Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why so testy that most Indian food is oily. It's a simple fact. It might be that YOU have modified recipes, but generally speaking whrn I go back home to Bangalore (which is about 4xs.a.year due to work travel) I'm always working hard to avoid the excessive oil and vegetables cooked until they are dead. Don't get me wrong, it's good, but when I'm home it really stands out to me how the educated wealthy of India look like the uneducated poor in the US. And Indians are still eating Indian food, you can't blame it all on McDonald's. It's access to more rich foods and food in general.
Home cooked South Indian vegetarian food is not oily. And the vegetables are not cooked until they are dead. A lot of old world cultures have the tradition of slow cooking vegetables until they melt in your mouth.
North Indian vegetarian food is richer but that's what suits their cooler climate. Home cooked North Indian vegetable dishes are not done to death either.
Your facts are wrong as many on this thread have pointed out.
Maybe you all are so used to eating oily, overcooked veggies so you don't realize that they are indeed oily and overcooked?! It's 'normal' for you since you grew up with it and therefore you don't recognize it for being what it is.
Well my North Indian MIL's vegetables are super oily AND cooked to death. That's my experience with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why so testy that most Indian food is oily. It's a simple fact. It might be that YOU have modified recipes, but generally speaking whrn I go back home to Bangalore (which is about 4xs.a.year due to work travel) I'm always working hard to avoid the excessive oil and vegetables cooked until they are dead. Don't get me wrong, it's good, but when I'm home it really stands out to me how the educated wealthy of India look like the uneducated poor in the US. And Indians are still eating Indian food, you can't blame it all on McDonald's. It's access to more rich foods and food in general.
Home cooked South Indian vegetarian food is not oily. And the vegetables are not cooked until they are dead. A lot of old world cultures have the tradition of slow cooking vegetables until they melt in your mouth.
North Indian vegetarian food is richer but that's what suits their cooler climate. Home cooked North Indian vegetable dishes are not done to death either.
Your facts are wrong as many on this thread have pointed out.
Maybe you all are so used to eating oily, overcooked veggies so you don't realize that they are indeed oily and overcooked?! It's 'normal' for you since you grew up with it and therefore you don't recognize it for being what it is.
Well my North Indian MIL's vegetables are super oily AND cooked to death. That's my experience with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why so testy that most Indian food is oily. It's a simple fact. It might be that YOU have modified recipes, but generally speaking whrn I go back home to Bangalore (which is about 4xs.a.year due to work travel) I'm always working hard to avoid the excessive oil and vegetables cooked until they are dead. Don't get me wrong, it's good, but when I'm home it really stands out to me how the educated wealthy of India look like the uneducated poor in the US. And Indians are still eating Indian food, you can't blame it all on McDonald's. It's access to more rich foods and food in general.
Home cooked South Indian vegetarian food is not oily. And the vegetables are not cooked until they are dead. A lot of old world cultures have the tradition of slow cooking vegetables until they melt in your mouth.
North Indian vegetarian food is richer but that's what suits their cooler climate. Home cooked North Indian vegetable dishes are not done to death either.
Your facts are wrong as many on this thread have pointed out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting -- didn't realize diabetes was prevalent among Indians. I grew up in a home with boring, bland Indian food -- NOTHING was drowning in oil; veggies were cooked in like 1-2 spoons of oil, just with Indian spices so they didn't taste like American food, and daal was basically just boiled lentils w spices -- no oil at all.
My South Indian SIL cooks like this. I think it is delicious! Of course her kids are all about pepperoni pizza ...
Anonymous wrote:Interesting -- didn't realize diabetes was prevalent among Indians. I grew up in a home with boring, bland Indian food -- NOTHING was drowning in oil; veggies were cooked in like 1-2 spoons of oil, just with Indian spices so they didn't taste like American food, and daal was basically just boiled lentils w spices -- no oil at all.