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Cover
Title Page
Alternative Contents
List of Recipes
Dedication
Introduction
A word on Indian cookery
How to use this book
Kitchen equipment
Helpful weights and measures
Eat like an Indian, think like an Indian
01 Starters and snacks
Pea Kachori
Chilli Paneer
Fire-Smoked Aubergines
Corn on the Cob with Chilli Garlic Butter
Ondwa
Oven-Roasted Chicken Tikka
Pan-Fried Chicken Livers in Cumin Butter Masala
Chana Ka Chips
Chilli-Roasted Cashews
Poppadom Chaat
Royal Bengal Fish Fingers
Spiced Potato Tikki
Scallops with Tamarind
Beetroot and Feta Samosas
Chicken and Coriander Samosas
Lamb and Mint Samosas
How to Make Samosas
02 Vegetables
Aubergine and Cherry Tomato Curry
Roasted Butternut Squash Curry with Garlic and Tomatoes
100 Garlic-Clove Curry
Bateta Nu Shaak
Chapatti Wraps with Spicy Vegetables
Cauliflower, Cashew, Pea and Coconut Curry
Disha’s Pav Bhaji
Fresh Spinach and Paneer
Matoke
Pan-Fried Okra with Caramelized Onions and Yoghurt Sauce
Roasted Aloo Gobi Salad
Slow-Cooked Red Pepper and Paneer Curry
Tomato Fry
Sautéed Spring Vegetables with Spices
Simply Spiced Spring Cabbage
Sprouted Beans with Garlic, Lemon and Cumin
03 Meat
Whole Roast Masala Chicken
Creamy Chicken and Fig Curry
Pistachio and Yoghurt Chicken Curry
Garlic Chicken Chaat
Roasted Tamarind Chicken with Honey and Red Chilli
Coconut and Tamarind Chicken Curry
Chicken in Pickling Spices
Coriander Chutney Chicken
Mum’s Chicken Curry
Ugandan Quail Poacher’s Stew
A Simple Goat and Potato Curry
Wild Pheasant Curry
Slow-Cooked Lamb and Spinach Curry
Howrah Express Cinnamon Lamb Curry
Lamb Kebabs with Cumin and Coriander
Spicy Lamb Burgers
Maharani’s Favourite
Lamb Raan
The Perfect Lamb Biryani
04 Fish
Chilli-Fried Squid with Spinach, Tomato and Coriander Salad
Coconut Fish Curry
Coriander and Cumin Stuffed Sardines
20-Minute Fish Curry
Grimsby Smoked Haddock Kedgeree
Mussels in a Coconut and Ginger Sauce
Fish in a Coriander, Coconut and Mint Parcel
King Prawns with Garlic and Mustard Seeds
Salmon and Spinach Curry
05 Eggs
Bombay Eggs
Caramelized Onion, Coconut and Egg Curry
Inda Boflo
Masala Omelette
06 Pulses and grains
The Perfect Basmati Rice
Caramelized Onions and Jeera Rice
Cinnamon and Clove Pilau with Cashew Nuts
Steamed Buttery Rice with Dill
Badshah Kitchari
Pomegranate and Fennel Seed Poha
Chana Dal with Golden Garlic Tarka
Daily Dal
Dal Makhani
Junjaro
Jyoti’s Peanut Soup
Wild Mushroom Pilau
Workers’ Curry
07 Sides
Baked Masala Chips
Ferrari
Golden Garlic Raita
Spinach with Black Pepper, Garlic and Lemon
Green Beans with Mustard Seeds and Ginger
Jaipur Slaw
Kachumbar
Pomegranate and Mint Raita
Roasted Cauliflower with Cumin, Turmeric and Lemon
Chaat Salad
08 Breads
Chapattis
Hot Flaky Paratha
Aunty Harsha’s Naan
Millet-Flour Flatbread with Young Garlic Shoots
Quick Peshwari Roti
Cinnamon-Lamb Stuffed Paratha
Pudlas
09 Chutneys and pickles
Coriander Chutney
Great-Grandma’s Mango Chutney
Date and Tamarind Chutney
Garlic Pickle
Sweet and Hot Tomato Chutney
Mint and Yoghurt Chutney
Fire-Bellied Garlic and Chilli Chutney
Lime-Pickled Onions
10 Puddings
Saffron Shrikhand with Passion Fruit
Banana Pancakes with Coconut and Jaggery
Fig Firni
Chai-Spiced Chocolate Puds
Coconut-Milk Fudge
Fennel Seed Shortbread
Love Cake with Cardamom and Pomegranate Shrikhand
Mango, Lime and Passion-Fruit Jelly
Pistachio Nut Brittle with Ginger and Jaggery
Ice Creams, Kulfis and Sorbets
Cinnamon Ice Cream
Black Pepper Ice Cream
Fennel Seed Ice Cream
Pistachio and Saffron Kulfi
Alphonso Mango Sorbet
Cardamom and Rose-Water Kulfi
11 Drinks
Buttermilk
Fresh Lime Soda
Ginger Cordial
Sanjay’s Spiced Hot Chocolate
Mango and Cardamom Lassi
Saffron Lassi
The Perfect Masala Chai
12 Housekeeping: Make your own and Leftovers
Home-Made Paneer
Home-Made Yoghurt
Chai Masala Spice Mix
Mum’s Garam Masala
Home-Made Ghee
Toasted Poppadoms
Sprouted Beans
Chapatti Crisps
Basic Tomato Masala
Leftover Rice Flatbread
Junglee Pilau
What to do with leftover . . .
