Sunday, August 1, 2010
VERMICELLI PAKORA
Ingredients
Vermicelli 1 cup
Basin flour 2 table spoons
Rice flour 1 table spoon
Baked and smashed potato 1
Onion (cut lengthwise) 3
Green chili (cur lengthwise) 4
Ginger and garlic paste ½ tea spoon
Salt To taste
Mint leaves 2 table spoons
Cashew nut 2 table spoons
Coriander leaves (cut finely) 1 table spoon
Oil and ghee
Put ghee in a frying pan, fry vermicelli till it becomes golden brown in colour. Add little warm water and boil it. Then add cool water into it and filter it nicely. Add potato, green chili, onion etc to vermicelli. Make thick dough without water. Then deep fry the pakoras in oil. Serve hot with sauce or chutney.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
TOMATO SOUP
Ingredients
Tomatoes 1 Kg
Onion 2 medium
Fresh Ginger 1 ½ “piece
Carrot 1 chopped finely
Beet root small piece
Salt, pepper and sugar
Dice onions, tomatoes into big pieces. Peel and chop ginger. Take all the chopped vegetables in a vessel and pour enough water to cover the pieces. Cook in medium flame till tomatoes become just tender or pressure cook till one whistle. Cool down thoroughly and discard beet root piece. Blend in mixer and then strain through broad eyed strainer to remove seeds and skin. If necessary dilute it with water and reheat with salt and sugar.
Sunday, March 7, 2010
RAVA DOSAI
Ingredients:
Suji (Rava) 200 gms
Rice flour 200 gms
Maida 100 gms
Cumin seeds ½ tea spoon
Sour butter milk 100 gms
Green chili 1 cut into pieces
Salt To taste
Oil
Pour the buttermilk in a bowl. Add suji, maida, rice flour, cumin seeds, green chili and salt. Make the batter properly like the regular doasi batter. Keep it for 30 minutes. Heat a tawa (dosaikkal), pour a little oil in it and spread evenly. Take one measure of the batter and start pouring from the corners of the tawa in a round shape and finish in the centre. We cannot spread the batter like regular dosai batter. Put oil in the corners of the doasi. Turn the dosai to the other side. It will be crispy. Serve hot with chili powder, onion chutney.
We can add sliced onions to the batter and prepare onion rava dosai.
Thursday, February 25, 2010
வெண் PONGAL
Ingredients
Raw rice 200 Gms
Green dhal 50 Gms
Pepper ½ tea spoon
Cumin seeds ½ tea spoon
Ginger 1 piece finely cut
Cashew nuts 5
Ghee 50 Gms
Curry leases
Salt
Wash rice and green dhal nicely and pressure cook with 800 Gms water. Add salt. Stir it well. Put ghee in a pan, add pepper, cumin seeds, ginger pieces, curry leaves and cashew nuts. Fry it well. Put the fried items into cooked pongal and stir it well. Serve hot with chutney or gotsu.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
MASIYAL
Ingredients
Tur Dhal 50 gms
Mustard seeds ¼ tea spoon
Sambar podi 1 table spoon
Fenugreek ½ tea spoon
Red chili 3
Green chili 3
Tamarind 1 lemon size
Salt To taste
Curry leaves
Banana Flower, yam, chow chow, methi and greens can be used for this masiyal.
Cook dhal and vegetable separately. Make 200 gms of tamarind water, add salt, curry leaves and sambar podi. Boil it for 10 minutes. Season it with mustard seeds, red chili, asafetida, fenugreek one spoon tur dhal and finally add green chili. Put all the seasonings in to the boiling tamarind water. Then smash the dhal and vegetables and add to the boiled tamarind water. Allow it to boil for 2 more minutes. Serve hot.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
MAIDA CURD BONDA
Ingredients
Maida flour 2 cups
Sour curd 1 cup
Baking powder (cooking) 1 pinch
Cumin seeds 2 tea spoons
Asafoetida 1 pinch
Green chili 2
Salt To taste
Oil
Take Maida; add salt, cumin seeds, green chilies, baking powder, and asafetida. Mix it well slowly with sour curd and make a bonda paste. In a frying pan, pour oil. With a little flame, make small bondas and deep fry it. Serve with chutney.
