I took a deep long breath and thought and thought and then went through my drafts and chanced upon this curry recipe. This is a traditional Rajasthani curry (though not the simplest one!) and is one of my favourites. This recipe is by my lovely mom :-) and has a lot of memories attached to it. Without going into all of them, I’ll just share one little secret. My hubby who generally eats everything under the sun, was somehow not too fond of this curry since his childhood – even though his mom was famous for it. When I made this curry for the very first time, my hungry hubby came to the dining table and saw this curry and said "Oh, you made gatta today", he said, he would just have one bite of gatta, because I made it, otherwise he is not too fond of it. I said, "Don't, if you don't like it", he repeated, "I'll have a bite" with a smile on his face. He had his first bite and I had mine, he had his second and third, while I was still on my first bite (i'm a slow eater) and soon the curry was over. And believe me when I say this, that I did not get much of that curry that day :-) From that day onwards, we have a convert at home :-)
Go ahead and make this curry, I promise you will not be dissapointed. And, I hope my cousin is not dissapointed in me :-)
Enjoy!
Go ahead and make this curry, I promise you will not be dissapointed. And, I hope my cousin is not dissapointed in me :-)
Ingredients
100 grams - gram flour (besan)
1/2 tsp - salt
1/2 tsp - red chilli powder
1/8 tsp - garam masala powder
1 1/2 tbsp - oil
1/2 tsp - kasuri methi (dried fenugreek leaves)
yogurt to knead the dough
For the gravy
2 1/2 tbsp + 1/2 tbsp - sunflower oil/ghee
1/4 tsp - fennel seeds (saunf)
1/8 tsp - nigella seeds (kalonji)
a generous pinch of hing (asafoetida)
1 - bayleaf
3 tbsp - low fat yogurt
1/4 tsp - red chilli powder (more or less)
1/2 tsp - turmeric powder (haldi)
1/2 tsp - dried mango powder (aamchur)
1 tsp - coriander powder (dhaniya powder)
a generous pinch of garam masala
salt to taste
1/4 tsp - dried fenugreek leaves (kasuri methi) + to garnish
Method
- Mix together the besan, salt, red chilli powder, garam masala and kasuri methi in a bowl. Add the oil and rub with the fingertips until it resembles fine bread crunbs. Add yogurt spoon by spoon and make a hard dough.
- Divide the dough into 4 parts and roll out into cylinders.
- Boil 4-5 cups of water in a deep pan.
- Add the cylinders (rolled out gatte) to the boiling water and boil for approx 15 - 20 minutes or until you see small white spots on the gatta.
- Drain and let the gatta cool before cutting them into small pieces. Do not discard the boiled gatta water.
- Mix together the yogurt, red chilli powder, haldi powder, aamchur, dhaniya powder, garam masala powder, salt and kasuri methi in a bowl and keep aside.
- Heat 2 1/2 tbsp of oil in a pan and saute the gatte for a few minutes and remove from the heat.
- Heat 1/2 tbsp of oil in a pan, add the saunf and kalonji. When the seeds start to crackle, add the hing and bayleaf. Add the yogurt mix and cook on a medium heat, stirring continously. When it starts to boil, add the gatte and cook again for a couple of minutes.
- Add the reserved gatta water to correct the consistency of the gravy and cook for 3-4 minutes on low heat.
- Garnish with dried fenugreek leaves and serve hot with phulka (indian bread) and kadhi or even with Daal bati.