Thursday, December 31, 2009

My Nana Calls This Gravy (about $15 makes two lasagna's worth; about 20 minutes)


My Nana. She's 91. Born in Italy, I think outside Rome. Her father was a scholar, then a coal miner. One of her sisters died in the flu epidemic in 1918; she still has two brothers living, one older, one younger.

My Nana has lived on Long Island (good lord, it has its own website!) for half a century or more, in the same house facing the neighborhood school. She had three children after the war: my aunt Irene, my father, and my uncle Rich. When my father was 17 he and my mother, the 16-year-old daughter of a local Irish family, made me, then relinquished me to my adoptive parents. Two years later, when my bioparents were legal, they married and then had five children: Chris, Missy, Tom, John, and Tracey. We found each other ten years ago. Which is when I met my Nana, who filled her house with her relatives so that I could meet them all.

This is a nice story, and I'm betting you think that what's about to follow is her recipe for red gravy. Actually, it's sort of my sister Missy's recipe, only not quite that either. And maybe she got it from our Nana, I don't know. All I know is that one day I was visiting the coast and Missy said, let's make spaghetti sauce. And I blinked and said, okay, and then we were shopping, and then she was dumping things in a pot, and all of a sudden, blammo. My whole spaghetti sauce nightmare of a childhood ended. Ended, I say. Blammo.

Because as is probably clear to you from my other posts, my mother, bless her heart, was a modern cook. Packages. Pre-made stuff. If it came in a box or a can it was way superior to the raw, naked, whole stuff. I don't blame her. She's a product of her generation, as I am of mine. Thus, on the issue of red sauce she was multiply screwed: she didn't have the ethnic, class, or more generally cultural impetus to make her own. Her idea of getting spaghetti sauce was--go to A&P. Find Ragu. Buy Ragu. Heat Ragu with browned ground beef. Serve over spaghetti noodles. Side salad of iceberg lettuce, pallid tomato, carrot dimes, either Ranch or Good Seasons Italian.

This isn't Ragu. Doesn't have fifty weird ingredients, preservatives, all that sugar. It takes almost no time to fix.

As I've written it, this makes maybe three quarts of sauce, enough for two lasagnas and a little more. Decrease as necessary for your purposes.

Here's what you need:
Stock pot
olive oil
crushed garlic
oregano
basil
red pepper flakes and/or jalapeno mash
vegetables (here, it's onions, green peppers, and broccoli, though just about any sort will do)
Three large (32 oz) cans of crushed tomatoes
one small can of tomato paste
opt. med can of diced tomatoes
possibly a TBSP of sugar
possibly a little salt

Chop all your vegetables up. Set aside onions and peppers, since they'll go in first. But you can glop the rest together.

Open the cans. If you're using diced tomatoes, drain them only. Don't drain the others (you can't actually, but I didn't want you to try).

In the stock pot, heat up enough oil just to cover the bottom. I'd say about 4-5 TBSP max. Use med heat.

When you can smell the oil, or when it starts to shimmer, drop in a heaping spoon of garlic, a handful (maybe 3 TBSP) of oregano, half that of basil (so maybe a TBSP and a half), and some red pepper flakes or jalapeno mash.

Saute these in the oil for just a minute. Don't burn the garlic. This is easy to do, so err on the side of undercooking.

Add onions, peppers, celery, any veg that's there just for flavor. Saute until just limp, stirring pretty constantly.

When the onions are translucent, or the other vegetables are just a little soft, add the tomatoes.

Stir. Turn the heat to low. Cook uncovered for about five minutes, until the tomatoes are simmering. Taste.

It's important to taste at this point because your tomatoes might be very acid. If they taste like can, or sort of bitter, you'll need to add the sugar. This happens unpredictably, so you have to taste. Add salt at this point, too, if you feel you need it. I almost never feel I do.

When the tomatoes taste right to you, add the rest of the veg and about a third cup of wine. I generally just dump, about two glugs.