VEGETABLE BIRIYANI
Ingredients
Basmati Rice 2 cups
Sliced onion 2
Tomato Gravy 1 cup
Vegetables
(Sliced carrot, Potato, Beans,
Peas, Cauliflower) 2 cups
Ghee 5 Table spoon
Turmeric Powder 1 pinch
Briyani leaves 2
Mint and coriander leaves ¼ cup each
Salt To taste
To grind
Red chili 5
Green chili 2
Cardamom 2
Clove 2
Cinnamon 1 small piece
Ginger 1 small piece
Garlic 6 small pieces
Cashew 15
Soak rice in water and keep it aside for 10 minutes. Grind the ingredients. In a pressure cooker, add ghee and fry briyani leaves. Then add sliced onion and ground paste, tomato gravy and turmeric powder. Fry well. Then add the vegetable mix. Put the soaked rice with 4 cups of water. While the rice baked for 3/4th then add mint and coriander leaves and stir it well. Then leave the flame and close the lid. Keep it for 7 minutes. Serve with raitha.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
கட் பாசக் ஒன தி FAT
Regardless of what anyone tells you, I am going to tell you one thing. Fat makes you fat. It is as simple as that. Fat is loaded with calories and you can only lose weight if your calorie ‘input’, which is your food consumption, is less than your calorie ‘output’-which is the calories you burn off through the day. I know how hard it is to cut out the fried stuff, in a weak moment that fried jalebi looks like it is begging to be consumed. Or a pack of chips seems like the answer to life’s problems. Believe me when I say it is simply not worth it. Tell yourself you could consume a delicious, sweet juicy fruit and be just as happy.
Whenever you pass up the medu vada for the idli, congratulate yourself. Once you make the effort, you will find it becomes easier to spurn the samosas and ditch the desserts. Go busy yourself a trendy accessory. Try out a new perfume. These little things work as huge morale boosters, because not only did you say no to fat, you did something special for yourself. As we get further into this chapter, you will fully understand why fat is the single most important factor that leads to a dieter’s downfall.
One gram of fat equals 9 calories. One gram of carbohydrates or one gram of proteins equals 4 calories.
As you can see, compared to proteins and carbohydrates, fats contain more than double the calories-it is obvious why dieters must severely restrict their fat intake. Limiting fat in the diet automatically brings down over call calorie consumption.
Visible fats such as oil, butter, ghee and margarine are easily identified. But there are hidden fats present in almost all foods, in varying amounts. For example, cheese could have milk fat up to 70%. Oily fish such as tuna or sardines also have a high fat content. Even certain fruits, such as avocado for example, are high in fat.
While some amount of fat is required in your diet, it has to be kept to a minimum. In fact, dieters should cut their fat consumption to roughly 15% of their daily calorie intake.
What happens when supply exceeds demand?
If you put extra petrol in a car with a full tank, the tank overflows. In the same way,
Once your body has had its daily requirement of, let us say, 1,700 calories, and you insist on stuffing 2,000 calories, the extra 300 calories “overflow”. This overflow turns into fat and is stored in your fat cells. However, if more and more fat keeps coming in, the cells are forced to expand. There comes a point when the cells expand so much, they can no longer store any more fat, so they multiply, to make room for all the additional fat that is coming in.
When fat intake is reduced, fat cells shrink in size. But once fat cells have been formed, the number of fat cells does not decrease.
ARE ALL TYPES OF OILS AND FATS EQUAL AS FAR AS CALORIES ARE CONCERNED?
Yes. Every type of oil-groundnut, sunflower, mustard, olive, sesame, or any other-all contain 9 calories per gram. Butter and ghee also add up to 9 calories per gram. If you want to lose weight, it is crucial to limit your daily consumption of fats.
WHAT ARE GOOD FATS AND BAD FATS? WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
Examples of good fats are mono unsaturated fats such as olive, peanut and canola oil. Polyunsaturated fats from plant sources such as corn and sunflower are also considered beneficial. These are considered good fats because, when consumed in small quantities, they reduce blood cholesterol and protect against heart disease.
However, ayurveda encourages the consumption of ghee. In India traditional cooking methods make use of ghee, butter and locally available cooking oil.
MYTH: Fats should be eliminated from the diet.
FACT: Limit but do not eliminate fats. Fat is required by the body in small amounts. It is the most misunderstood of all essential nutrients. Fats are needed by the body cells. Provide energy, preserve body heat and protect the organs from damage. Vitamins A, D, E and K are dissolved in fat, and fat is needed for their absorption.
FAT FILE
Did you know, even with a reduced fat supply, your fat cells never disappear? They merely shrink as the fat is depleted, and will expand again if the fat supply increases!
The writer is a certified Clinical Exercise Specialist, Lifestyle and Weight Management Specialist.
This article was read from a daily news paper and published for the use of dieters.
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