Massi vadai

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Preparation time : 15 minutes
Cooking time      :  2 minutes for each batch deep fried
Serves                :  4 to 5 members

Description

Authentic home recipes that are passed down from generation to generation is what that always excite’s me the most as it carries a lot of untold stories and values to it. This dish I remember having it at one of my friends place in kayalpattinam for lunch as a side dish. It sure did have an actuate taste and I didn’t like it much as well then. Now being the true blue foodie I am, this recipe just did came into my mind from no where. Gave it a try and was hit on the table. The most amazing thing about this recipe is, it uses an unusual combination of cupboard friendly ingredients that’s always available at home. These simple recipes passed down from self – taught culinary whizz’s with easy approach and uncomplicated home style recipes are a silver spoon feeding to us where we always are looking to rustle up a meal of comfort food for the family or to host a gathering . It’s all about warmth and hope that brings in a glow with child – like delight profound in its simplicity. It feels great to be sharing these little known Muslim cuisines into context, explaining the significance of each dish.

Ingredients
Quantity
Maasi powder50 grams
Rice cooked1 cup
Egg1
Chilli flakes to taste
Cumin powder1/2 teaspoon
Fennel powder1/2 teaspoon
Curry leavesfew chopped
Grated coconut1 tablespoon
Saltto taste
Oil to to deep fry

Method

  • Grind rice to a coarse paste.
  • Add all the other ingredients to it except for oil and mix well.
  • Heat oil to deep fry.
  • Shape the rice mix into small rounds of goose burry Size with wet hands.
  • Flatten a bit and deep fry to golden.
  • Drain and serve hot.

Wheat Appam

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Preparation time : 10 minutes + 5 hours fermentation time
Cooking time      : 40 seconds to 1 minute for each appam
Serves                : 6-8 members

Description

Any thing made with wheat flour is a warm welcome now a days. I was so surprised to come across a recipe of appam made with wheat flour that was shared by a fellow foodie blogger beena stephy. I did make quote and give a try the next day itself. with my doubts about the results.. Made sure to spare some dosa batter if the wheat appam gets to be a flop show. It was a big no from my boy but surprisingly hubby dear gave a thumbs up. I was blown away with the results as it was perfect just like the regular rice appams we make always with a crisp lace around and a spongy middle. Shared the results in all the food groups I am a member of with joy even before I could share it with you all. I was requested by the television team of news 7 Tamil channel to cook paya recipe with appam. I grabbed the opportunity and made sure to make wheat appams as well making sure to mention the source of the recipe as I was in a soup for not doing so previously in my blog for another recipe. Any good recipe that excites me I make sure to share it with you all first and then in all the foodie groups. Like wise I did so. As I was going through the comments in one foodie group post, got the shock of my life to see comments on me for not sharing the source of the person in the recipe share. I made sure to clear the problem then and there as I respect this world of sharing recipes for free. From then on made sure to add the source of any recipe that I share. This recipe is for sure keeps as its healthy and uses very few ingredients, less efforts and great results.

Ingredients
Quantity
Wheat flour 3 cups
coconut milk1 1/2 cup
Water1 1/2 to 2 cups
Sugar1 tablespoon
Yeast3/4 teaspoon
Saltto taste

Method

  • Mix wheat flour, salt, sugar and coconut milk together.
  • Dilute by adding more water to get a lump free batter.
  • Add yeast and blend well in a food processor. Let it ferment for 5 hours.
  • Mix the batter and dilute to appam batter consistency and pour into hot non stick kadai and make appams.

Cannolini

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Preparation time : 30 minutes
Cooking time      : 1 hour 20 minutes
Serves                : 8 members
Recipe source    : afritha

Description

What do I start with. The dish Cannolini or the person who shared the recipe “Afritha”. Well I know Afritha long before I got to know the dish Cannolini. So it’s about Afritha first and then to the dish for sure. My cousin sister’s daughter. Always confident, tall and giggly are the first three things that come to my mind about her. Then being enthusiastic and inquisitive to know about every thing as well. Her mother, my first cousin Shifa and myself were not the best of friends as kids. Like we all have that one cousin who is a snicker and loves to get us into trouble. She was one hell of a terror for sure. Her father was from Tanjore district and I remember shouting at her on every fight saying. You better make a leave soon to Tamilnadu. Not knowing I myself was there in Tamilnadu.(dum me). In reply she used to ask me to migrate to Kerala (may be because I was born there). Finally, I got married into a typical Tamil family (guess it was her curse.. Kidding) and she into a mixed one.. Following with her daughter Afritha too. Afritha and myself are the only two who are married of to the deep southern part of Tamilnadu and we know every bit of the craziness we are going through with the extreme differences in between the cultural, regional and food habit changes of the opposite ends of Tamilnadu. oops.. I have gone far away from the dish and am boring you all with my silly childhood and present thoughts. Coming to the dish.. Afritha got this dish for the second anniversary of sauté, fry n bake celebration. She missed a prize as the pasta sauce she made was ready made one but taste wise.. The bowl was kicked out clean. The picture by itself is evident for that as even before I could click a picture 3/4 of the dish was empty.. So peeps try this Italian dish made by a Tamil – Mallu combination girl who lives in Deep South Tamilnadu.