Menu ideas
Wine and Indian food
How to eat with your hands
Help
Indian ingredients
Recommended suppliers
Thank you
Follow Penguin
Copyright
Roasted butternut squash curry with garlic and tomatoes
Creamy chicken and fig curry
Slow-cooked lamb and spinach curry
Bombay eggs
Daily dal
Whole roast masala chicken
Wild pheasant curry
Howrah Express cinnamon lamb curry
Maharani’s favourite
Lamb raan
Dal makhani
Cauliflower, cashew, pea and coconut curry
Roasted tamarind chicken with honey and red chilli
20-minute fish curry
King prawns with garlic and mustard seeds
Daily dal
Slow-cooked red pepper and paneer curry
Mum’s chicken curry
Howrah Express cinnamon lamb curry
Chana dal with golden garlic tarka
Spinach with black pepper, garlic and lemon
Green beans with mustard seeds and ginger
Pomegranate and mint raita
Royal Bengal fish fingers
Chapattis
Coconut-milk fudge
Love cake with cardamom and pomegranate shrikhand
Bateta nu shaak
Caramelized onion, coconut and egg curry
Chana dal with golden garlic tarka
Junjaro
Workers’ curry
Pea kachori
Fire-smoked aubergines
Samosas
Baked masala chips
Chapatti crisps
Aubergine and cherry tomato curry
Sautéed spring vegetables with spices
Chicken in pickling spices
Fish in a coriander, coconut and mint parcel
Aubergine and cherry tomato curry
Cauliflower, cashew, pea and coconut curry
Sautéed spring vegetables with spices
Daily dal
Wild mushroom pilau
Ondwa
Disha’s pav bhaji
Simply spiced spring cabbage
Sprouted beans with garlic, lemon and cumin
Love cake with cardamom and pomegranate shrikhand
Samosas
Mum’s chicken curry
Howrah Express cinnamon lamb curry
Workers’ curry
Oven-roasted chicken tikka
Roasted butternut squash curry with garlic and tomatoes
Mum’s chicken curry
Slow-cooked lamb and spinach curry
Coconut fish curry
Aubergine and cherry tomato curry
Chicken in pickling spices
Grimsby smoked haddock kedgeree
Chana dal with golden garlic tarka
Wild mushroom pilau
100 Garlic-Clove Curry
20-Minute Fish Curry
A Simple Goat and Potato Curry
Alphonso Mango Sorbet
Aubergine and Cherry Tomato Curry
Aunty Harsha’s Naan
Badshah Kitchari
Baked Masala Chips
Banana Pancakes with Coconut and Jaggery
Basic Tomato Masala
Bateta Nu Shaak
Beetroot and Feta Samosas
Black Pepper Ice Cream
Bombay Eggs
Buttermilk
Caramelized Onion, Coconut and Egg Curry
Caramelized Onions and Jeera Rice
Cardamom and Rose-Water Kulfi
Cauliflower, Cashew, Pea and Coconut Curry
Chaat Salad
Chai Masala Spice Mix
Chai-Spiced Chocolate Puds
Chana Dal with Golden Garlic Tarka
Chana Ka Chips
Chapatti Crisps
Chapatti Wraps with Spicy Vegetables
Chapattis
Chicken and Coriander Samosas
Chicken in Pickling Spices
Chilli Paneer
Chilli-Fried Squid with Spinach, Tomato and Coriander Salad
Chilli-Roasted Cashews
Cinnamon and Clove Pilau with Cashew Nuts
Cinnamon Ice Cream
Cinnamon-Lamb Stuffed Paratha
Coconut and Tamarind Chicken Curry
Coconut Fish Curry
Coconut-Milk Fudge
Coriander and Cumin Stuffed Sardines
Coriander Chutney Chicken
Coriander Chutney
Corn on the Cob with Chilli Garlic Butter
Creamy Chicken and Fig Curry
Daily Dal
Dal Makhani
Date and Tamarind Chutney
Disha’s Pav Bhaji
Fennel Seed Ice Cream
Fennel Seed Shortbread
Ferrari
Fig Firni
Fire-Bellied Garlic and Chilli Chutney
Fire-Smoked Aubergines
