When Noelle and i are at the gym, we spend a lot of time noting how we married the same dudes. there is so much "really? he does that too?!!??" happening that our neighboring cyclists must be bored stiff by our ramblings after 3 minutes. too bad we have 27 more minutes to go, old guy! anyways, the one thing that makes me like Noelle's husband instead of Neil, is that if i cook a meal and it doesn't turn out well, just pack it up and go home. game over. nothing good here. move on. J and i are both super cranky like that.
So yes, indian food is scary. it could ruin two whole days, retrospectively, if you count the time to marinate the chicken.
But something got under my skin. Building our garden and the thoughts of being vegetably self sufficient, the crazy apocalyptic ramblings of those on the internets, i don't know.....i decided it was time to provide my family with Indian Food. no more blindly trusting that society will provide me with Indian food, just because i know i have a take out menu in the drawer. i pushed my fears aside. i found recipes. i even went to the fancy spice store and purchased what one can not find at safeways and such. People, meet Hing, Mango Powder, and Ghee (some people make Ghee. i think my cousing Kerry does. but she also has two kids and teaches. she clearly does a lot of things that i do not do):
So the menu was not to be a fancy one: tandoori chicken (grilled, since we do not have a Tandoor Oven, surprisingly enough), aloo gobi, naan, and cilantro mint chutney.
I don't bake. and i don't bake in Denver. and again, i do not have a tandoor oven. AND i am trying to cur back on the white carbs. so this whole naan plan is just really pushy in general. but i went for it, whole wheat in my oven at high altitude and all.
dough before rising:
the aloo gobi freaked me out. maybe it is all the pot i smoked in high school but there just seemed to be So Many ingredients. so i got out all of my little glass bowls and did all my prep work. i lined it all up in order of appearance and opened all the windows in case i was going to burn everything and i just went for it.
the cilantro mint chutney was a breeze. i'd like to thank the Bhores once again for the food processer. i have no idea how we lived before it!
So, in all, the standouts were the aloo gobi and the chutney. those were to my previous professionally made Indian food standards. The naan was amazing for 30 seconds and then it went really hard, like a cracker. a yummy cracker, but the texture of naan is what makes it so dreamy. i'll have to readdress. the chicken's flavor was not tandoori, but it was good. basically, what one would expect from a Cooking Light recipe that is geared towards not having to go to the special spice store.
oh, and Neil hates cilantro and mint. but he ate the chitney cos i didn't tell him until after that it was cilantro and minto. oopsie!
My favorite thing to have discovered about all this is actually a financial one. Indian Food at a restaurant is expensive! i remember paying $7 for aloo gobi in SF! now, i have all of the spices in house, so i can make it for the cost of 2 potatoes and a head of cauliflower! tandoori chicken? $12 in a restaurant. i can now have it for $3 worth of chicken thighs. you catch my drift here, people? it's a nice thing to know.
so, come the apocolypse, you know where to get your Indian Food!
1 comment:
Mango Powder! I have to work so hard to find that stuff, but finally located it last weekend. So delicious.
I love Julie Sahni's Indian cookbooks (especially the vegetarian grains one) if you are looking for easy and authentic...the library may have one or two as she's pretty popular.
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