Ingredients
Quantity
Olive oil1 tablespoon
Onion1- finely chopped
Garlic clove2- crushed
Chicken mince500 grams
parmesan cheese grated2/3 cups
Spinach 2 tablespoons- chopped
Boiled corn kernels1/2 cups
Tomato pasta sauceHome made
( u can use ready made sauce as well )
Pasta sheetsHome made or ready made cannelloni sheets

Method

  • Preheat oven 180C and lightly grease ovenproof dish.
  • Heat oil in frying pan and sauté garlic and onion.
  • Add chicken, brown well for 4-5 minutes.
  • Add corn n spinach into chicken mixture and season to taste and let it cook

TO MAKE PASTA SHEETS

Beat together 2 cups of all purpose flour n 1 egg . Dilute with little water to get pancake consistency.
Pour on pan n make thin sheets (like dosa)

  • Let the sheets cool down and fill the sheets with chicken mixture
  • Pour a third of the pasta sauce over bottom of ovenproof dish and top with filled cannelloni tubes.
  • Pour remaining sauce over the top of the cannelloni tubes, then sprinkle with remaining Parmesan.
  • Cover with foil and bake for 30 minutes, uncover and bake further 15-20 minutes until tender.

TO MAKE PASTA SAUCE

  • Heat the oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add the 3 cloves garlic and 1 onion and cook for 3-4 minutes until softened but not browned.
  • Add the 1 tablespoon tomato paste and cook, stirring constantly for 1 minute
  • Add the 6 Cooked n beaten tomatoes, reduce the heat and simmer for 8-10 minutes, until thickened.
  • Stir through the salt and pepper, sugar, basil and parsley, adjusting the seasoning as required.

Butter scotch peach praline

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Preparation time : 10 minutes
Cooking time      : 10 minutes
Serves                : 8 members

Description

Getting to eat a new dessert is always exciting and if it tastes good it gets even the more better. But this happens only once in a blue moon to all of us. Like wise, I had this dessert at my aunt’s place at a dinner feast. I sure could not stop with one serving the first reason being the taste obviously and next reason being the dessert was ordered else where and served here. Now the challenge began with me tasting the dessert intensely to reconstruct it in my mind as how it was made. Myself and my gal were debating over this and we stuck to one method that felt right to our instincts. What next? Giving it a try to check how food smart I am. Made this dessert in the next feast at home. Tasted a mouth full before it was sent out to others. There was a tsunami of flavours and textures happening in that one mouth full of mine. In fact, the dessert was pitch perfect. Actually even better than what I had at my aunts place. Immediately called my gal and let her know about the results. Now, this is to my go to dessert recipe when ever pressed for time to entertain through food as its easy, yum and impressive. The pat on my back for being food smart was done by myself as no one else did. There’s no harm in self praising yourself when other’s forget to do it. Isn’t it?

Ingredients
Quantity
Marie biscuits 2 packets
Tinned peaches1 large tin
Cream500 ml

Ingredients for the butter scotch

Ingredients
Quantity
Sugar to taste
Vanilla essence2 drops
Sugar1 cup
Water1 teaspoon
Cashew nuts1/4 cup
Almonds 1/4 cup
Pistachios1/4 cup

 

Method 

  • Heat a large pan with one cup sugar and one teaspoon of water. Do not stir. Let the sugar dissolve and caramelise to a deep golden colour.
  • Add the nuts and mix well. Pour over a greased plate and cool completely to harden up. Crush the set caramel sugar and nuts to a coarse powder. (I blitz it the food processor of a second or two)
  • Mix cream, sugar and vanilla essence together. Mix well until sugar dissolves.
  • Drain the tinned peaches and chop them.
  • Take a large pudding bowl. Layer the bottom with two rows of biscuits.
  • Sprinkle chopped tinned peaches over. Pour enough cream mix over making sure it covers the biscuits and peaches.
  • Sprinkle crushed butter scotch over. Repeat the layers to the top of the pudding bowl making sure the top most layer is butter scotch nuts.
  • Place in the refrigerator for six hours or over night to set. Serve chilled.

