A mother-daughter conversation on food and cooking (mostly)
Monday, August 27, 2007
Satay Triple Threat and Indian Okra II
by
Eva
I like when one meal feeds another -- when something left over can be used again in a new way. There are lots of brilliant examples of doubled meals: spaghetti sandwiches, your post-Thanksgiving turkey chowder, rice pudding.
It wasn't quite so magical as those examples, but the peanut dipping sauce I made Saturday to go with Lawson's shrimp-vegetable kebabs and stir-fried noodles became the dressing for Sunday's salad: another iteration of the Thai watermelon salad. This time the salad had hard-boiled egg, raw red pepper, watermelon, arugula, and Thai basil. I served it with Indian curried okra.
We still have some peanut sauce left. I don't know what's next for it -- a topping for chocolate ice cream? In a burrito with lettuce, black beans, tomatoes, chiles, and pumpkin seeds?
Anyway, yesterday I was happier with the okra. Here's my modified version of Madhur Jaffrey's Sweet and Sour Okra.
Indian Curried Okra
Mash in a mortar and pestle to form a paste:
-5 cloves garlic
-1-2 small dried red chiles
-1 teaspoon coriander seeds
-1 teaspoon salt
-1 tablespoon water, if needed
(Jaffrey had me pureeing garlic and chiles and 4 T water in a blender, but getting such a small amount of liquid out of my blender was awful. Plus, then the blender smelled like garlic and red chiles. With cleaning and scraping factored in, the mortar and pestle took less time.)
Stir in:
-1/2 teaspoon turmeric
Heat over medium in large skillet with lid:
-3 tablespoons oil
When hot, add:
-2 teaspoons cumin seeds
When they seeds begin to sputter and fry, turn down heat, add the paste, and stir, letting it fry but not burn for about a minute.
Add:
-1 pound okra, rinsed, tops chopped off and pods sliced into 3/4" pieces
-1-2 tablespoons lemon juice
-1 teaspoon sugar
-a few tablespoons of water
Cover and simmer for 10 minutes or until okra is tender. Add more salt and lemon juice if necessary.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
Sounds yummy. I have just started reading Jaffrey's memoir "Under the Mango Tree."
I dug up this recipe and tried it with some of our garden okra which had become a little too big to steam--we loved it.
I dug up this recipe and tried it with some of our garden okra which had become a little too big to steam--we loved it.
How funny -- I just made this last week.
Post a Comment