Fish in a Coriander, Coconut and Mint Parcel
Fresh Lime Soda
Fresh Spinach and Paneer
Garlic Chicken Chaat
Garlic Pickle
Ginger Cordial
Golden Garlic Raita
Great-Grandma’s Mango Chutney
Green Beans with Mustard Seeds and Ginger
Grimsby Smoked Haddock Kedgeree
Home-Made Ghee
Home-Made Paneer
Home-Made Yoghurt
Hot Flaky Paratha
How to Make Samosas
Howrah Express Cinnamon Lamb Curry
Ice Creams, Kulfis and Sorbets
Inda Boflo
Jaipur Slaw
Junglee Pilau
Junjaro
Jyoti’s Peanut Soup
Kachumbar
King Prawns with Garlic and Mustard Seeds
Lamb and Mint Samosas
Lamb Kebabs with Cumin and Coriander
Lamb Raan
Leftover Rice Flatbread
Lime-Pickled Onions
Love Cake with Cardamom and Pomegranate Shrikhand
Maharani’s Favourite
Mango and Cardamom Lassi
Mango, Lime and Passion-Fruit Jelly
Masala Omelette
Matoke
Millet-Flour Flatbread with Young Garlic Shoots
Mint and Yoghurt Chutney
Mum’s Chicken Curry
Mum’s Garam Masala
Mussels in a Coconut and Ginger Sauce
Ondwa
Oven-Roasted Chicken Tikka
Pan-Fried Chicken Livers in Cumin Butter Masala
Pan-Fried Okra with Caramelized Onions and Yoghurt Sauce
Pea Kachori
Pistachio and Saffron Kulfi
Pistachio and Yoghurt Chicken Curry
Pistachio Nut Brittle with Ginger and Jaggery
Pomegranate and Fennel Seed Poha
Pomegranate and Mint Raita
Poppadom Chaat
Pudlas
Quick Peshwari Roti
Roasted Aloo Gobi Salad
Roasted Butternut Squash Curry with Garlic and Tomatoes
Roasted Cauliflower with Cumin, Turmeric and Lemon
Roasted Tamarind Chicken with Honey and Red Chilli
Royal Bengal Fish Fingers
Saffron Lassi
Saffron Shrikhand with Passion Fruit
Salmon and Spinach Curry
Sanjay’s Spiced Hot Chocolate
Sautéed Spring Vegetables with Spices
Scallops with Tamarind
Simply Spiced Spring Cabbage
Slow-Cooked Lamb and Spinach Curry
Slow-Cooked Red Pepper and Paneer Curry
Spiced Potato Tikki
Spicy Lamb Burgers
Spinach with Black Pepper, Garlic and Lemon
Sprouted Beans with Garlic, Lemon and Cumin
Sprouted Beans
Steamed Buttery Rice with Dill
Sweet and Hot Tomato Chutney
The Perfect Basmati Rice
The Perfect Lamb Biryani
The Perfect Masala Chai
Toasted Poppadoms
Tomato Fry
Ugandan Quail Poacher’s Stew
Whole Roast Masala Chicken
Wild Mushroom Pilau
Wild Pheasant Curry
Workers’ Curry
An Indian kitchen can be anywhere in the world. Mine just happens to be in London.
I’ve never lived in India, but I grew up in England eating the same food my ancestors have eaten for hundreds of years and which I still cook in my kitchen, every day.
My family’s home cooking is unrecognizable from a lot of the food that is served up in most high-street curry houses across the UK; ours is all at once simple, delicious and fresh. Real Indian home cooking is largely an unknown cuisine, and it’s my love for what we Indians really eat at home that has led me to share these recipes with you now.
My grandparents’ kitchen started in Gujarat, where this story begins. Gujarat is the area north of Mumbai and south of Pakistan, with Rajasthan to the east and the Arabian Sea to the west. The Arabian Sea is where my grandfather Mathuradas Lakhani happened to be looking when his curiosity to find out what lay across it got the better of him. Along with his wife, his father and his brother, he set sail for Kenya to begin a life there, taking with him all the family recipes.