Bring to a boil over low-med heat (to keep you from having red sauce popping all over your kitchen). Taste, adjust for bitterness -- more sugar -- or for richness -- more wine. Let simmer until the vegetables are just cooked through.

If the sauce looks too thin, add more paste or just let it cook down for a while. This will overcook the vegetables, however, so unless that's okay with you, use the paste to thicken.

[This is a picture of the sauce boiling. I thought it was really neat: a still of motion. Also, the sauce launched a giant blob of red stuff into the atmosphere; it landed on my arm, where I licked it off like Yukon Cornelius licks his pick.]

There you go.



Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Burritos for Breakfast (maybe $5; about 15 minutes)

I preface this whole entry with the caveat: we are not Southwesterners. These are as inauthentic as any other ethnic recipe here.

As I say this, I wonder: what is authentic Southwestern? A hybrid of Mexican and American food? What is authentic Mexican? A hybrid of Spanish and indigenous food? And which indigenous food? And which Spanish cuisine? And how long does a cuisine have to be itself before it's really a cuisine and not some hybrid? And while we're at it, what's Spanish cuisine, but a mash up of regional food ways overlaid with preferences from hundreds of invasions from elsewhere?

I'm looking for the Ur cuisine. That might be authentic.

And don't get me started on "American" food. Now there's a mare's nest if I ever saw one.

Okay, caveats and phlights of philosophy aside, here's what we do when we want quick finger food for brekkie.

You need:

** tortillas (these are El Banderito, but any will work.)

** 2 med potatoes, washed, unpeeled, and chopped into about 1 inch pieces

** 2 eggs

** jalapeno cheese slices (You too can torture your children! Use pain and bribery!)

** a little margarine or butter

** salt and pepper

You can add diced onion and salsa if you want. We generally don't.

In a microwave-safe dish, cover and cook the potatoes on high about 5 minutes. They should be completely cooked.

In a separate bowl, beat the two eggs together.

Meanwhile, heat two skillets. Lightly grease one (I use spray grease). You'll use this to heat the tortillas.

In the second skillet, melt a little butter. Use med to med-high heat.

When the potatoes are done, dump them into the buttery skillet and brown the potatoes. If you want diced onions, this is the stage to add them.

As the potatoes brown, set a tortilla in the other skillet and put a piece of sliced cheese on it. Heat for about a minute (until the edge of the cheese starts to soften). Remove to a plate.

In the potato skillet, pour eggs over potatoes and scramble with potatoes until almost dry. Turn off heat, add salt and pepper, mix.

Set another tortilla in tortilla skillet, add cheese. While that's warming, take a spoonful of the potato mixture and wrap it inside the warm tortilla. You can do a simple taco-like fold-over; we tend to want less messy envelopes, so we fold and roll like a burrito.

Repeat fill-and-fold with the now-warm second tortilla; repeat whole process with the rest of the tortillas until you run out of filling. This should make 5-7 small burritos; maybe 1-2 large ones.

If you want salsa, I'd recommend adding it before you fold, or using it to dip.

There you go.






Thursday, December 24, 2009

Stone [Soup] Salad (virtually free; less than fifteen minutes)


This is virtually free, since what you're doing is using the odds and ends you have left over in the fridge to make the salad. You may have to buy some lettuce (you know you want the vegetarian starter kit, right?). Or maybe you have some, or some spinach, or something leafy and green? That's where you start.

Chuck can make two meals: this, and a pasta dish he calls carbonara, but it's really just pasta with olives and turkey bacon. It's really good, equally as good as his salad. He tells me that most of his cooking life was spent microwaving fish sticks or eating processed cheese on tortillas (microwaved). There's a good story about a last minute Thanksgiving he and his brother Bob ended up eating at 3am the morning after Thanksgiving. I've seen him make Bisquick pancakes -- and they're also good. But yeah. Now that we live together, mostly I cook.

Here, however, is his "famous" salad. Salad, in this part of the world, is best in fall and spring, when lettuce is fresh and local.

