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Category Archives: spices

Bombay sandwich

26 Wednesday Feb 2014

Posted by Zoli in indian, quick and awesome, sandwiches, Sauces, spices, Street food, Vegetarian

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Bombay sandwich, Indian street food, mint chutney, toastie, vegetarian sandwich

bombay-sandwich-cut
When I was around 20 or 21, I went to the UK for the summer. My boyfriend’s English friends left almost straight after my arrival for France on a camping holiday leaving us, the dreadfully poor, sitting in a 2-bedroom flat in London, chain smoking and bored (Ah, youth). My boyfriend suggested that we go to Northern Ireland for the Summer. It’s cheap to live and we can make some money working there and then naturally we’ll go on holiday too—maybe France or even Amsterdam! His suggested oasis of money making was the small university town of Portrush. This was a really stupid plan. I agreed immediately.

This was a stupid plan for many reasons, the most obvious being that the average wage for a barmaid (my only skill at the time) was 2 pounds an hour. In London (where we WERE) it was much more than that.

Off we went!

If I remember correctly (oh, it was so long ago), we took a train to the west coast, then a ferry in the middle of the night to Dublin. We landed in Dublin early morning, stopped for a pint somewhere and then hitchhiked the rest of the way North to Portrush. It took us all day and about 4 different drivers. At last we arrived in a charming seaside town (although I didn’t notice its charm at the time) with a sweet little marina, narrow stony terraced houses, outrageously dramatic cliffs and angry waves. We each had a hiking bag on our backs and were exhausted from walking, standing, walking and waiting by the sides of roads. My boyfriend led the way to the small house he shared with other students–most of whom were away for the summer. But one housemate happened to be in, a tall Irish fellow named Fergal who, as far as I can tell, hated me on sight. But even so he took the time to make us a cup of tea and a toastie.

A toastie? What the hell is that?

Two pieces of bread, filled with something nice and smushed together in a metal contraption until cooked and crispy. Kind of like grilled cheese taken to the next level. Fergal served me a ham and cheese toastie and I did something very strange for my 21-year old self (my young self who survived on cigarettes, coffee and packets of crisps). I ate the whole dang thing. Because it was fricking delicious and because I was hungry. Really hungry.

And if you find yourself in such a state, when you need food—hot, substantial, easy, cheap, scrummy food—than a toastie is the way to go. Or something much like a toastie. Which is how I like to think of my newly discovered favorite (of the moment) street food: the bombay sandwich. To me, it’s an exotic toastie. The nice thing about it is it is not anywhere near as heavy as it sounds. Potato and bread? Yes, but thinly sliced potato, also beets, tomato, cucumber, onion and fresh zingy knock you out mint chutney. It’s actually more like a salad than a sandwich, even with some freshly grated cheese just melting over the top.

green-chutney
bombay-sandwich-open-cucumber
bombay-sandwich-open
bombay-sandwich-untoasted
bombay-sandwich

Homemade green chutney
1 1/2 cups fresh cilantro
1/2 cup fresh mint leaves
3 green chilies, deseeded (unless you want the extra spice)
1-2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 tsp fresh ginger, chopped
2 tsp chopped nuts (peanuts or cashews)
salt and pepper
1 tsp lemon juice

1) Put all in a blender or food processor and blend until liquified and smooth. If using a blender, you may need to add a dash of water but this will make the chutney watered down.

Ingredients for one awesome Bombay sandwich
2 slices completely unpretentious bread (white or brown)
homemade green mint chutney–not optional!
butter
1/2 cooked potato, sliced thinly
1/2 tomato sliced
thin slices of cucumber
1/8 thinly sliced onion
4-5 slices of cooked beet
grated mild cheese such as cheddar or jack
1/2 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp fresh ground cumin
1/2 tsp chaat masala

1) Butter two slices of bread and spread generously with the homemade chutney.
2) Layer the vegetables on one slice of bread: cucumber, tomato, beets, onion and potato.
3) Sprinkle the spices over the vegetables and then cover with the other slice of bread.
4) If you do not have a toastie maker: Butter the outside of the sandwich and then fry in a frying pan with a weight on the sandwich. Fry on med low for 2 or 3 minutes. Melt more butter in the frying pan and carefully flip the sandwich to fry the other side in the butter, taking care not to let the fillings spill out. Add weight to the top of the sandwich to press down.
5) If you do have a toastie maker, butter both sides of the outside sandwich and cook as normal.
6) When the sandwich is done, serve with extra chutney slathered on top and fresh grated cheese over it. Enjoy!

bombay-sandwich-assembled

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Vegan Thai green curry

19 Wednesday Feb 2014

Posted by Zoli in gluten free, healthy, jasmine rice, peanut free, rice, spices, Thai, vegan, Vegetarian

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

galangal, green curry, Jasmine rice, lemongrass, Thai curry paste, Thai green curry, Vegan curry, Vegan Thai food, vegetarian curry

Vegan Thai green curry

Vegan Thai green curry

This is flavorful and so dang healthy… lemongrass, galangal, lime juice, basil, cilantro, jalapeno, garlic, etc… The fragrance and taste are so much more than what you see on your plate.

If you’ve never made a Thai-style curry paste from scratch before, give it a whirl. It’s easy—the only hard part being locating ingredients. I saw galangal root, fresh lemongrass stalks and jasmine rice at the Korean H Mart the other day and destiny took over. Any leftover galangal (or curry paste) can wait it out in the cold darkness of my freezer till next curry time.

There are three phases to putting this together: 1) Make the paste, 2) make the curry sauce and 3) cook the Jasmine rice (or basmati, or quinoa, or cous cous).

Ingredients for vegan green curry paste
Makes enough for one large batch of Thai green curry, to serve 4-6

1 cup fresh cilantro, roughly chopped
1/2 cup Thai basil (basil can be substituted)
1 lemongrass stalk, roughly chopped
6 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
1/4 red onion, shallot, or mild onion, chopped
3 green chilies, deseeded and chopped (you can leave a few seeds in for heat)
2 tbs chopped fresh galangal root
3 tbs soy sauce
juice of 1/2 lime
1/4 can coconut milk or coconut cream
few grinds of salt
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp palm sugar or brown sugar

1) Add everything to a food processor or blender and blitz until completely blended. The end.

vegetables for Thai green curry
vegetables for Thai green curry
DSC_0144
Thai jasmine rice

Putting the curry together*

All the green curry paste
3/4 can coconut milk (or 1/2 can coconut cream and 1/2 water)
handful fresh Thai basil (or basil)
1/2 cup vegetable stock
a few kaffir lime leaves (I didn’t have these and it was fine)
vegetables such as asparagus, bell peppers, mushrooms and bak choi
1/2 a block of firm tofu, cubed (optional)
Olive oil
* Cut the recipe in half and add in only half the curry paste if you are cooking for only 2 or 3 people.

1) In a large frying pan or wok, heat up a glug of olive oil and add in all the homemade green curry paste. Fry the paste for a minute on medium heat.
2) Add the coconut milk, stock (and water if necessary).
3) Add the chopped vegetables and cook on a medium low heat till just tender. Add the tofu and fresh basil in and cook another minute or two.
4) Serve over jasmine rice, cous cous or whatever you like. Who cares? It’ll be awesome. Don’t forget a cold Thai beer!

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