like hot baati chokhas ;) After coming back I thought of giving this Lucknowi delicacy a try in my kitchen here in Chennai. This recipe is divided into three steps- first making the ‘Chokha’, then the sattu filling that goes inside the baati and finally making the baati. So here I go…


What you need?

For the chokha:
Tomatoes: 2
Brinjal (medium sized): 2
Boiled Potatoes: 2
Roasted dried red chillis: 2 (I used roasted red chilli as they give a nice smokey flavor to the dish, you can go for green chillis also if you like)
Onion: 1
Chopped coriander leaves: 2 tbsp
Mustard oil or extra virgin olive oil- 1 tbsp
Salt to taste

Filling for the baati:
Sattu (roasted gram powder): 1 cup
Garlic & green chilli paste: 2 tbsp
Ginger paste: 1 tsp
Caron seeds: 1 tsp
Clarified butter (ghee): 1 tbsp
Pickle masala: 1 tsp
Salt: ½ tsp

For the Baati:
Wheat flour: 2 cups
Baking Soda: ¼ tsp
Clarified butter (ghee): 2 tbsp and some more for greasing
Carom seeds: 1 tsp
Salt: 1 tsp

How to create it?

The chokha:
Roast the tomato in your gas until the skin turns black

Similarly roast the brinjal

Once the tomatoes and brinjals are cool. Peel off and put them together in a big bowl along with the boiled potatoes.

Mash them with a fork or even better with your hands

Roast the red chillies in the gas oven and crush them into the mash. By now your kitchen would already flood with an awesome smokey aroma

Next add the chopped onion, coriander and salt.


Mix it all into a nice mash and your chokha is ready!



Filling for The baati:
Dry mix sattu, garlic- green chilli paste, caron seeds, ghee, ginger paste, salt and pickle masala in a bowl.


Now add little water to form a coarse powdery texture. Your baati filling is ready. Now lets get to making the baati.
Baati:
Mix  all the ingredients mentioned for the baati together in a bowl



Add water and make a dough just the way you do for chapatti

Now take a small portion of the down and make a cavity in the centre like you do while making aloo parathas.

Stuff the cavity with the filling and seal the edges properly.

Shape it into a ball.

Repeat the process for all.

Grease the over portion of the baati with ghee and bake in a pre-heated oven. The baking time varies from oven to oven. Mine is a convection microwave and it took me 15 min at 100 degrees. Serve the baati hot with the yummy chokha. Bon appétit! 
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