This one he made for dinner, and the way he makes them, they are a dinner.

What you'll need:

Green leafy substance (this is romaine, but any lettuce or non-cooking greens will do)

some fruit (here he's got apples, tangerines, dates, and raisins)

some vegetables (carrots, tomatoes, scallions, green peppers)

some nuts (here, pecans [how to say it like a native] and walnuts)

some salty stuff (like pickles, olives, capers)

some cheese and whatever else you have a spoonful or two of left in the fridge

Some spices (here, dill, cilantro, red pepper and black pepper)

What you do:
Wash what needs washing. Cut up what needs cutting up into bite-sized pieces.
Tear the lettuce into bite-sized pieces.
Put this in the bottom of a big bowl.
But the other bite-sized stuff on top.
Shake on some Parmesan or other cheese.
Toss and serve.

We eat this without dressing, but for guests we have some bottled stuff, or I drizzle on a little mustard mixed with honey and olive oil, or some Good Seasons Italian.

There you go.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Turkey Shaped like a Football (under $15, about an hour)


I have the lyrics to "Secret Agent Man" (I know I used this in the last post, but it's just SO good) stuck in my head this morning. Only they're the wrong lyrics, they're the classically wrong lyrics: I'm hearing,
secret... ASIAN man, secret... ASIAN man over and over again. It's a mystery. Can you be a secret Asian? Why would you keep that a secret, even if you could? Why can't the singer sing AGENT, with a nice hard G?

Look, I'm procrastinating. I need to write a paper, but instead I'm writing to you guys.

Everything isn't what it should be.

Welcome to meatloaf.

Once, I sat down at a table to a meatloaf made of god knows what dead animal -- what obese dead animal -- ground up and pressed into a big square corningware casserole. The grease was...impressive, if you're impressed by about half an inch of grease, say, floating on top of your meat. There was also ketchup somehow, but I never caught how.

I think of this particular meatloaf as an insult to the meatloaf deity.

My mother's meatloaf was never like that. When I ate beef, I liked hers, and conveniently enough when it's reshaped, it makes delightful meatballs. So when I stopped eating red meat, I began experimenting with her recipe. Her meatloaf was tender in the middle, crispy-edged (for those yummy heel pieces), savory, and remarkably ungreasy. I wanted that for my non-beef-loaf.

Here is what I came up with. Look at the pictures for what you want in consistency and meat-to-bread ratio. I make two loaves at a time and often freeze one for later.

about a pound and a half of ground poultry
about a pound and a half of poultry sausage (we like hot Italian turkey sausage when we can get it)
stale bread (maybe four cups), cut into cubes
about 1/2 c seasoned breadcrumbs
two eggs
some milk
oregano, thyme, red pepper flakes, salt
jalapeno paste, if you like it hot

Dump the cubes in a giant bowl.

Dump the ground poultry on top of that.

Squeeze the sausage out of the casings into the bowl. Discard the casings.

Add eggs.

Splash in maybe 3/4 c milk. Keep the milk out in case you need more.

Add the bread crumbs and spices.

With a potato masher, mash everything together. You want to do this until everything is WELL mixed, so give it some time. If the bread cubes aren't coming up into the meat, splash on a little more milk, but just a little at a time. Keep mashing. It should come together so that you can form balls of it with your hands. If you set them down, they should hold together and not crack or fall open. This may take five minutes of mashing, though I'd say it takes maybe two-three normally.

When you have everything mashed together, wash your hands, set the oven for 375 and get out two pans with edges. I use rectangular brownie pans because both with fit in my oven together. But use what you have and bake in stages if you have to. Lightly grease the bottom of the pans (I use spray grease). Divide the meat mixture in half, taking out one half with your hands and forming it into a footbally-loafy shape. Pat it smooth. Place it in one pan. Repeat with the other half and place it in the other pan.

