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Vegetable samosas

23 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by Zoli in indian, party bites, pastry, snacks, spices, the basics, vegan, Vegetarian

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Tags

Indian food, Madhur Jaffrey, mango pickle, party food, potato, samosas, vegan, World Vegetarian

vegetable samosas
The best samosas I ever had in my life were at a wedding in England, made by the groom’s mother, a scary overbearing lady who didn’t smile during the whole affair. Damn fine cook, but oh thank you sweet lord she wasn’t my mother!
These are yummy, but not as yummy as hers. I got this recipe from the wonderful, the marvelous Madhur Jaffrey, whose book, World Vegetarian, just blows my mind. The filling is great, but the pastry could be a little bit lighter. Still, nothing some spicy mango pickle can’t fix. This is my first attempt at homemade samosas. I find them a little trickier than pakoras. Pakoras use batter, samosas use pastry and, well, lets be honest, pastry takes practice.
A word about fried food. I like it. I like the homemade stuff. My food philosophy is: if I made it and fried it, it’s not so bad. No preservatives. No weird ingredients that came straight out of a chem lab, fried or not.

Vegetable samosas
inspired heavily by Madhur Jaffrey
750g or 5 smallish potatoes
1 onion, diced finely
3 cloves garlic, sliced thinly
1 green chile, deseeded and chopped
1 handful parsley or cilantro, chopped
1 tbs fresh ginger, peeled and minced (or grated)
fresh or frozen peas
2 tbs lemon juice
1 tsp salt
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp garam masala
water as needed
olive oil and vegetable oil

pastry
225g or 2 cups flour
1 tsp salt
4 tbs olive oil
4-6bs water

1. Start with the pastry. Mix the flour and salt together
2. Add the olive oil and rub it with your fingers to form a crumbly mixture
3. Add in the water and mix to form a stiff dough. Add a little more water as needed so that the dough sticks together.
4. Knead the dough on a clean counter until it is nice and smooth. A few minutes. Put in a plastic bag and set aside.
5. Boil the potatoes until just tender. Let cool and then peel and dice.
6. Heat up olive oil in a heavy frying pan and fry the onion, garlic and chili gently until very soft.
7. Add the spices, the diced potato, cilantro and peas. (Fresh peas will need longer cooking time.)
8. Add a little water to the potato mixture so that it doesn’t dry out or stick to the bottom.
9. Cook gently for a few minutes until all the flavors are combined. Add lemon juice, taste and adjust seasoning as needed. Might need a little more salt if too bland or water if too dry.
DSC_0009
10. Back to the dough. By this time it should be softer and more pliable. Knead for a couple minutes and divide into 8 balls. Roll each one out very thinly–about as thin as a tortilla–and cut in half. Fold over into a triangle shape and use a fork to press down on the bottom side to seal it together. Put about a tsp of potato filling in and press down with a fork to seal the remaining open end. You should have what looks like a small wonton or empanada style samosa ready for frying. Continue with the rest of the pastry and filling until you have 16 samosas.
11. In a heavy frying pan, heat up some vegetable oil for deep frying or shallow frying. I chose shallow frying, so just enough oil to fry one side of the samosas fully before flipping.
12. Place the samosas gently in the oil and fry till one side is golden and then use tongs to flip over. Have plenty of paper towel to hand for draining.
13. We ate these with spicy mango pickle, but anything would be good–a mint cucumber dip or tomato sambal.
hot mango pickle
veggie samosas

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Spanish tortilla

09 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by Zoli in breakfast, comfort food, drinks, eggs, gluten free, omelettes, party bites, Sauces, snacks, spanish, tapas, Vegetarian

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Tags

potato omelette, romesco, spanish recipes, Spanish tortilla, tapas, tortilla, tortilla de patatas, tortilla espanola

Tortilla 1 Tortilla 2 Tortilla espagnola

The first time I went to Spain, I noticed these potato omelettes everywhere–on every menu, in every cafe and bar, stuffed inside of bread flutes and sold as sandwiches and sometimes cut into wedges and served to us free with a drink. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that what I thought would be a cold, dry, brick of potato and egg turned out to be soft, moist and delicious. The humble tortilla is not your run-of-the-mill omelette. For one thing it is delicious cold. For another it is delicious warm, hot, on its own, stuffed in bread, or served with homemade romesco and a green salad. It doesn’t feel like a heavy meal either–unless you eat the whole thing yourself.
I recently had the good fortune to visit my sister-in-law who lives just outside of Madrid. She was a wonderful hostess and tour guide and joy of joys, we stopped several times to sit in the shade with a cerveza or tinto de verano and pan and tortilla. It’s been so long since I’ve had really good tortilla that I had forgotten that Tortilla Espanola should be so soft and moist that you can barely tell the potato from the egg. Time to update this recipe!
Oh and, as a bonus, if you can find a last warm sunny day (such as today) before Autumn sets in, tinto de verano on your deck or patio will make it even more special.

Tortilla ingredients
will make about 6 mid-size wedges
3 large potatoes or 4-5 small potatoes, peeled
1 onion, sliced thinly
5-6 eggs, beaten and seasoned
sea salt and fresh ground pepper
about 2 cups Spanish olive oil
9-inch frying pan with curving edges
plates for flipping

1. Cut the potatoes into small pieces, almost like flakes, by holding each potato in one hand and using a pairing knife to cut off little pieces. They do not have to be uniform, just thinnish bits of potato, roughly the same size.
2. Do the same with an onion–small, thin pieces.
3. Mix the potato and onion in a large bowl with salt.
4. Heat up a generous amount of olive oil in the frying pan—enough oil to almost cover the potatoes. This might make some people uncomfortable, but the magic to this dish is that the potatoes and onions are simmered in the olive oil and become super moist and flavorful. Simmer on a low or medium-low heat until tender and easily breakable with a wooden spoon. Stir the mixture to cook evenly.
5. When the potatoes are soft and tender, pour into a strainer over a bowl to catch the excess oil.
4. Break the eggs into a large bowl and beat. Add a little salt. Then add the cooked potato onion mixture.
6. Heat up a little oil in the frying pan on medium heat and then add in the egg/potato/onion mixture. Hold the handle of the frying pan and shake it so that the egg doesn’t stick to the bottom. Use a spatula to run around the sides and make sure nothing sticks.
7. Let the omelette cook until the bottom is browned.
8. Take a large plate and fit it over the omelette in the frying pan. In one swift motion, flip the frying pan over so that the omelette falls smoothly onto the plate.
9. Add a little bit more oil to the frying pan.
10. Hold the plate with the omelette over the frying pan and scoot the tortilla carefully off the plate so that it gently eases into the frying pan (runny egg side down, cooked side up). Cook on medium for another few minutes–about 3-5 minutes on medium heat. Loosen the sides with a spatula to make sure it doesn’t stick.
11. Turn off the heat and cover the omelette with a lid for a couple minutes to gently steam cook. Then hold a plate over the frying pan and flip again to serve the finished tortilla.

This may take some practice and experience to judge when the tortilla is ready. Some people may prefer the egg more undercooked than others. You can’t really go wrong with potatoes, eggs and salt though!

Tinto de verano
For this lovely summery low alcohol cocktail:
1/4 to 1/2 cup red wine
1/2 cup lemon soda such as Fanta or Trader Joes Lemon soda
squeeze of lemon, plus lemon slice
plenty of ice

1. Mix all together. I prefer mine on the light side—too much red wine isn’t as nice to me.
It seems so simple, but is quite delicious.

ingredients

peeled potatoes
diced potatoes
potatoes and onions

simmering in oildrain the oil
tinto de verano

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