I had been planning on buying an electric pressure cooker for a long time. The sole reason I resisted buying a rice cooker or a slow cooker is because the electric one does it all. I have been using my electric cooker that I bought from Amazon for a little over two years now. After trying different cooking options, I have to say this is one of my prized kitchen gadgets. I am glad to have made the yogurt using the pressure cooker finally. It turned out to be perfect. We ate it for dessert the following day and kept some in the refrigerator. I didn't make it too sweet but I guess you can make it sweeter if you like.
Sunday, January 8, 2017
Yogurt in Electric Pressure Cooker
Cilantro and Bell Pepper Chicken
Hope you all had a wonderful Christmas. We spent our christmas hopping around theme parks this year. My son was super excited to meet his hero Optimus Prime from the Transformers movie at Universal studios. We had our share of fun with the rides at Disneyland, Universal Studios and Legoland and the amazing LA food, of course. I am planning to do another post with all the restaurants we visited during our Los Angeles visit. California never fails to please our appetite in its literal sense.
After coming back from a week long vacation, we were longing for some home-cooked food. My son was craving for some home-made chicken curry but I didn't feel like making the same old curry. Therefore, I decided to make something different. Here goes the recipe and the outcome.
Ingredients:
1 onion thinly sliced
2 tbsp garlic paste
1 tbsp ginger paste
4-5 green chilies
1/2 tsp garam masala
1/2 a bunch of cilantro
1/2 tomato
1/2 red bell pepper
1 tbsp vinegar
Salt, sugar, turmeric and black pepper per taste
Mustard oil and vegetable oil
Blend the cilantro, bell-pepper, green chillies and tomato together with a little water
Marinate the chicken with salt, vinegar, ginger and garlic paste for at least about 2 hours
Heat some oil in a pan. I used both mustard and vegetable oil together
Add the sugar and black pepper to the hot oil
Fry the onion very well until brown
Add garam masala
Then add the marinated chicken
Cook the chicken until half done and all the water is dried
Then add the cilantro-pepper blend
Cook it at medium-low heat for 20-25 minutes until oil separates, sprinkle water as needed to make sure the spices don't stick to the bottom
Shabu Makha (tapioca mix)
I was feeling extremely lethargic the whole day yesterday and didn't feel like cooking or eating. As I was thinking of making some sort of salad or one-dish meal that would be fast and easy, my mom reminded me of 'shabu-makha'. People that have grown up in Bengali households are most likely to be familiar with this dish, especially, those with grandparents. I remember this to be the staple food for my grandmothers on auspicious days or to break a fast. I used to look forward to those days for these special meals. Guests used to bring fruits as presents and my grandmothers would mix the tapioca with the fruits. Now if you think of it, tapioca is actually a very good source of carbohydrate which is rich in iron, and low in sodium. Therefore, it soothes a fasting stomach while at the same time providing a good source of energy. Anyway, it requires absolutely zero preparation time, so good for a lazy cook as well. That said it does require to be soaked in water overnight. So needs some planning time definitely.
Method:
Wash the tapioca in clear water and soak overnight
Run through cold water one more time before preparing
Add 2 tbsp of milk for a cup of soaked tapioca
Add half of a large banana or a small banana
Add some fruits, raisins and nut chopped per preference
Add grated coconut (I used the frozen one)
Sugar per taste
Mix everything together and let it sit for 10/15 minutes
Ready to serve
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Winter Eggless Fruit Cake
After spending a delightful 5 months with us, my parents left for India this week. I got used to having them around so much, the house feels extremely empty, and maybe the heart somewhat more so. The following morning we woke up to find our neighborhood covered in a snowy blanket. We don't usually get this much snow. My son's school was closed due to the inclement weather.

We decided to take advantage of the snow and make our very own snowman (or snowbird) in the backyard.
Anyway, after freezing for an hour outside we came inside and planned to do some work together, as my son wanted to help me bake a cake. I thought of baking a traditional fruit cake. While working on it, I was remembering my parents even more as my last cake was a coffee cake, when my parents were staying with us. They loved it so much that they ate the cake for lunch 😊. Fruit cakes always bring back lots of nice childhood memories too. We always used to look forward to eating fruitcakes that my parents would bring home on christmas eve from the Anglo-Indian bakeries in our city. They taste significantly different from any other cake. Not sure if it were the cake or the festive season had something to do with it. They were a little hard, fruity, and looked brown. Although it used to have rum in it, I didn't use rum in my cake. If you wish you can soak the fruits in rum for a couple of nights before baking. Also, this time I decided to make it eggless, for which I followed the recipe from Joy of Baking.
Ingredients:
1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
3/4 cup fine brown sugar
1 tsp baking soda
1 cup buttermilk (if you don't have buttermilk at home you can make buttermilk by mixing 1 tbsp white vinegar to 1 cup of plain milk and let it sit in the room temperature for 10 minutes. you will see the milk gets curdled a little bit)
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup dried fruits and nuts (I have used raisins, dried cranberries, dried apricot, candied pecan, walnut, cashew)
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Recipe:
Mix the dry ingredients first
Melt the butter and add to the dry ingredients
Add the buttermilk and vanilla extract
Mix everything very well with a spatula
Spray oil on a loaf pan
Pour the mixture
Bake at 350F for 1 hour
A skewer inserted comes out clean says your cake is ready
Monday, December 5, 2016
Fish Roll
Fish roll is another popular fish snack. Sometime fish rolls are stuffed with leftover portions of a fish or minced meat. While in Kolkata, although we used to devour fish rolls from street food joints or snack corners, we were equally in love with my Dad's homemade fish rolls. Among some of his other delicious recipes, this one is something that I can have anytime, anywhere. However this summer, I thought of learning the recipe while my parents' visited us. This is the easier version. I watched him from a distance as he is very particular about the uniformity of each rolls. I have to admit, the end result was excellent.