Wash your hands (remember you're working with poultry) and then put the pans in the oven. Baking loaves can take from 45-60 minutes. You want to watch that they're uniformly brown on the outside, and they aren't pink in the middle.

If you need this in shorter order, divide the meat mixture in three or four and make smaller loaves: four loaves will cook in about 20-30 minutes.

To make meatballs, just form the meat mixture into balls whatever size you like. You can bake these, but I normally use a skillet and pan-cook them on the stove. Since they're very unfatty, you need a little olive oil in the skillet.

There you go.


Sunday, December 20, 2009

Smashed Potatoes (under $3; about 25 minutes)

There is almost nothing more unpalatable to me than the mashed potatoes of my childhood. My mother used to peel and boil chunks of potato until they fell into powder. Then she'd get out the electric mixer, add margarine and some milk and mix until she could nearly pour the stuff. Babyfood. The consistency of vomit-froth. Insubstantial and unchewable. Gah. Yuck.

I encountered these again in Wisconsin and would have despaired, but thankfully, I'd been living in Georgia in between, where I --
  1. had a shitty electric mixer that couldn't handle potatoes for, say, 15 (I fed 23 people at once);
  2. so had bought a potato masher (mine is less hand-grenade-y than this), which changed my life, potato-wise; and
  3. had met the inestimably wonderful Peter Gareis, who taught me his secret to mashed spuds.
The secret to smashed potatoes ala Gareis is that you must chew, and you must chew on rich, worthwhile things. All hail Peter, who stood in my kitchen and made these one day while I watched. Actually, come to think of it, it might have been his kitchen, and I might have been spying intrusively. All hail Peter anyway.

Okay, what you need:

A large pot
water
about 6-8 medium boiling potatoes (for about four people, or just one of you, if it's been a really really bad day)
butter
milk
salt
cream or yogurt cheese

Easy.
Step one: wash potatoes thoroughly. You're going to eat the skin, so make sure it's clean.

Step two: cut unpeeled potatoes in about 2" pieces.

Step three: put potatoes in pot and just cover with hot water.

Step four: boil them on high until a fork slides easily into the largest piece you can find. This should take about 10-15 mins. NO longer than 20 or you'll have crap falling apart potatoes and that's no fun.

Step five: drain the potatoes. Save the water for soup if you're that kind of person.

Step six: put the potatoes back in the warm pot. Add about two-three TBSP of cream/yogurt cheese, a splash of milk, a tsp salt and some butter.

Step seven: mash vigorously. Add a little more milk to get a smoother consistency if you need to.

Taste and adjust salt and add pepper if you like that. Find an old sappy movie and plop down on the couch with a bowl of these. Eat in big gobbing spoonfuls, like ice cream. They're good for your soul, very calming, very grown up.

There you go.


Thursday, December 17, 2009

Cornbread (about $2; 40 minutes)

I was reading something the other day -- don't ask me what -- and someone was complaining that she couldn't make cornbread because there wasn't any buttermilk. That got me to wondering what the heck she was talking about. I guess you could use buttermilk. I'd never used it. But I guess you could.

And anyway, the chemistry of using buttermilk in baking is easy enough that you can substitute spoiled milk (or sweet milk curded with a little vinegar) for buttermilk, in a pinch.

People get their panties in a wad for the weirdest of reasons.

Witness: the sugar issue (this person's actually pretty mild in her disapprobation; she only kicks you off the website). Apparently -- I'm really outside this debate (here's another random sampling), too, so can't be trusted to represent it at all well -- if you add sugar to your cornbread you are [insert nasty regional epithet here]. "True" cornbread, the food of [benevolent regional description]ers, is sugar-free.

I don't know. You could take out the sugar I guess, just add a little less milk, and see how it does. All depends on whether or not you want to be a [nasty region]ist, or if (heresy, I suppose) the matter of sugar really does mark you as a [nasty region]ist.

Alright: here's the recipe. I make this in a cast iron skillet, and make 1 and a half of this recipe to fill it. As written below, this will fill a loaf pan.

