Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Crabmeat Kofta (Crabmeat balls in a rich tomato sauce)

Ingredients for the crabmeat balls
250 gms of crabmeat
1/4 finely chopped bell pepper
1 tablespoon tomato ketchup
1 teaspoon fish sauce
1 tablespoon garlic paste (I used ready-made garlic chutney that you get with ready-made packets of Bhel)
1/2 finely chopped onion
1 egg
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 cup of Bread crumbs
Oil for frying

Ingredients for the sauce

3 tablespoons of olive oil
1/2 finely chopped onion
4 pods of garlic
1 inch of ginger
2 small tomatoes
4-5 cashews
1 teaspoon each chilli, turmeric, cumin, and coriander powder
2 teaspoons garam masala
2 tablespoons of yoghurt
3 stocks of coriander leaves
1 teaspoon salt (Add more to suit your taste)
A pinch of sugar
Mozzarella cheese (optional)

Step 1: Mix all the ingredients for the crabmeat balls in a large bowl. Refrigerate it for about an hour. 


Step 2: Roll the meat into small balls, dust with bread crumbs and fry them. You could either shallow or deep fry them.


Step 3: Saute onions, and ginger garlic paste in olive oil in a separate pan. Add the diced tomatoes and let it cook until it becomes a thin sauce.


Step 4: Grind the cashews with the yoghurt and add it to the mixture. Add the remaining spices and sugar and let it cook for about 10-15 minutes.




Step 5: Add the crabmeat balls to the curry, and gently stir the mixture. You can sprinkle mozzarella cheese and chopped coriander on top, if you would like. Serve hot with rice or bread.



Sunday, November 30, 2014

Saba - Authentic Yemeni fare in Northern Virginia

Yoghurt salad
I had the opportunity to visit several Middle Eastern restaurants in the DC metro region. A characteristic shared by each of these establishments was the blandness of the food. However, a recent visit to Saba, a Yemeni restaurant in Fairfax, made me think that I was too quick to condemn the region's cuisine.   

For appetizers, we ordered the shofout, a yoghurt salad with a spongy sour-dough bread on the bottom. It was cold and refreshing. However, the portion was such that a single order could conceivably serve as the sole side dish for a party of five or more. 

Chicken Mandi
Among the entrees, we tried their chicken mandi: chicken cooked in a tandoor and served on a bed of rice and lots of caramelized onions.  We also ordered the lamb haneeth, which featured slow cooked lamb served on a bed of rice. Both dishes were delicious, especially when complemented with the yoghurt from the shofout. If I had one criticism of the entrees, it would be the excessive amount of rice, both in absolute terms and relative to the amount of protein on the plate.


Ma'soob
Finally, we tried the Ma’soob, an item off the dessert menu made with rashoush, bananas, purified butter, honey, and topped with a sprinkling of nigella. Like the other dishes, the Ma'soob was not lacking in flavor and was served in quantities that could best be described as generous, though perhaps too much of a good thing for our party of two.

The decor struck me as authentic, a perception which was reinforced by the presence of many customers who appeared to be native to the region. 


Recommended, though only for large parties.


Sunday, November 16, 2014

Depth over breadth

Bonchon chicken
7215 Columbia Pike Annandale, VA 22003

The draw of many restaurants is their focus on the execution of a single dish. For certain items with a sufficiently broad appeal, such a strategy can result in significant popularity even if the establishment itself is associated with a particular ethnic cuisine.  Two establishments which have successfully applied this depth over breadth strategy to chicken are Bonchon Chicken and El Pollo. 

Bonchon (translated to Hometown) is a Korean franchise around the U.S that serves made to order fried chicken wings and drumsticks with hot and/or soy garlic sauce. We visited locations in both Annandale and Fairfax. They both offered a delightful dining experience, though we preferred the Annandale's location due to the complementary coleslaw, which is a must if you order the chicken with the hot sauce.  On the other hand, the ambience was a little more refined in the Fairfax location, and the servers a little more attentive. The menu includes a few other traditional Korean appetizers and entrees, which helps if you or someone in your party is not in the mood for chicken. Of these, we tried their vegetable dumplings. They were not exceptional but certainly edible.