Africa back then was a land of opportunity for anyone with a good idea. He had many, and, along with his father and brother, he set up Kenya’s first printing press, a Coca-Cola bottling factory and, later, when he moved to Uganda, a grain mill. With his new-found prosperity he employed a cook, and so my mother grew up not cooking, but being cooked for, until she arrived in England.
My family’s arrival in this country was sudden and part of a well-documented episode in British history. Idi Amin, tyrant, dictator and then-president of Uganda, woke up one day in 1972 and gave all Asians living there 90 days’ notice to leave the country before he would start to kill them. Along with thousands of others, my family left everything: their homes, businesses, money and friends. They arrived in Lincolnshire with one suitcase between all five of them and £50 with which to start a new life.
While the backdrop to their lives changed in every way – the country itself, the language, the people, the culture, the weather and local ingredients – their food did not. My grandparents went to work, and my mother reassembled our Indian kitchen in Lincolnshire and carried on cooking the family recipes.
She met my father, had me and my sister, and continued to cook, day in, day out, to feed her growing family, arranging whatever she could afford into various pots and pans to magical effect, conjuring up tastes and smells of the past and linking us, in an instant, to our ancestral home.
At the same time, she started to use local ingredients. Indian cooking can be adapted to any place by encompassing whatever ingredients are available. As we lived in Lincolnshire, a county that abounds in local produce, she was able to use gorgeous beetroot, rhubarb and squash in her cooking, as well as fish from the nearby docks in Grimsby and local meat (including the famous Lincolnshire sausages).
Whichever vegetables or meat she used, every day there would be fresh hot chapattis – made in minutes, gobbled in seconds. She would cook dishes so fragrant with cloves, cinnamon and cumin that they’d make your mouth water and your belly rumble, and her sweetly spiced puddings filled the house with smells that would make you weak at the knees. All these dishes were cooked with love, instinct and her trusty wooden spoon – the same spoon that she bought just days after arriving in the UK with barely a penny to her name.
My mother’s spoon cast a spell over me from a young age, and it is to her that I owe my love of cooking. Using all the culinary knowledge that she passed on to me, I’ve created this collection of recipes so that you can make the same delicious, fresh-tasting food in your own home.
Some of the dishes in this book are ancient family recipes which have never been recorded or written down until now. They were passed down from woman to woman in our family, with easy-to-remember anecdotes for when cooking alone, with sayings such as ‘the mango should be as hard as a cricket ball’ and the dough ‘as soft as your ear lobe’, or ‘when the spoon sticks up in the mixture, it’s ready’. Many measurements were in ‘handfuls’, ‘bowls’ and unique boxes and tins.
Other recipes are my mother’s, all of which apply Gujarati know-how and techniques to local ingredients. A couple of her recipes are Ugandan.
And a few are mine and have come into my kitchen (and heart) by way of friends, my travels far and wide across India and my experimentation in the kitchen using Indian flavours.
Not everything in this book is a ‘curry’ (a term I use loosely for dishes with sauce), and there are no set rules. Many dishes are frugal and thrifty, turning humble vegetables, store-cupboard ingredients and even leftovers into something delicious.
I hope this book will allow you to experience what we consider to be real home-cooked Indian food, and will also give you a greater understanding of different ingredients and techniques so that you can come up with your own recipes using your own instinct, with just a few key spices and whatever happens to be in your fridge.
On my last birthday, Mum passed her treasured wooden spoon over to me as a present. With it was a note that simply read, ‘Happy cooking’. I hope, like that spoon, this book fills your kitchen with the same happiness as it has done ours.
Indian food has a reputation for being intimidating and complicated, but this is a myth. The majority of Indian home cooking is fresh, simple and quick, and I’m on a mission to show you just how easy it is.
This book is written for everyone, from first-timers to seasoned cooks, and for those who love Indian food but don’t know where to start.
Most of the recipes can be cooked quickly, in around 30 minutes, and you should be able to pick up the majority of ingredients in your local supermarket on the way home from work without having to go on a wild-goose chase (there are no wild-goose recipes in this book).
In order to help you, I’ve laid out a section that introduces you to Indian ingredients here, explaining what each one tastes like and how to use it, along with shopping tips. There is also an Alternative Contents here, which will help you to pick what to cook depending on the occasion or your mood, and there are some menu ideas here.
My most important piece of advice to you, however, is this: taste everything.