You'll need:
1 c self-rising cornmeal (buy local!)
1/2 c white flour
1/4 c white sugar
1 egg (what I want for my birthday)
milk

Oven at 350.

Grease the skillet or loaf pan generously.

In a bowl, mix meals and sugar. If you're using corn niblets, add them to the meal/flour mixture. I put about a handful in mine -- so maybe 1/4 c?

In a large measuring cup, beat the egg with creamed corn if you're not using niblets. Don't do both or you won't have bread so much as corn pudding. Which is delicious, but won't really sop much.

Add enough milk to the measuring cup to make about a cup and a half of liquid. Keep the milk out since you may need a little more wet.

Mix the wet materials into the dry materials all at once. Add enough milk that the consistency of the batter is like very loose pancake batter. You should be able to pour it. Mix just until everything's incorporated, then immediately pour into your greased pan.

Bake about 30 minutes. Eat hot with lots of butter. Sop up soup if you want.

NOTE: I use this for stuffing at the holidays, only I make it hot and spiced. I double the recipe, add garlic, red pepper flakes, oregano, sage, basil and thyme. Cook in a large skillet. Leave out overnight, then crumble with regular bread for your stuffing. It's my secret. Shhhhh.


There you go.


Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Locked and Loaded, Sir, Yes, Sir (less than a dollar, 1 minute or less)

[No, you've come to the right blog: I changed the colors because, much as I loved the way the black looked with the pictures, the letters swam and danced and I was getting a headache trying to read the thing. Let me know if this works better for you, or if you really want to be back in black again. I'll listen, my disciples. My precious.]


I issue a warning here. Working with hot peppers means washing your hands A LOT, with soap and hot water, before you touch your eyes or any other mucusoid or otherwise private part of your or another person's anatomy.

True story.

No, wait. I can't tell that one. Sorry.

Jalapeno paste is designed to allow you to eat VERY spicy food without blistering your lover's(') privates, or your own. Or blinding him/her/them/you. After you make JP, you touch it only with a spoon before you eat it. It's a beautiful, relationship-saving, doctor-visit-preventing thing.

I grow my own peppers and make up, and can, vast batches of this every summer. I have heard that setting out hot peppers next to mild ones -- say, habaneros next to bells -- can make the mild ones hot. Also, the heat in a pepper is there to prevent the fruit from getting fungal infections: thus, peppers grown during wet summers (like this one) are drastically hotter than those grown during dry ones.

Oh, and one reason people like hot peppers is that the pain of eating such things releases endorphins in the brain. In warm countries, the sweat the heat of peppers creates is also cooling. They are amazing little things. More fun facts? Why yes, I have one more! Only mammals experience capsaicin (the "hot" in these peppers) as hot: birds and bugs don't. Thus, you can help keep squirrels out of your feeders with hot pepper-coated seeds (well, except those "Cajun" squirrels [dear GOD, do NOT Google "cajun squirrel" unless you want recipes] -- listen for their zydeco bands to know whether this will work for you). Seriously.

What you'll need:

1) Peppers. This is a picture of the very last batch we could harvest before the first frost killed our plants. It was our sixth or so harvest of this size from these plants. The peppers come from two jalapenos, one habanero, and one plant sold as serrano, but which I think is thai green peppers. Probably there's a pound or a pound and a half here. Note that I have not stemmed or seeded any of these -- they go into the paste whole, without my cutting them. If you have to have less hot pepper paste, I'd suggest using milder peppers (poblanos, for instance) instead of seeding. Or using less paste in a recipe. Seeding means cutting peppers which means getting your hands on them, which means -- danger, Will Robinson. You get the picture.

2) Salt. Use about a tsp or 2 per 3 med. jalapenos. This sounds like a lot, but if you're going to store it, salt is a way to keep the peppers from going rancid. If you're going to use it all at once, you won't need more than a single jalapeno or two and I'd skip the salt entirely -- just salt the dish. I make this en masse so I add a lot of salt.