El Pollo Rico, Peruvian
932 N Kenmore St, Arlington, VA 22201


We have been customers of El Pollo (Translated to chicken) since we were students due to its location across the street from George Mason's Arlington campus. The sole entree is the charcoal broiled chicken, which is filling and flavorful, though not particularly spicy. The chicken comes in full, half and quarter sizes. The half chicken is priced at $8. Sides include french fries, coleslaw and sauces (a hot sauce and mayo-based sauce). Producing chickens on a mass scale, El Pollo's kitchen and dining space are most similar to what one would expect to find in a school cafeteria. If you cannot deal with this "ambience", a take-out option is available. Recommended due to its lack of pretension, low prices, and delicious food.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Shrimp Biryani

Biryani is a spicy Indian layered rice dish that is mostly cooked with vegetables, shrimp, chicken or goat. This recipe I am sharing is for a medium-spicy shrimp biryani. If you like it more spicy, you can add a few more chillies and/or garam masala. 

Ingredients 

2 cups of Basmati rice
1/2 pound large deveined wild caught shrimp
3 tablespoons of olive oil
2 small green chillies
4 pods of garlic
1 inch of ginger
1 large onion
1 large tomato
1 teaspoon each chilli, turmeric, cumin, and coriander powder
2 teaspoons garam masala
2 tablespoons lime juice
1 large potato
2 bay leaves
2 star anise
3 stocks of coriander leaves
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon salt (Add more to suit your taste)

Step 1: Grind the green chillies, ginger and garlic into a paste. Marinate the shrimp in half of the paste and keep it aside.

Step 2: Boil the rice in 8 cups of water along with 2 bay leaves, and star anise. Drain the water once the rice is cooked.
Step 3: Cut the potato in wedges, add some salt and pepper and shallow-fry them until they turn golden brown.


Step 4: Boil three eggs. Cut them into halves and keep them aside.
Step 5: For the shrimp mixture, saute the remaining ginger garlic paste in olive oil. Add the diced onions and tomatoes and let it cook for about 5 minutes on medium heat.  Add the spices, salt, shrimp, finely chopped coriander leaves and the lime juice. Let it cook for about 15 minutes.


Step 6: Layer the rice, shrimp mixture and potato wedges on top of one another. Keep layering until you can add rice as the final layer. Garnish the top layer with the eggs, remaining potato wedges and coriander leaves.


Step 7: Let it heat on low heat for about 15 minutes.

Step 8: Serve hot. You could have it with yoghurt on the side.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Chicken Curry

Cuisine: Indian

Ingredients

1/2 pound chicken                                                           2 tablespoons yoghurt
1 teaspoon turmeric powder                                            1 teaspoon chilli powder
1 teaspoon coriander powder                                         1 star anise
2 tablespoons curry powder (garam masala)                  4 small red potatoes
2 tablespoons olive oil/ ghee                                           Salt to taste
2 tablespoons ginger garlic paste                                    2 stocks of coriander leaves
1/2 onion                                                                         1/4 cup lime
1/2 tomato                                                                      
1/2 cup milk    
 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour                                                                 
                                    
For the cashew nut powder
2 teaspoons cumin seeds
2 red chillies
2 pepper corns
2 cloves
4 cashew nuts

Step 1: Grind the cumin seeds, chillies, pepper corns, cloves, and cashew nuts into a fine powder. 


Step 2: If you would like to prepare your own chicken stock, boil the chicken skin in water for about 30 minutes.  


Step 3: Marinate the chicken with yoghurt, lime, chilli, turmeric, coriander, curry and the prepared cashew nut powders and leave it for about 2-3 hours (I left it for 5 hours). 


Step 4: Saute the star anise, onions, tomatoes and the ginger garlic paste in olive oil/ghee. 


