Skip to main content

Paruppu thuvaiyal- MLLA 35 entry


My mom is visiting and one of the things I ask her to make every time she visits is some form of paruppu thuvaiyal (a kind of pesto that you eat with rice, similar to chutney except a lot more thicker)

This recipe uses yellow moong dal- skinned and split mung beans that are easy to digest.


Ingredients

1 cup yellow moong dal
1 clove garlic
2 dried red chillies *
a pinch of asaefotida (hing)
2 tbsp oil
salt to taste
water, minimal quantity for grinding

Method

Heat oil in a pan. Add the garlic, red chillies, asaefoetida- saute for about 30 seconds. Then add the yellow moong dal and roast till the dal is golden brown.

Cool it down and grind with minimal amount of water.

Serve with hot rice, ghee (clarified butter) and some fried papad!

Judgement

With the garlic and the heat from red chillies, it sort of warmed me up- exactly what I needed after kind of weather we have been put through here in the area. (I guess I cannot complain about it being cold when people down south have lost their lives, homes and livelihoods to the monstrous tornadoes- my hearts go out to them).

I am sending this simple, no-frill drill to MLLA 35 hosted by Smitha of Kanada Cuisine. This event was started by Susan of The Well Seasoned Cook and has been going on for a while now.

Comments

  1. Nice version of thuvaiyal. I normally add some coconut too.

    ReplyDelete
  2. yeah I add coconut too with the version where I use tuvar dal...this is my mom's thing :D

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Abhirami

    Thanks for the delightful entry.. We Kannadigas call a version of this recipe 'Hesarubele Chutney' Love it with hot rice a generous helping of ghee.
    BTW, the event is MLLA 35 :)
    Cheers
    Smitha @ Kannadacuisine

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Smitha

    Oops. changed it to MLLA 35- thanks for hosting!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Gingerbread house

Oh the warm smell of spices is the hallmark of the holiday season and is the one thing we all love, don't we? GInger is definitely one spice that I love to include in my cooking/baking expeditions during this time of the year. So I was naturally happy to see that this month we were doing the gingerbread house for this month's challenge, well it was a fleeting moment anyway until I realized that it was yet another kitchen mishap. Consider this my 10th new recipe and the 3rd in Nupur's marathon . The December 2009 Daring Baker's challenge was brought to you by Anna of Very Small Anna and Y of Lemonpi . They chose to challenge Daring Bakers' everywhere to bake and assemble a gingerbread house from scratch. They chose recipes from Good Housekeeping and from The Great Scandinavian Baking Book  as the challenge recipes. I used Y's recipe Ingredients 1 cup butter, room temperature 1 cup brown sugar, well packed 2 tablespoons cinnamon 4 teaspoons ground g...

Vadas- not your ordinary ones

I know, I know- I have been out of the blog-land, troubles of this world have me taken over you see and I need to fix it all for me to get back to y'all! Here is a gorgeous looking and perhaps amazingly tasty vada- it was my mum and my experiment all the way to fruition. Now I think kala or kabuli chana is the one of most underused forms of the fabacae family (compare to its ever popular cousin-chickpea). I love kabuli chana especially in what we call sundal from the Tam-land. If you have never tried sundal made of these babies, you must and I insist. But for now I settled for this minor experiment in the kitchen- kabuli chana vadas. Ingredients: Kabuli chana, 1 cup soaked overnight in 2 cups water 1/2 onion, chopped 1 tsp cumin seeds 1 tsp fennel seeds salt and ground red chilli powder to taste Oil for Method: Just like any dal vada- coarsely grind the softened chana (Note: this is not going to have a lot of binding capacity) Mix in the onions, salt, red chilli powder, cu...

Tried and Tasted- hell yeah!

I love a lot of the food blogs and eventually I begin to love the food bloggers themselves for their creativity. One such food blogger is Raaga- The Singing Chef. She has a lovely blog filled with wonderful recipes and stories. When Divya announced that Raaga's blog is being featured on Tried  and Tasted , I was thrilled and I had to make something from her blog. I chose a rice dish for a simple reason that Raaga puts it best herself "Pulaos are multipurpose dishes. They are showstoppers at parties, timesavers on weekend and lifesavers during weekday lunches." Cauliflower peas pulao from her blog Ingredients:  2 cup Basmati Rice 1 cup Peas 2 cup Cauliflower florets Salt to Taste 1-2 tbsp Oil ¼ tsp Asafoetida 1” stick Cinnamon 3 Cloves Masala (Grind to a Paste):   3 tbsp frozen Coconut, thawed 1 1/2 cup Coriander Leaves 3 Green chillies 1" piece Ginger 3 pods Garlic 1 medium Onion, roughly chopped 1” stick Cinnamon 3 Cloves  1 tbsp Khus-Khus, soak...