3) Optionally, olive oil. I add this because it also prevents spoiling and saves me a step in cooking. I don't have to oil the pan at all or as much if I add oil at this juncture. And my peppers stay green in the fridge. Here I've added maybe a quarter cup. Sometimes I add more, but I figured I'd be using this batch up pretty fast.

4) Food processor or blender.

Step one. Wash the peppers.

Step two. Stuff them in the processor/blender.

Step three: Add salt and/or oil.

Step four: Press go-button. Process to a paste. You'll still see seeds, but it should be smoothish.

Step five: Move the paste carefully to a refrigerator-compatible, sealable dish and refrigerate until it turns black and nasty throughout, which means its spoiled. I've been able to keep this for up to a year open in the fridge, with the right amount of salt. By which I mean a lot.

Step six: Rinse everything carefully and wash in a hot, soapy medium. Wash your hands. If you think you got some on you, lick that part. If you tongue heats up (slowly, painfully), wash that part again with hot water and soap. The heat in peppers is oily, so it takes lipid-busters to get it off.

You're done.

One of Chuck's favorite ways to eat this is by the cafe-spoonful, on top of cream cheese (they have a festival!), on top of a cracker. His eyes water. It's fun to watch.

There you go.



Sunday, December 13, 2009

Collards Are Not Nasty Tasting (about $10; prep, 20 minutes; cooktime, 4-6 hours)


I don't remember if I've always been a fan of green stuff. I can remember a time that I ate only Egg McMuffins (college) and a time when I ate a lot of Hamburger Helper (someone needs to make a horror movie with that little hand thing) and London broil (age whatever to 18). Given my druthers, I'd probably sit down to a bowl of homemade mac n cheese every day -- though now I like it weaponized, and with cauliflower -- so maybe that means I'm not secretly still two years old, culinarily speaking.

I don't come from a collards-eating culture. My parents, the son and daughter of German and Scots-Irish immigrants, grew up in northwest Pennsylvania. They understood sausage and pot roast and hamburger. Vegetables were carrots, peas, potatoes. Onions as a garnish. No garlic. Tomatoes maybe raw on hamburgers; tomato sauce was for the "low-class Italians" on the other side of town.

Broccoli I remember eating in the 1980s, maybe for the first time. It was steamed, with margarine (has its own European association) and salt.

You understand where I come from. Collards thus were so off the radar that I had no idea, seeing them for the first time, what they were. And had no problem avoiding them as I saw them cooked when I moved to the real South -- full of nasty bits of greasy pork fat floating in bitter-smelling, soapy-looking water.

I don't remember why I tried cooking them for the first time -- probably, again, because of the CSA in Carrollton and their heaps of greens mid-winter here. Now, come December? I can't get enough of them. They're cheap (I got six pounds for 50 cents. I kid you not.); they're really good for you; and the way I cook them, they taste incredible.


Here's what you need:

One bunch of collards, de-stemmed, washed, and chopped into about quarter-sized bits. You can get bags of collards at the Publix already chopped up; if you do this, use just one bag.

2 smoked turkey wings (you can substitute any smoked meat. DO NOT use fatback or fat pork or fat yuck -- use meat or a smoked-meat substitute.) NOTE: remember to remove all the packaging. Sometimes I inadvertently skip this step with interesting results.

red pepper flakes
salt
about a 1/4 c sugar
1 c white vinegar
about 5 c water

You'll need a big crock-pot (OOOOooo. A three-holer!). If you have the smaller kind, halve the recipe here.


Put the meat on the bottom of the pot. You might want to take off the skin, but you don't have to debone. I don't do either: I just slap the stuff in there.

Put the collards on top of the meat.

On top of the collards, put a couple of TBSP of red pepper flakes or however much you like. I tend to fill my palm and put that much.

Then dump on about a 1/4 c white sugar. Much as I hate sugar in savory dishes, collards need it. Sorry.

