Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kandi pappu is often cooked with leafy vegetables such as palakura (spinach), gongura, malabar spinach, and other fruits and vegetables such as tomato, mango, or aanapakaya. Sometimes the cooked version of the dal is replaced with a roasted and ground version, like kandi pachadi (roasted toor daal ground with red chilis), or pesara pachadi ...
Savory pancetta gets paired with sun-dried tomatoes, then simmered with heavy cream and finished with fresh spinach. It’s tossed with cooked tortellini, topped with fresh mozzarella, and broiled ...
Light and subtle-flavored Kerala dish prepared from white gourd, ash-gourd or black-eyed peas, coconut milk and ginger seasoned with coconut oil. Vegetarian Pachadi: Side dish made with yoghurt, coconut, ginger and curry leaves and seasoned with mustard. Vegetarian: accompaniment Paniyaram, Paddu, Gunthapangnalu: a dish made of rice flour and ...
Add the cumin, rice, chickpeas and spinach and cook, stirring, until the spinach is wilted, about 3 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Serve with lemon wedges.
In Andhra Pradesh, a southern state in India, a curry of Basella alba and yam is made. In Gujarat, fresh big and tender leaves are washed, dipped in besan mix and deep-fried to make crispy pakodas called "poi na bhajia". The vegetable is used in Chinese cuisine. It has many names including flowing water vegetable.
Ginger (Hindi: Adarak अदरक) Dried ginger: mostly powdered (Hindi: Sonth सोंठ) Green cardamom: Malabar variety is native to Kerala. Used as a tempering spice. (Hindi: Hari Elaichi हरी इलायची) Green chili pepper (Hindi: Hari Mirch हरी मिर्च) Indian gooseberry: It is used in Chyavanprash.
Map of South India. According to culinary historians K. T. Achaya and Ammini Ramachandran, the ancient Sangam literature dated from 3rd century BCE to 3rd century CE offers early references to food and recipes during Sangam era, whether it's a feast at king's palace, meals in towns and countryside, at hamlets in forests, pilgrimage and the rest-houses during travels.
In Tamil Nadu, pachadi is eaten fresh and typically made of finely chopped and boiled vegetables such as cucumber or ash gourd, with coconut, green or red chillis and fried in oil with mustard seeds, ginger and curry leaves. Pachadi is commonly eaten with rice and lentil curry.