Step 5: Add the chicken, stock, milk, and potatoes and let it cook for about an hour. 


Step 6: After letting it cook for an hour, if you would like to thicken the curry, add some flour to the mixture. Add salt to suit your taste. Garnish it with some chopped coriander leaves.

Step 7: Serve hot with chapati or roti


Note: Instead of chicken, you can prepare goat curry in a similar way except that you might need to cook goat for close to 3 hours on medium heat. 

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Latin American cuisine in Falls Church, Virginia

Causa Rellena
In my experience, the most reliable predictor of the authenticity and quality of a restaurant's ethnic food is the presence of a community of the relevant ethnic population in the surrounding area. Two local establishments offering Latin American cuisine which meet this criteria are Kampo and La CaraqueƱa Latin American Cuisine. 
Reina Pepeada







Kampo
5884 Leesburg Pike, Falls ChurchVA 22041
While the overall quality of the dining experience at the  two restaurants I reviewed were similar, I thought Kampo scored higher with respect to authenticity. Kampo offers traditional Peruvian cuisine as well as Peruvian Chinese. We tried the Causa Rellena, a dish comprised of mashed potato and mayonnaise stuffed with tuna served with a sauce on the side. While I was unfamiliar with this simple, cold appetizer before visiting Kampo, its simple but strong flavors has made it a candidate for the title of my favorite comfort food. They also offered ceviche, which I thought was very close to what I tried in Peru. 
Seafood ceviche

La CaraqueƱa
300 W. Broad Street, Falls Church, VA 22046
La CaraqueƱa, was a slightly more upscale establishment than Kampo. The ambience was also, in my opinion, less authentic but offered Latin comfort good of similar quality. Along similar lines of Causa Rellena, we ordered the Reina pepeada, a chicken salad blended with avocado and mayonnaise and filled in a grilled cornbread. I had this dish with some habanero sauce on the side. For our entrees, we tried their tilapia with a lemon caper sauce served with steamed veggies and mashed potatoes, El Sabraso, a chicken breast sandwich with cheese and slices of avocado, and Pollo la caraquena, baked chicken with baked beans and white rice. Overall, we were quite satisfied with all the dishes, the flavors and textures of which are more likely to appeal to American palates than the more authentic fare at Kampo.

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Dining options in Yorkville, Toronto

Penne via Frattina
During my recent trip to Toronto, I had the opportunity to visit a few restaurants in Yorkville, a neighborhood in close proximity to the University of Toronto.  The neighborhood offered a great diversity of ethnic dining options.

My first stop was Sotto Sotto Ristorante, a cozy Italian restaurant where the dining area overlooked the kitchen. Every item on the menu allowed the patron to choose between lunch and dinner portions. I tried the appetizer-sized penne via frattina, penne pasta cooked with wood smoked salmon & asparagus. I never imagined a strongly-flavored fish such as salmon would go well with cheese and pasta, but I was pleasantly surprised by this dish.


My next stop was Pangaea, a Canadian restaurant where I attended a hosted dinner with a catered menu. My three course meal was comprised of wild mushroom soup, rainbow trout with veggies, and a lemon meringue for dessert. The ambience and flavorful food made for a pleasant dining experience.


Goat Korma with Garlic Naan
Finally, I visited The Host, a fine dining Indian chain restaurant located in several locations in Toronto. I tried the goat korma with garlic naan at the Yorkville site. While the goat korma was nothing out of the ordinary, the garlic naan was great example of how to make a seemingly mundane dish memorable through solid execution. This restaurant also had prawn balchao on its menu, a spicy Goan specialty I have not seen on the menu of most Indian restaurants.

Given the reasonable prices and the quality of the dishes, I would gladly return to each of these establishments during my next trip to Toronto.

This blog was started by Uma Kelekar to express her love for food.

My photo
I like to visit local ethnic restaurants in Northern Virginia and then try the dishes out in my kitchen. I started this blog to express my love for food.