Pacha Meen Masala

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Preparation time : one hour marination + 15 minutes
Cooking time      : 10-15 minutes
Serves                : 4 to 6 members

 
Description
As always skipping television channels and I come across Britain’s celebrity chef Keith floyd cooking up a fish dish in some coastal beach of India. He made the dish with a green masala paste. I just loved the idea and stored it in my mind to be executed some day when time permits. As trying this dish with my own twists and turns to it came up a question. Why do I always have this habit of following and not leading. Well that one moment of spark sure did awaken me. I promised to myself that I will let my thoughts graze free about all the things I am passionate about with no limits. I have been doing so ever since and what a change it has brought into me. I feel so much more confident, self content and beautiful about myself. Coming to the dish.. The herby flavours of the mint and coriander married with the coconut milk and the tang of lime is sure a heavenly experience to dine. Like this killer combination, to me.. my kitchen is a country in which there are always discoveries to be made from recipes to reinventing myself.. no matter what. I know sounds crazy but it’s the fact. Keith floyd’s recipe, me trying it with my twists and turns, a good question in my mind, promising myself, getting to reinvent and love myself… No connection right? But my kitchen helps me to connect it some how beautifully.
 

Ingredients
Quantity
White Pomfret Fish whole 1/2 kg medium sized , cleaned and with close slits on each side
Lime juice 1 big lemon + 1/2 a lime
Salt to taste
Turmeric powder 1/4 teaspoon
Coconut oil 4 tablespoons
Small onions one hand chopped
Ginger and garlic paste 1 teaspoon
Tomatoes 3 chopped
Mint leaves half hand
Coriander leaves 1 bunch
Green chillies 10 or more to taste
Thin Coconut milk 1/2 cup
Thick coconut milk 1 cup

 

Method

  • Marinate the cleaned fish with lime juice, turmeric powder and salt to taste for one hour.
  • Grind mint leaves, coriander leaves and green chillies to a smooth paste adding very little water.
  • Heat a wide pan with coconut oil, fry the small onions to translucent. Top with Ginger and garlic paste and fry to golden and crisp.
  • Add the chopped tomatoes and sauté until it gets mushy and oil floats on top. Top with the ground green masala with a pinch of turmeric powder, salt to taste and sauté until oil floats once again.
  • Pour the thin coconut milk extract and bring to boil. Gently drop the marinated fish and cook until 3/4 cooked on both sides with the thin coconut milk.
  • Add the thick coconut milk extract, once the thin coconut milk has evaporated. mix gently. Simmer the flame and squeeze half a lime juice. Mix, taste and adjust seasoning.
  • Simmer until all the flavours infuse and oil floats on top and gets to a thick gravy consistency.
    serve hot as a side dish.

Millet Tabbouleh salad

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Preparation time : 10 minutes
Cooking time      : 15- 20 minutes
Serves                : 4 members
Recipe source    : Yashu

 

Description
The second anniversary celebration of sauté, fry n bake. A million doubts in my mind if I will be able to pull this of in style as its not with in my comfort zone (home) but in Coimbatore. Though its where I grew up, the long gap of being else where sure did give me shivers. From how will every one get along, to the spread on the table, to every bit I had imagined it to be like. For all the confusion and cribbing I had with in myself, I felt so much at ease with every one and the entire event. Among the lot present there was yashu who actually had to hit a like to our page as only members of the sauté, fry n bake could attend the anniversary celebrations. This healthy millet tabbouleh salad was brought by her which was the only salad on the table. Very light in taste but filling and healthy. As any thing made with millet’s is so in now a days, I saved the recipe for keeps. To my surprise, I get a call from my cousin noorie that very evening asking me if I have any left overs of this salad as she loved it. I made sure to pack her the entire lot that I had in hand. When on diet (that’s what I say but fail royally always) this salad is had as a meal very often and every time yashu pops up in my mind. I have been wanting to catch up with her but it just did not happen. I Hope at least this post does it for me.

