sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2017-11-10 11:43 pm

I'd roll my eyes when approached in the streets

Tonight's report from the kitchen involves combining recipes for dal palak and palak paneer and about the only thing we could have done to complicate the cooking process was make the paneer from scratch, because otherwise I mean I ended up making my own garam masala (I am so glad the mortar and pestle is no longer in storage) while [personal profile] spatch chopped ginger and garlic and kept an eye on the lentils boiling and the spinach cooking down and I pan-fried cubes of paneer until they were lightly, crisply brown on the sides and I regret nothing. Autolycus regrets intensely that we did not let him stick his face in the cast-iron skillet full of lentils and spinach and butter and cheese, or at least lick out the rice pot by way of compensation, but we are pretty sure he would have regretted it a lot more eventually had he succeeded.
jesse_the_k: Muppet's Swedish chef brandishes cleaver and spoon with rooster at side (grandiloquent cook is grandiloquent)

More education!

[personal profile] jesse_the_k 2017-11-12 03:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for introducing me to "charnuska," which sounds like a spice I need to explore.

One of our local Indian restaurants serves pakora paneer, which is makes sense since fried cheese curds are A Thing here in Wisconsin.

There is always curry in my life: Indian cuisines are havens for the gluten intolerant. When I need to really wake up of a morning, I stir ~1/2 tsp of my (store bought) Garam Masala into my Greek yogurt.