Try your dish at the start, middle and end. Add something, stir and taste, and if it’s a spice or chilli you’re adding, add it little by little. The more you taste, the more you’ll be able to understand your ingredients, how they behave and what you enjoy.
A note on naming
Recipe titles and the names of spices are given in English, with translations in Gujarati and the odd adopted Hindi or Swahili word, unless the dish or spice is better known by its Indian name, in which case the translation is in English.
Although there are many items specific to a traditional Indian kitchen, the truth is that very little special equipment is needed in order to get started. When I left home to come to London I took with me a spice tin, a sharp knife, a lidded pan, a saucepan and a wooden spoon. I cooked in a kitchen the size of a phone booth. All went well – I’m still friends with the people I cooked dinner for back then – and I’ve not added a huge amount of special equipment to my kitchen since.
You can easily get by on some basics which you are already likely to have.
The must-haves:
• A good knife, sharp enough to make cutting tomatoes enjoyable and easy.
• Some pans: a wide-bottomed frying pan with a lid, or two frying pans if you cook a lot. One with a tight clear lid is very useful when you’re cooking rice (so that you can look in without letting the steam escape). A deep saucepan is essential too.
• A rolling pin, if making breads. Indian rolling pins, velans, are thin and light and easy to manoeuvre (see Recommended suppliers, here).
• A large, heavy pestle and mortar for crushing garlic, ginger, chillies and bashing up spices.
• A pair of digital kitchen scales – especially helpful for making bread.
The nice-to-haves:
• A garlic crusher, for frequent garlic crushing.
• A chapatti board (a patlo): inexpensive and available online (see Recommended suppliers, here), it will help you to roll perfect round chapattis because of its circular shape.
• A wooden chapatti press: this small disc-shaped press has a short handle attached at one side, and allows you to press your chapattis and other breads so that they cook quickly and evenly.
• An electric spice grinder: although it does a similar job to a pestle and mortar, if you’re cooking a lot it’s worth the investment as it will transform whole spices and nuts into a fine powder in seconds. A wet and dry one will allow you to whizz up garlic, ginger and chillies into a paste too.
• An Indian spice tin (a masala dabba), to keep all your favourite spices fresh and to hand (see Recommended suppliers, here).
• A blender or food processor, for making light work of frequent tasks such as chopping vegetables and blending chutneys or tomatoes; especially useful when cooking in large quantities.
• An ice-cream maker, if tempted by the recipes in this book. While you can always churn by hand, an ice-cream maker does all the hard work for you. The small ones are relatively inexpensive to buy now, and make ice cream an easy and quick dessert to whip up.
General
1 teaspoon = ⅓ of a tablespoon = 5ml
1 tablespoon = 3 teaspoons = 15ml
Rice and pulses
Appetites will vary (so plan accordingly), but as a general rule allocate 50–60g of dry rice per person. As for pulses, allow 100g of the dried variety per person, or 200g of soaked or tinned.
Meat and fish
Around 150–200g of meat or fish is a good amount per person for a main meal, alongside other things such as bread or sides.
A good rule of thumb if you’re using meat on the bone is to buy a third more than the weight of boneless meat given in a recipe. For example, if a recipe calls for 600g of boneless meat, buy around 800g of meat on the bone.
Spices
You might find the following measures helpful if grinding whole spices for powder.
Cardamom Approximately 12 pods = 1 teaspoon of ground cardamom
Cinnamon 1 × 4cm stick = 1 teaspoon of ground cinnamon
Coriander 1 teaspoon of coriander seeds = 1½ teaspoons of ground coriander
Cumin 1 teaspoon of cumin seeds = 1¼ teaspoons of ground cumin
Black pepper 1 teaspoon of peppercorns = 1¾ teaspoons of ground pepper
Citrus fruit
1 lime = roughly 30ml of juice
1 lemon = roughly 50ml of juice
Garlic
1 fat clove of garlic = 1 teaspoon of finely chopped garlic
Onions
1 large onion = approximately 200g
Tomatoes
1 medium tomato = approximately 170g
Without wanting to generalize too much, before you start to cook like an Indian, here’s how to think like an Indian:
Eat with your hands, specifically the right. Eating with the left is taboo.
Always look like you’re studying hard when your parents are around, no matter how old you are.
Never waste food. Offer it to neighbours, the postman and the birds before putting it in the bin.
Always turn up an hour late for an event, or set the time of your event an hour early to ensure your guests arrive on time; this is called ‘Indian Time’.
As an Indian host, you must feed your guests until they beg for mercy – it’s the ultimate hospitality.
Feed the dog chapattis. Dogs love chapattis.
