I mainly used white colored ingredients - yogurt, cream, white onions paste, ginger-garlic paste, aromatic spices - I like cardamom, some cumin, white pepper, cashew nuts paste, some green chilli deseeded (or skip it), lemon juice. Cook on very slow heat and don't burn the spices or brown the onions. It is to be cooked in a slow simmer. The nut paste is used in the end to thicken the gravy and for the color. Use blanched almond slivers to decorate it. I prefer to skip putting cilantro on it. It is to be served at room temp. This dish works well with Indian breads. I have served it in the past with akki roti (rice flour roti), rumali roti, laccha parantha, plain naan with nigella seeds, but visually a spinach parantha with sattu filling has appealed to my family more. I would prefer a plain rumali roti with it. |
Do Indians have a 'thali platter' every day in India? If they do, who cooks there (how do they have time and you don't)? |
Does it make you sleepy? What do they put in it ? Sleepy feeling come from eating types of foods too. |
Indian chicken fingers ? |
No one eats a restaurant thali every day. But a typical meal in our South Indian household would comprise of a sambar/dal, rasam, 2 vegetable dishes, a small chopped salad, rice, pickle and yogurt. We would help prep the ingredients the night before. My mom would cook everything for the 10 people in our household within 2 hours, including making a separate hot breakfast. |
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I love Indian food.
Roti Naan Chicken Tika Marsala Paneer And more..... |
Can't speak for others. DH and my family always had cooks and maids. Enough dishes were made every day to have a "thali". Daal, rice, breads, non-veg dish, fried dishes, a few vegetarian dishes, yogurt, salad, dessert, pickle, chutney, papad etc almost every day. Then there were also full-fledged "continental" dishes and indo-chinese dishes. Dad had a good job and both parents had generational wealth. |
Agreed— he’s terrific. I’m South Indian, and he makes the dishes my mom made better than I could. Seriously. |
Chicken kebabs or tandoori chicken? Chicken pakodas? |
+ 1 Daily cooking for the family is the norm in an Indian household. Does not matter who makes the food. Food gets made fresh in majority of households. There were always a bunch of household cooking chores - kneading dough, soaking beans, chopping veggies, shelling peas, grinding batter, boiling milk, setting yogurt... it was part and parcel of daily life. Yes...took a huge chunk of time. And all of this inspite of the fact that most people are not making papads, badis, pickles, sauces, jellies...at home like our mother's did. An |
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I love a paneer that’s just the right temperature; firm outside soft chewy inside.
I don't like that some restaurants use red dyes on meat. |
Paneer is my particular weakness. This thread is making me hungry. |
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I have gone back to making my own paneer at home with full fat organic milk and the difference in taste and texture is amazing.
You can control for taste - using real lemon juice instead of vinegar when separating the milk solids. Also, depending upon what you want to make - paneer bhurji, paneer curry, grilled paneer or bengali sweets - you can manipulate how much moisture you want to retain and how long you want to cook the paneer in the whey. The one size fits all paneer was just not working that great for me. You can also reuse the whey for kneading dough or to make pulao, veggis, daals, kadhi etc. |
Is $9.99 for a square (can't remember how big exactly) about the standard for paneer at non-ethnic stores (MoM's for example)? |