Monday, November 25, 2013

Desi Style Chicken Burgers



Here’s something that can brighten up your Monday. You can make these burgers on Sunday, refrigerate them and carry them to work/school on Monday. They’re easy to make and absolutely delicious.

These were inspired by the amazing Sahil “Demonstealer”Makhija, India’s only heavy metal cook. You should check out his cookery show “Headbanger’sKitchen”, and his bands, Demonic Resurrection, Workshop and Reptilian Death.

INGREDIENTS

For the patties

Minced Chicken – 600gms
Onion – 1 large, chopped fine
Garlic – 1 tablespoon, chopped fine
Ginger – 1 tablespoon, chopped fine
Green chillies – 1 tablespoon, chopped fine
Fresh coriander leaves – 2 heaped tablespoons, chopped fine
Salt – 2 level teaspoons
Garam masala powder – 1 level teaspoon
Black pepper powder – 1 heaped teaspoon
Eggs – 2
Sattoo powder – 2 heaped tablespoons
Vegetable oil for frying

For the buns

Pao buns – 8
Butter/Mayonnaise

METHOD

Mix together all the ingredients for the patties. Don’t be afraid to use your hands, make sure there are no lumps.

Now minced chicken even with all the ingredients will have the consistency of a very thick paste. Add more sattoo if you want to make it thicker, but don’t overdo it. Too much sattoo will make it taste awful.

Before you fry your patties, fry a test piece. Put your frying pan (preferably non-stick) on the flame and add oil. We will not be deep frying the patties, so just add enough oil so you have a little less than a ½ inch layer. Now take a spoonful of the chicken, and once the oil has started smoking, gently drop into pan, and fry on high heat till all sides are golden brown.

Take it out of the pan, give it a minute to cool and then taste it. Make sure you got the seasoning right.

Now shaping the patties can be tricky. You could buy an expensive hamburger press, but the simpler, and cheaper way is to use a large jar lid, covered in some clean, transparent, plastic wrap. Make sure the jar is not too much larger than the pao buns, line it with the transparent wrap, wipe the plastic with some vegetable oil, so the chicken doesn’t stick to it and then begin shaping.

Add enough chicken to fill the lid, flatten it down so it takes the shape of the lid, scrape off the excess. Gently invert the lid and tip the patty on to your hand, and then gently drop the patty into the oil, once it’s smoking hot. You can look at photos of this technique, here.

If you don’t have a lid, it’s not really a problem. Just scoop the chicken, using a tablespoon or serving spoon into a large enough ball, and once you put it in the frying pan, flatten it out into a patty. But this way, it does get harder to have evenly sized and perfectly shaped patties.

Now remember, chicken cooks very very fast, so DO NOT lower the flame. Fry the paties on one side till they become golden brown and firm enough to flip. The turn them over and cook the other side. If you feel the oil has become too hot, and there’s way too much smoke, you can turn the gas down to medium-high at most. Do not slow cook chicken burger patties on a low flame, they will lose all their moisture and become totally dry.

I find it takes about 3 minutes on each side to cook the patties on high flame. But then that’s on my gas stove. Your stove may cook it faster, or slower, so pay attention to the patty when your frying it.

Once the patties are done, slice the pao buns in half, and toast the insides lightly. Don’t brown them, just make them a little crisp.

Apply butter or mayonnaise on the inside of the pao buns. I find Amul cilantro flavor cheese spread goes really well with these “desi style” burgers.

When placing the patties inside the pao buns, you can improvise and add a slice on onion, tomato and lettuce if you feel like it. I don’t bother, coz they taste great anyway.


Makes 8 – 9 burgers

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Railway Style Chicken Curry


I have to be honest, this recipe isn't completely my own. It was a recipe for mutton, which I found here, and I adapted it for chicken. It's a nice spicy curry, that you can try out for Sunday lunch. Looks a little elaborate, but it isn't very difficult. 

