toujours_nigel: plum cake with pomegranate seeds on a blue-work stoneware plate (cake)
Eggs again today, because they're easy and filling: a perfect breakfast food. Also because I get cranky without an eggy start to the day. Plus I've been seeing egg muffins all over the place for a while now, and only rediscovered T's muffin tin yesterday.

Egg muffins are basically baked mini omelettes, which means you can put pretty much anything in them (bell pepper, spinach, ham, sausages, garlic just to start you off) but I went pretty simple and traditional for this first attempt.




Ingredients

  • 3 eggs

  • 1 medium red onion

  • 1 small or half a medium tomato

  • 1 cube of cheese (optional)

  • salt to taste

  • pepper to taste




Read the rest over on the blog, if interested. Given my usual lackadaisical approach to blogging, I'm very surprised and glad to have missed only a single post out of the 16 scheduled thus far and that because I'd fallen quite badly and couldn't sit up to type.
toujours_nigel: Greek, red-figure Rhea (Default)
So the name of the food is in quotes up there because this is really really not how the dish is usually cooked. But it's got paneer and it's got palak, albeit not enough, so what else can I call it? Cottage cheese in spinach garlic sauce?




Ingredients

  • 200 gm paneer/cottage cheese

  • 200 gm spinach/palak

  • 2 tablespoons jeera/cumin

  • 6-8 cloves of garlic

  • salt to taste






Method

So the trick is to have a couple of things going at the same time, because this is going to reduce cooking+prep time. I assume time is of the essence or you'd be cooking this the usual way.

Start by soaking spinach. It's the only way to really get the dirt out; depending where you've bought it you might have to change the water a couple times.

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Now while this is soaking, heat oil in a pan and add cumin.
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Mince the garlic while the cumin sputters.

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After the cumin starts letting off scent, add garlic, saute till transparent and beginning to turn golden.
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Chop up spinach with a weather eye on the garlic.
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Add spinach to the pan
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Rinse out the bowl in which you were soaking spinach and soak paneer unless you just bought it from a shop/dairy/doodhwala. My packet of Amul Malai had been sitting in the freezer for a couple days and really needed the soaking.

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Take a completely gratuitous photo of the palak because it's funny when it wilts.

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Now add the paneer and allow to cook for ten minutes or so. You can add in the water from the paneer, which I did and which will have to suffice for the paneer photo because my phone glitched while I was taking a shot after adding paneer and I didn't notice till just now.

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You can leave some liquid in the pan, especially if you're using this as an accompaniment to rice or iterations of roti, but I prefer to cook it down till the water's all gone and the paneer's brown and crumbly. Add salt before you take it off the fire/stove/induction if you hadn't before; I hadn't because I always forget about salt.

IMG_20180423_121127.jpg




Consume with carbs of choice, or a nice cool drink because cooking is hot work in this weather and please please desist from cooking this for shakahari/niramisashi/vegetarian family members, cause remember, garlic is non-veg.

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