Add some salt, maybe two tsp. Smoked meat has salt as part of the processing, so go lightly and add salt when it's finished and you've tasted it.


Then add the vinegar, and enough water that, when you put your finger just under the first layer of collards you can feel the top. For me, it's about five cups. Might be a little more or less for you, depending.

Cover the crock-pot and set it for four hours. If you want to give it a stir mid-way, you can, but it's not necessary.

You'll smell this when it's done -- it's very fragrant when it finishes. To check for doneness, make sure the leaves have turned dark green and the meat comes loosely off the bones or pulls apart very easily. There should appear to be more water in the pot than when you started.

If your meat has bones (never use anything with small bones unless you want to kill someone -- so thighs, wings, NOT legs, NOT backs or breast with backmeat), this is the time to remove them, and the skin if you don't have a Chuck around to eat it. I use long tongs ("long tongs" sounds so nasty!). Everything will be VERY hot in temperature, so be careful.

I serve this with cornbread to sop up the pot liquor (I'm a damnyankee). Hardly ever are there leftovers.
There you go.

Curried Potatoes and Cauliflower (under $10; 30 minutes)


This is Aloo Ghobi. I learned to cook it
after I got home from India, from a website called Manjula's Kitchen. Manjula uses consistently good recipes, and her videos are excellent. This is her recipe, lightly modified for my taste.

Adjust the heat (spiciness) in this by adjusting the amount of jalapeno paste you use. You can make it perfectly mild if you leave most or all of it out.

Some of the spices are not readily available at the local Publix. We use the Dekalb Farmer's Market for ours, but still, if we run out of amchoor (dried mango powder), that's only available at Indian grocery stores. If you want to cook Indian food often, you need this; otherwise, leave it out. To my taste, it imparts a bit of astringency and makes the taste more complex. But not so much that the dish is meaningfully harmed without it.

Hing (asafoetida) is necessary. You never need more than a pinch, so pick up a few ounces and you'll be good forever. Probably this is also available only from an Indian grocery store.

So, this is what you need:

3 TBSP of oil
pinch of hing (go EASY)
2 c. cauliflower, cut into about 2" pieces
3 c potatoes, cut into about 2" pieces (do not peel the potatoes)
1 tsp shredded fresh ginger (about a 1" piece, grated)
3 tsp coriander powder
1/4 tsp turmeric
1/4 tsp cayenne or other red chili powder
1 tsp jalapeno paste
1 tsp salt
1 tsp amchoor
2 TBSP cilantro
water

It's best to prepare all of this ahead of time since it makes up so fast.

Chop vegetables, wash and set aside.

In a separate bowl, mix ginger, coriander, cayenne, turmeric, and 3 TBSP of water to make paste.

In a separate small bowl, mix hing and cumin seeds.

In a separate bowl, mix amchoor and cilantro.

Measure out the salt in another bowl.

In a large saucepan, heat oil on medium. Drop a cumin seed in when the oil begins to shimmer and pops when a drop of water is added to it. The cumin seed should crackle. If it does, add hing and cumin seeds and move them around, cooking for just a few seconds. [Wait to add hing and cumin seeds until the seed pops right after it hits the oil.]

Add bay leaves and spoon(s) full of jalapeno paste. Stir just a few seconds until everything's coated.

Add spice paste and cook one minute, or until the oil separates from the spices.

Add cauliflower, potatoes, salt, and 2 TBSP of water. Mix to coat vegetables thoroughly.

Keep the heat on low-medium. Cover and cook for twenty minutes or until tender, stirring every five minutes so the potatoes don't stick. Add just a little water if necessary. If the vegetables are very wet, leave the cover vented for the last five minutes to evaporate the water.

When the vegetables are tender, add the amchoor and cilantro. Taste and add salt if needed. Cover and rest the dish at least five minutes before serving.

I serve this with whole wheat tortillas (I just buy El Banderito brand at Publix), heated in my iron skillet. It's almost roti. Really.

There you go.
 
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