INGREDIENTS

Boneless chicken – 350 gms approx

For “Railway Masala Powder”

Coriander seeds ~ 2 tsp
Cumin Seeds ~ 2 tsp
Fennel seeds or Saunf ~ 2 tsp
Whole black Peppercorns -- 15
Dry Red Chilli – 8

For marinade

Plain yoghurt – 100 gms
Salt – 1 level tsp
Turmeric powder - 1 level tsp
Kashmiri red chilli powder – 1 heaped teaspoon
Ginger paste – 1 heaped teaspoon
Garlic paste – 1 heaped teaspoon
Mustard Oil – 1 tablespoon

For phoron (tempering)

Black cardamom – 1, crushed
Green cardamom – 2, crushed
Cloves – 2, crushed
Cinnamon – 1 inch piece, crushed
Bay leaf – 1, medium size

For gravy

Onions – 2 large, finely chopped
Potatoes – 2 medium sized, peeled, and cut in half
Mustard Oil
Hot water
Salt

METHOD

Cut the chicken into medium sized pieces.

Take a dry kadhai, and put it on a burner on full flame, but without any oil. The kadhai should be adequately hot in a couple of minutes. Take all the ingredients for the “Railway Masala Powder” and gently drop them into the dry kadhai. Stir constantly to avoid anything burning. Turn off heat and take the spices out of the kadhai as soon as they start getting a little fragrant. We’re not really roasting the spices, just making them a little crisp, driving the moisture out of them so they can be powdered easily.

Once the whole spices for the “Railway Masala Powder” have cooled, run them in a blender, and turn them into a fine powder. Put the powder in an airtight container and set aside.

Run all the ingredients for the marinade, except the mustard oil, in a blender and turn it into a fine paste. Mix this marinade and the chicken well, sprinkle the mustard oil on top and set aside for atleast an hour. For best results marinate overnight.

Heat mustard oil to smoking, and fry the potatoes till the edges start turning light brown.

Keep enough oil in the kadhai to fry the onions, and once the oil is smoking hot, add the ingredients for the phoron, before they have a chance to burn, add the onions, half a teaspoon of salt, and half a teaspoon of sugar.

Fry onions on high heat, stirring frequently, until onions start turning brown, but don't brown them too thoroughly.

Add the chicken, marinade and all, stir for a minute or so on high heat. Once that’s done, you can lower the flame, and cover the kadhai, and allow the chicken to cook. It will release a lot of water, and continue to cook slowly.

During this stage, do keep checking every 10 minutes, and giving the chicken a stir, otherwise all the masala pastes will settle and stick to the bottom of the pan.

Once all the water has evaporated, and the oil comes out from the sides, add two heaped teaspoons of the “Railway Masala Powder” and stir well. You may raise heat to medium at this stage if you feel like it, but be careful. There is almost no moisture in the kadhai, so everything will have a tendency to stick to the kadhai and burn.

Add the potatoes, two cups of hot water, bring to a boil, cover and cook till the potatoes soften.

You can figure out if the potatoes are cooked through by poking them with the handle of steel teaspoon. The spoon should go right through a potato if it’s well cooked. Once that’s done, raise heat and reduce gravy to desired consistency.

Taste the gravy. Check the salt. The thicker the gravy, the saltier it gets, so if you find there’s slightly less salt but you intend to thicken the gravy further, don’t add any salt just then. Remember, with salt, it’s always better if there’s a little less, you can just add more later. Once you put in too much, you’re pretty much screwed.

Serve with steamed rice.

NOTES

Remeber to crush the whole spices a little, particularly the cardamom, or it'll explode when you put it in hot oil.

Kashmiri Red Chilli powder is just for colour and does not have much potency, so you don’t need to be too scared to use it.

Potatoes tend to absorb a lot of water when left in gravy. So if you leave this dish sitting for a long time, you’ll find it’s dried out a bit. Just add a little water and reheat in the microwave.

For the water, keep an electric kettle handy. You could of course use cold water, and it'll work. BUt adding cold water lowers the temperature of the kadhai, and some say it affects the taste of the dish.


Serves 3
Preparation time - 1.5 hours
Cooking time - 1 hour