Believe that almonds have the power to increase your IQ, even if it’s not been scientifically proven.
No matter how many people in your family, make sure everyone piles into the same car, whatever the length of your journey.
Spend at least an hour at the door when saying goodbye to people you’re visiting.
Do not come back from India with baggage under the weight limit – it is a faux pas.
Treat cricket as the second religion.
Encourage your children to become lawyers, doctors or engineers.
Make good Tupperware part of the family, and never waste a good container. Mum’s chapatti-flour tub is a Vitalite one from the 1990s.
Cling-film your remote control and don’t take the covers off the posh sofa, no matter how many years you’ve had it.
Call any Indian woman older than you ‘Aunty’, and any older man ‘Uncle’.
Be naturally suspicious of any food which is not home-cooked. Always take your own food with you wherever you go, even if you’re not going far.
Assess the suitability of your sister’s or friend’s new date by first asking how much they earn and what their parents do.
If one member of the family is going on holiday, gather the entire family to say goodbye at the airport.
Every Indian man must have a Mercedes, and every car must have a gilded tissue box.
Recipe List
Pea Kachori
Chilli Paneer
Fire-Smoked Aubergines
Corn on the Cob with Chilli Garlic Butter
Ondwa
Oven-Roasted Chicken Tikka
Pan-Fried Chicken Livers in Cumin Butter Masala
Chana Ka Chips
Chilli-Roasted Cashews
Poppadom Chaat
Royal Bengal Fish Fingers
Spiced Potato Tikki
Scallops with Tamarind
Beetroot and Feta Samosas
Chicken and Coriander Samosas
Lamb and Mint Samosas
How to Make Samosas
Indians are always nibbling; in fact, India has one of the biggest street-food and snacking cultures in the world. With a lot of passion for food and very little regulation about who can sell food and where, streets thrum and resonate across the country with the calls of a thousand food hawkers selling their snacks. Whether it’s from their bikes turned into kitchens, from bins turned into ovens or from baskets perched on their heads, food is sold everywhere.
In the far north in Amritsar you’ll find queues of turbaned Sikhs waiting for the legendary Amritsari fish, a spiced deep-fried kingfish, and in the winter the mustard-seed curry ‘sarson ka saag’, topped with freshly made butter and mopped up with cornbread. Travel down to Delhi and you’ll see spiced potato tikki (see here), dressed with tamarind chutney, and delicious blackened kebabs served with ‘roomali roti’ – chapattis as thin as hankies and as big as car wheels. In Mumbai, they love pav bhaji (see here), a rich mash of vegetables eaten with bread, chicken tikka (see here) and chaat (see here). Head east to Kolkata for a ‘kati roll’ – an egg-fried wrap of meat or vegetables; west to Gujarat for some fluffy ondwa (see here) or moreish pea kachori (see here); and south for dosas, thin crispy pancakes made from rice and lentils.
What might have started out as an idea on the street can now be found in the homes of many Indians, recreating the famous dishes they first tried on a hot, dusty street corner and adding them to the snacks already served in their homes.
My favourites are the ubiquitous samosas (see here); the chilli paneer (see here), which I first encountered near my grandparents’ home in Leicester; and the corn on the cob (see here), which our family has eaten in the same way in Uganda, in India and in Lincolnshire, where it grows as tall as me.
There is so much variety, the only tough decision you’ll face is what to eat first.
These delicious balls of pea-green joy are an old Gujarati delicacy. They are often served at family functions because they’re very easy to wolf down when no one is looking. Baked in the oven, they are best served on a bed of sharp lime-pickled onions (see here), alongside some mint and yoghurt chutney (see here).
A food processor is ideal to make the kachori mixture, but if you don’t have one, you can use a pestle and mortar and a potato masher. Amazingly, pea kachori can be made almost entirely from items you’ll probably already have in the freezer and store cupboard.
MAKES AROUND 25 KACHORI (TO SERVE 5 TO 8 PEOPLE)
For the filling
4cm ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
2 fresh green chillies, roughly chopped (deseeded if you prefer less heat)
600g frozen petit pois or garden peas, defrosted
rapeseed oil
1 teaspoon mustard seeds
1¼ teaspoons ground cinnamon
1¼ teaspoons garam masala
½ teaspoon ground turmeric
1¾ teaspoons salt (or to taste)
½ teaspoon chilli powder
For the pastry
300g plain white flour, plus extra to dust
½ teaspoon salt
1½ tablespoons rapeseed oil
175ml hot water
Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F/gas 4 and lightly grease a tray with some oil.