 

Ingredients
Quantity
Millet 175 grams
Water 600 ml
Tomatoes 3 large
Cucumber 1 big
Spring onions 3 finely chopped
Lemon juice 1/2 a lime
Olive oil 2 tablespoons
Mint leaves 4 tablespoons
Coriander leaves 4 tablespoons
Parsley 4 tablespoons
Salt + pepper to taste

 

Method
  • Cook millet with water covered in a sauce pan. Bring to boil, then simmer for fifteen minutes and cook. Drain if necessary. Cool the cooked millet completely.
  • Combine all the ingredients together and mix well. Taste and adjust seasoning.
  • Decorate and serve.

Thakkali jam / Tomato sweet

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Preparation time : 20 minutes
Cooking time      : 15- 20 minutes
Serves                : 6 members
 
Description
Through out Tamil Nadu the ravuthar community (Tamil speaking Muslims) in each district have their own version of a sweet served with biriyani at weddings and festivals mainly. It’s usually made with a vegetable as that’s the age old tradition. But now the new age fruits and bread sweets are very much in. In Palghat-Coimbatore region we serve the white pumpkin sweet called as pusanikka mittha which is rarely made at homes but served only in weddings, festivals or gatherings where the cooks come and cater. Here, Deep South in tirunelveli at hubby dear’s place it’s beetroot sweet or tomato sweet served with biriyani’s authentically which is made at all homes as well. Now a days they serve pineapple jam, raw papaya sweet etc… my mother-in- laws special is adding Apple bits to the beetroot jam . The tomato sweet takes first place though as its always access able in the local market. They use the country verity tomatoes alone as it gives a sweet and sour taste to the dish. It depends on each individual as how they like to have their sweet… To have it with the biriyani (like hubby dear does) or in the end after you are done with your meal (like I do). The sweet is served beside the biriyani on the same plantain leaf or plate. The gloss with the seeds of the tomato popping to inject a dose of freshness is sure a killer with sharpness, acidity and sweet to balance. This recipe is simple, keeping it so to give respect for the ingredients used. It’s one of those dishes that go wrong the minute you try to over complicate it. The valve of simple traditional fare that has travelled in its original from from one generation to the other. Taste may be evolving, but nothing can replace the original dishes that our ancestors patiently created to achieve the maximum possible flavors with pleasure.

 

Ingredients
Quantity
Tomato ( country variety not the hybrid ones )1 kg
Sugar2 cups or to taste
Cardamom powder1/4 teaspoon
Salta pinch
Ghee3 tablespoons
Cashew nut2 tablespoons chopped to bits
Raisins1 tablespoon

 
Method

  • Cut each washed whole tomato with a sharp knife in a cross pattern on the bottom half way, keeping the top intact.
  • Bring a large pot of water to boil that can accommodate the entire lot of one kg tomatoes in it. Add the half way cut whole tomatoes and keep covered for five minutes over medium flame.
  • Remove from heat and cool completely. Drain the tomatoes, retaining the water. Peel the skin of each tomato.
  • Blitz the peeled tomatoes in a food processor making sure not to grind the seeds. We need a purée that’s not very coarse but smooth with the tomato seeds whole.
  • Pour this tomato purée into a non stick pan and reduce the water content in it. Takes about 10-15 minutes. Keep stirring occasionally making sure not to burn the bottom.
  • Add sugar, a pinch of salt and cardamom powder. Mix well. The tomato purée becomes loose once the sugar melts. Cook until you get a semi thick purée that gets to look glossy.
  • Taste and adjust sweetness to taste. Remove from heat. Heat ghee, add the cashew bits and raisins. Fry to golden. Pour over the prepared tomato sweet. Mix well and serve at room temperature with biriyani.

 
Notes

  • The reserved tomato boiled water can be used to make rasam or can be added to any savoury dishes instead of water.
  • Make sure not to purée the boiled peeled tomatoes too much. The beauty of this sweet is in seeing the whole seeds once cooked that add a pop to the dish with a slight crunch too.
  • After adding sugar, if the tomato purée is cooked for longer than needed it tends to get to a halwa consistency. So make sure to remove it from heat once it gets to a semi think gravy consistency.