Ingredients:
White fish fillet cut in very thin slices (I took 2 Tilapia fillet)
Onion paste, quarter of a big onion
Ginger and garlic paste, each 1 tbsp
Lemon juice, 1 lemon
Salt and pepper to taste
1 to 2 egg white
Flour 2 tbsp
Bread crumb, 1/2 cup to one cup
Recipe:
Marinate the fish with salt, pepper and lemon juice for 15 minutes
Now add onion, garlic and ginger paste to the fish and marinate for 2 hours or more
now with the help of a skewer carefully roll the fillets
Whisk the flour with water in a bowl
Now roll them on the bread crumbs
Dip the rolls in the egg white
Heat some oil to deep fry
White fish fillet cut in very thin slices (I took 2 Tilapia fillet)
Onion paste, quarter of a big onion
Ginger and garlic paste, each 1 tbsp
Lemon juice, 1 lemon
Salt and pepper to taste
1 to 2 egg white
Flour 2 tbsp
Bread crumb, 1/2 cup to one cup
Marinate the fish with salt, pepper and lemon juice for 15 minutes
Now add onion, garlic and ginger paste to the fish and marinate for 2 hours or more
now with the help of a skewer carefully roll the fillets
Whisk the flour with water in a bowl
Now roll them on the bread crumbs
Dip the rolls in the egg white
Heat some oil to deep fry
Bottle Gourd with Hilsa Head (Ilish maacer matha diye lau)
One of my caucasian friends once told me "you know, I have seen fish heads sold separately in Asian stores, they look kinda gross". To her shock, I replied, "in our cuisine we don't leave out any part of the fish either".
I had some Hilsa head in the freezer. Unfortunately, my husband is not a fish-bone lover. I like to cook fish heads but because of him my consumption of dishes, using fish bone/head, has gone down significantly. In Bengali cuisine, fish head is cooked with dal/lentil or with vegetables or with rice. And the type of curry varies as well. This time I thought of preparing the heads with lau or bottle gourd. Bottle gourd is famously prepared with prawns. I have even heard some friends refusing to make lau without prawns. Lau with fish heads, however, is a common recipe. For this recipe I have used minimal spices to keep the aroma of hilsa intact.
Ingredients:
2 fish heads cut into halves
3 small bottle gourds, shredded
2 whole chilies slit
1 tsp turmeric
Oil for cooking
Salt and sugar to taste
Recipe:
I had some Hilsa head in the freezer. Unfortunately, my husband is not a fish-bone lover. I like to cook fish heads but because of him my consumption of dishes, using fish bone/head, has gone down significantly. In Bengali cuisine, fish head is cooked with dal/lentil or with vegetables or with rice. And the type of curry varies as well. This time I thought of preparing the heads with lau or bottle gourd. Bottle gourd is famously prepared with prawns. I have even heard some friends refusing to make lau without prawns. Lau with fish heads, however, is a common recipe. For this recipe I have used minimal spices to keep the aroma of hilsa intact.
2 fish heads cut into halves
3 small bottle gourds, shredded
2 whole chilies slit
1 tsp turmeric
Oil for cooking
Salt and sugar to taste
Recipe:
- Rub the heads with salt and turmeric
- Fry (or bake for 30 mins at 400F) the heads very well and keep aside
- Heat some oil
- Add chilies, be careful of the spluttering
- Add the fish heads and the shredded bottle gourd to the oil
- Add the turmeric, salt and sugar
- Saute on medium heat very well until the water from the bottle gourd dries up
Bandhakopir Kofta (Cabbage Balls)
Cabbage curry is a well-known dish and all Bengalis probably make it quite often. The one that is slightly more unusual, is probably the cabbage koftas. Strangely, I don't remember having them in Kolkata. I remember having plantain kofta, and loving that over the plantain curry. But because of the complexity of the procedure I don't remember having much of that. As far as I remember, I had my first cabbage kofta curry in California. We used to call her grandma, and she was a well-known cook among friends and families. She was originally from Bangladesh and the kofta she used to make was out of this world. Unfortunately, my koftas are no where close to them. Now thinking of that I am wondering if this dish was more popular in east bengal. I used to make them very often right after I learned it from her. But just realized I haven't made them in a while, probably because they are time consuming.
Ingredients:
1 whole cabbage shredded and boiled
2 potatoes cubed and fried with salt and turmeric
1/2 tsp whole cumin seeds
1 bay leaf
2 green chilies slit lengthwise
2 tsp ginger paste
1 tsp cumin powder
1 tsp coriander powder
1 tsp turmeric powder
1/2 chopped tomato
1 whole boiled potato
1 tbsp flour
Salt and sugar per taste
Oil for frying the koftas and cooking
Ghee and garam masala (optional)
Recipe:
Squeeze the boiled shredded cabbage very well and let it rest in a strainer for 2/3 hours until water completely drains out
To this cabbage add the boiled potato, a pinch of turmeric, cumin powder, half of the ginger paste, flour, very little salt (please keep in mind koftas will absorb salt from the gravy)
Knead it to a fine dough, that shouldn't be too soft or too tight, you can add more flour or potato if needed
Add oil to a skillet and shallow fry the koftas one by one
Add some more oil if needed for rest of the cooking
Add the bay leaf and cumin seed to the oil
Add the ginger paste, saute for one minute then add the tomatoes
Add green chilies
Add the coriander powder, turmeric powder, salt and sugar and saute until oil leaves the spices
Add desired water for gravy (the koftas will absorb some of the gravy and become almost double in size)
Add the koftas and fried potatoes
You can add some ghee and garam masala in the end
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