Place the ginger and green chillies in a food processor and blitz into a paste, or bash them up using a pestle and mortar. If using a food processor, remove the paste and set to one side. Briefly blitz the peas in the food processor and set aside, or mash up using a potato masher.
Put 3 tablespoons of oil into a frying pan on a medium heat and, when it’s hot, add the mustard seeds. When they start to crackle, add the ginger and chilli paste, stir-fry for a couple of minutes, then add the peas and cook for a further 5 minutes.
Now add the cinnamon, garam masala, turmeric, salt and chilli powder. Cook for a further 2 minutes, or until there is little to no moisture left but the peas are still bright green. Transfer to a bowl and put to one side.
To make the dough, put the flour into a bowl, make a well in the middle and add the salt and oil. Rub through with your fingers until the flour resembles fine breadcrumbs. Pour in 120ml of the water and add the rest little by little, kneading it into the dough until it feels nice and firm. Pour a teaspoon of oil into your hands and pat the dough with it to keep it moist.
Before rolling out the pastry, get your station ready. You will need a clean floured surface, a bowl of flour and a rolling pin. Now pinch off a blob of dough roughly the size of a marshmallow. Dip your dough ball into the bowl of flour and roll out to a circle roughly 10cm in diameter (the size of a bottom of a mug). To speed things up, you can divide the dough into the small balls before rolling and stuffing them.
To make the kachori, pop a heaped teaspoon of pea mixture in the middle and bring the sides of the pastry up tightly around the peas. Seal the pastry at the top by pinching it closed, then pinch off any excess pastry, roll the kachori into a ball and put it on a plate. Then make the rest. The first one you make might look a bit odd, so mark it out for tasting when it comes out of the oven.
Roll the kachori balls around on the baking tray to coat them in the oil and bake in the oven for 20 to 30 minutes, or until golden brown.
Every now and then, when we were growing up, Mum would find me and my sister wherever we were hiding in the house, whip us into the car and take us to Leicester on a sari shopping expedition. Our only consolation (aside from secretly unravelling beautifully folded saris in the shops) was a dish of freshly prepared chilli paneer from one of the nearby food stalls or cafés afterwards.
This dish is as popular with kids as it is with grandparents. Here’s Mum’s recipe for this spectacular street food.
SERVES 4
1½ teaspoons cumin seeds
400g paneer
rapeseed oil
4 cloves of garlic, crushed
1 fresh green chilli, very finely sliced
¾ teaspoon ground black pepper
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon tomato purée
½ teaspoon sugar
4 spring onions, finely sliced into rings
lemon wedges, to serve
Throw the cumin seeds into a pestle and mortar and roughly grind them to a coarse powder. Next cut the paneer into 2cm cubes. Pour a thin coating of oil (2mm) into a large frying pan and bring it to a high heat. Fry the paneer in batches, turning the pieces until golden brown on each side, and transfer them to a paper-towelled dish. Watch out, as the paneer may spit; if so, half cover the pan with a lid.
Put 2 tablespoons of oil into the pan, followed by the garlic, green chilli, cumin, black pepper and salt. Sauté for around 3 minutes on a low heat, stirring occasionally. Add the tomato purée and sugar and stir, then put the paneer back into the pan along with a splash of water. Cover the pan and simmer for a further 5 minutes.
Take the lid off the pan, add the spring onions and simmer until there is no water left. Serve fresh and hot with a squeeze of lemon.
I used to bake my aubergines in the oven for this recipe, but after seeing my aunt smoke hers to perfection over a direct flame in her kitchen in Porbandar, I can’t go back to my old ways. She holds the aubergine by its green stalk over the stove until the skin chars and the soft, creamy white flesh begins to peek through. Then she peels off the blackened skin and cooks the aubergine in a garlic and tomato sauce.
It’s a gorgeously rich, smoky mash of flavours and one of my all-time favourite dishes. I eat it hot or cold with chapattis, chapatti crisps or fresh naans.
SERVES 4 TO 6 AS A DIP
4cm ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
5 cloves of garlic, roughly chopped
1 fresh green chilli, roughly chopped
salt
2 large aubergines
3 tablespoons rapeseed oil (plus extra for brushing the aubergines with)
1 onion, finely chopped
2 medium ripe tomatoes, finely chopped
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground coriander
a small bunch of fresh coriander (20g)
To serve
Greek yoghurt
chapattis or chapatti crisps (see here)
Put the ginger, garlic and chilli into a pestle and mortar along with a pinch of salt, bash to a pulp and set aside.