 


Dalcha

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Preparation time : 15 minutes
Cooking time      : 25 minutes
Serves                : 4 members
 
Description
The word dalcha and the dish by itself is originally very own to Hyderabad cuisine. I have no idea as how this mighty dalcha landed up in all ravuthar (Tamil Muslim) homes as a must side dish for biriyani. The ravuthar’s of the southern districts of tamilnadu are unique, sharing similarities with Sri Lankan cuisine and using un usual ingredients like pandan leaves, dried tuna, poppy seeds, urugai or whole limes that are pickled in salt and used in various preparations. Each district and home have their own variations of the dalcha with slight change of the use of vegetable combination with mutton bones + fat + dal. This recipe is that I learnt from my mother-in-law which is a like through out the tirunelveli region. The dalcha recipe, allows the true characters of the vegetables used to shine, resulting in a creation far greater than the sum of their parts. There is no better way than to rely back to our roots and cook the old school way. I remember, in a wedding reception of one cousin bother in the family where the groom was ravuthar and the bride a mappla (malayali Muslim). We were served a grand malabar feast with layered biriyani. All the old women were shouting out loud asking for dalcha saying, the biriyani is shocking us.. Get us some dalcha. The rest of us around were all giggles as the ravuthar’s just can’t have biriyani with out their dalcha. True blue old haunts we are. I instantly sensed the gap in understanding food from place to place. yet again more to know, more to learn and more to understand as always.

 

Ingredients
Quantity
Yellow split peas / Toovar dal1 cup
Bengal gram ( Kadala paruppu)3/4 cup
Oil1 teaspoon
Mutton bones + fat 100 grams
Turmeric powder1/4 teaspoon
Ginger paste1/4 teaspoon
Garlic paste1/4 teaspoon
Egg plants1/4 kg each cut into 4 slices
Drum stick1 cut into finger length pieces
Yellow pumpkin1 slice cut into cubes
Raw mango peeled1 , cheeks cut into long thick pieces + seed
Big Onion 1 sliced
Small onionsone hand crushed
Green chillies6
Tomatoes2 medium sized chopped
Coriander leaves2 tablespoons chopped
Saltto taste
Red chilly powder1 teaspoon
Turmeric powder1/4 teaspoon
Cumin powder1/2 teaspoon
Fennel powder1/2 teaspoon
Coriander powder1 teaspoon
Tamarind pulp4 tablespoons or to taste
Coconut paste5 tablespoons

Ingredients to temper

Ingredients
Quantity
Gingely oil2 tablespoons
Mustard seeds 1 teaspoon
Fenugreek seeds1/4 teaspoon
Cumin seeds1/4 teaspoon
White urad dal1 teaspoon
Curry leaves1 tablespoon
Small onions1/2 hand chopped
Ginger garlic paste1/4 teaspoon each

 

Method

  • Heat a small pan with one teaspoon of oil. Add ginger and garlic paste. Sauté to crisp and golden. Top with the cleaned mutton bones and fat. Stir well for a minute or so until the colour of the bones and fag change. Remove from heat and keep is aside.
  • Pressure cook both the dals, the sautéed mutton bones + fat and turmeric powder with just enough water to well cooked. About 2-3 whistles. Open the pressure cooker only after the pressure in the whistle subsides.
  • In a large pot, mix the cut egg plants, drum stick, yellow pumpkin, raw mango, big onion slices, small onion crushed, slit green chillies, tomatoes, coriander leaves, salt to taste, red chilli powder, cumin powder, fennel powder, coriander powder. Mix well. Add just enough water to boil the mixed vegetables and cook to 3/4 done.
  • Add tamarind pulp and cook the vegetables to done. Drain excess water from the pressure cooked dal. Mash the pressure cooked dal and bones with the bake of a big spatula to smooth. Add it to the cooked vegetables. Mix well. Add coconut paste and bring to boil.
  • Check seasoning for salt, sourness and chilli. All the three must be more than required as only then when tempered. The dalcha tastes correct.
  • Heat the oil,add fenugreek seeds, mustard seeds, urad dal and cumin seeds. Once they crackle. Add the curry leaves and small onions. Once the small onions are golden. Add the ginger and garlic paste. Sauté to brown and crisp. Pour over the pot of dalcha.
  • Immediately pour a ladle of dalcha into the tempered hot vessel and swirl getting in all the flavours of the tempered pot into the dalcha. Pour into the dalcha pot and mix well.
  • Serve hot along with biriyani, ghee rice (nei choru) or coconut milk rice (thenga choru) as a side dish.

 


Sulu’s crab fry

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Preparation time : 15 minutes
Cooking time      : 20 minutes
Serves                : 4 members

Description
The first time I got to taste crab was at my aunt Thasneem’s place in chennai. Crab was never cooked or served in our homes before. My first try, I did get mesmerized with sweet taste of the crab flesh and the most interesting part was to fight out the shells to get the flesh part. At that point of time as a kid it felt like a treasure hunt game to me. As we enjoyed the crab, mom at home started to cook it as well. Here at hubbies place, it’s just my father-in-law and me who enjoy the crab. Latter my boy and hubby dear’s niece joined in. I know to prepare the crab in two ways. One is typical Indian and the other oriental. This recipe was shared to me by my best buddy sulu and that’s why this dish has such a name. The fried spices lend well to create delicious flavor profile The day I gave this dish a try at my home kitchen, I had my boy out of his bed early. Him being some one who loves to sleep, there has to be a great source of motivation to get him out of his bed each morning. The aroma of this dish did it for him where he was beside me asking for a taste even before the dish was cooked. My mind just travelled to my friend sulu’s home as she’s got four boy’s and imagine the situation there. A side of this kind of dish is perfect with almost any kind of meal. What more do you need, lift the dish straight to the table and serve with loads of love.

 

Ingredients
Quantity
Crab1 kg
Whole Peppercorns3 tablespoons
Whole coriander seeds2 tablespoons
Fennel seeds1 tablespoon
Ground big Onion paste2 cups
Turmeric powder1 teaspoon
Saltto taste
Ginger garlic paste1 tablespoon
Coconut oil4 tablespoons
Curry leaves2 teaspoon

 

Method

  • Dry roast whole peppercorns, whole coriander seeds and fennel seeds separately until a good aroma arises making sure not to burn the spices. Cool completely and powder the spices together in a food processor.
  • Heat 2 tablespoons of coconut oil in a wide pan. Add the onion paste and sauté to translucent until raw smell is not there. Top with Ginger and garlic paste. Sauté to crisp.
  • Add the powdered dry roasted masala powder, turmeric powder, crab and salt to taste. Toss well for a minute. Add little water, cover and cook stirring occasionally for 10-15 minutes or until cooked through. Remove from heat.
  • Heat the remaining coconut oil in another pan. Add the curry leaves. Once they splutter. Pour the cooked crab gravy over and mix well. Simmer for 5 minutes letting all the flavours infuse and oil floats on top.
  • Serve hot with boiled white rice or chapathis.

Monaco biscuit canopies

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Preparation time : 15 minutes
Cooking time      : 10 minutes
Serves                : 6-8 people

 

Description

By gone days of utter innocence of flipping magazine pages as a kid just gazing at all the colour full pages of attractive advertisements and movies stars. The image of Monaco biscuits stacked up with edible goodies over it always made me drool with the scheduled time table of food served at boarding school. I always wondered how it would taste and who serves such stylish visually attractive food at homes ?? Even then not realising that my passion was food and cooking. The Monaco image just vanished away from my mind as days, months and years passed by. Having to entertain some guests at home, I was fed up with the regular starters I always serve. Pondering around in my mind for an easy but impressive starter…. The image of my by gone days of the Monaco biscuits that haunted me just popped up in my mind. Well now was the time to execute the image to reality. I remember seeing cheese cubes, olive slices, tomato bits on top the biscuits. I had none of the above in my pantry. I just assembled the biscuits with ingredients That I thought might taste good. Had a fast taste before serving to guests. My fantasy of tasting the canopy in style was thrown in to the bin with reality taking over but the taste was sure worth the wait after all the by gone years.

 

Ingredients
Quantity
Monacco salted biscuits1 packet
Red , yellow and green capsicumchopped each colour 1/8 cup
Sweet corn3 tablespoons
Carrot1 small grated
Boiled eggs2 chopped ( optional)
Boiled Chicken bits1/2 cup ( optional)
Mayonnaise1/2 cup
Tomato sauce4 tablespoons
Sugar1 tablespoon
Saltto taste
Red chilli powder1/4 teaspoon

 

Method

  • Mix mayonnaise, sugar, salt, tomato sauce and red chilli powder together until the sugar dissolves. Taste and adjust seasoning. Keep aside.
  • Mix the chopped red, yellow and green capsicum with sweet corn and carrot. Add the mayonnaise mix to the mixed veggies and mix well.
  • Just before serving. Assemble the canopy with topping each biscuit first with the veggie mayonnaise mix, sprinkle with chopped boiled eggs and top with a chicken piece.
  • Serve immediately or else the canopies tend to get soggy.

Notes

  • Vegetarians can avoid the egg and chicken used. Instead can opt for boiled potatoes, paneer, broccoli flower lets etc..
  • Let your imagination rule and create your favourite taste canopy.