Pierce the aubergines in a few places with a sharp knife so that they don’t explode when cooking, and lightly brush them with some oil. Hold them one by one with a pair of tongs over a naked flame on the stove. Keep turning them until the skin blackens and the aubergine collapses and goes floppy. This should take around 15 minutes for both aubergines.
When the aubergines are cool enough to handle, peel off the charred skin, scoop the flesh out into a bowl and mash using a fork, then set aside.
Put the oil into a wide-bottomed, lidded frying pan on a medium heat. When it’s hot, fry the onion for 8 to 10 minutes, until soft and golden. Add the tomatoes, cover the pan and allow them to cook for another 4 to 5 minutes. Then add the ginger, garlic and chilli paste and leave to cook for a couple of minutes before adding the aubergine mash, cumin, ground coriander and ¾ of a teaspoon of salt.
Cover the pan, and cook for a further 5 minutes until all the ingredients have come together into a lovely thick mash. Taste for salt and spice and adjust if necessary.
Chop the fresh coriander and stir into the mash, then serve in a large sharing bowl or in individual bowls with a dollop of yoghurt on the top and some small chapattis or chapatti crisps on the side.
Corn has followed my family on our journey halfway across the world. It grew in Porbandar in India, where my grandma grew up; in Kampala, Uganda, where Mum grew up; and in Lincolnshire, where I grew up. We still eat it in the same way, no matter which country we’re in: blistered on a fire until it becomes deliciously smoky, then slathered in chilli butter with a squeeze of lime to finish. The garlic is my addition: I think it tastes great melted into spicy butter.
Try to buy your corn when it’s as fresh as possible, and with husks if you’re not eating it straight away, as corn starts to deteriorate the moment it’s been harvested. It should feel tender, bouncy to the touch, and juice easily when you press it.
SERVES 4
For the chilli garlic butter
100g salted butter
4 fat cloves of garlic, crushed
1 fresh red chilli, very finely chopped
a little salt, if need be
4 fresh corn cobs
1 lime, quartered
To make the chilli garlic butter, cut the butter into cubes and put it into a small pan on a gentle heat. When it’s melted, add the garlic and chilli, stir and leave to cook for around 5 minutes, then pour into a bowl. Leave to one side to cool down.
Take the corn cobs out of the fridge around 10 to 15 minutes before cooking to get them to room temperature. Pull out any hair-like strands, as they can catch on fire when cooking.
Turn the gas hob to a medium to high flame and, taking one of the cobs, hold it over the heat with a pair of tongs. Rotate it every 30 seconds until the kernels start to blacken and char. If it starts to pop, turn the heat down a little bit and carry on. It should take around 5 to 6 minutes to cook each cob.
Keep the cooked cobs warm by wrapping them tightly in foil until you’re ready to eat. Serve with the chilli garlic butter spooned over the top, a sprinkle of salt and a squeeze of lime.
Tip: I love to make a big batch of this chilli garlic butter and keep it in the fridge so I can add a spoonful to whatever I’m cooking.
The ultimate Gujarati all-in-one snack, ondwa is a type of bread made with yoghurt and semolina, studded with vegetables and topped with a layer of glimmering mustard seeds and sesame seeds. In Gujarati households it’s pretty much expected that you have a running supply of ondwa in your fridge in case friends or family pop by (although all the better for you if they don’t).
This recipe benefits from the savoury taste of older yoghurt, to give it a slightly sour tang, so the longer you’ve had yours, the better.
MAKES 12 PORTIONS
For the ondwa
2 tablespoons rapeseed oil (plus extra to oil the cake tin)
225g coarse semolina
250ml whole-milk yoghurt
1 courgette (200g), grated
2 medium carrots (180g in total), grated
100g green peas
1 onion, finely chopped
4cm ginger, peeled and finely grated
½ teaspoon ground turmeric
½ teaspoon chilli powder
¾ teaspoon salt
1½ teaspoons baking powder
100ml water
For the tarka
2 tablespoons rapeseed oil
1 fresh red chilli, finely chopped
1 tablespoon sesame seeds (plus extra to sprinkle)
½ tablespoon mustard seeds (plus extra to sprinkle)
Preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/gas 6 and lightly grease a 25cm × 30cm cake tin with oil.
Put the semolina into a large bowl, pour in 2 tablespoons of oil and mix together. Add the yoghurt, courgette, carrots, peas, onion, ginger, turmeric, chilli powder, salt and baking powder. Mix thoroughly.
Pour in 75ml of the water, then add the rest little by little, until the batter takes on a thick, custard-like consistency. Taste the mixture – although it will be raw, it will give you a good idea of salt and chilli seasoning – and adjust if necessary.