An Indian on foreign turf,
makes a beeline for the Indian grocery store, like a homing pigeon. He/she will
fill the cart with all familiars like beans, legumes, rice and flours, chai
biscuits et al. The bachelor will head to the ready-to-eat section, and
unerringly stash his basket with frozen vegetable entrees and rotis/naan and
then order his meal in the store-cum-restaurant, eat his fill.
The 'family' people stagger
out with grocery and walk purposefully to pizza hut and stuff their hungry kids
to the brim with pizza and heave a sigh of relief. A newly married couple will
pick up items that are a mix of ready-to-eat and some 'experiment on spouse'
items and then in all probability head out to a restaurant to try something
'different'. They walk in, uncertainly, into a fast food joint or restaurant
and gaze at the menu with curious intensity. This uncertain couple are
reflections of my former self, a good 6 years ago. I liked eating out as much
as at home, the only hitch being, I was a vegetarian in a meat lovers land!
What can I order without lengthy explanations of how I prefer my 'vegetarian'
soup without it's chicken/beef stock? In a menu where egg or fish were
considered vegetarian, I was treated like an oddball, chafing at the limited
options I had, or so it seemed.
Sound familiar?
I haunted the local library for
cookbooks, much like a family spectre, vanishing at closing time. I read them
like novels, gazing lustily at the glossy pictures. Slowly, I stepped into the
world of blogging to showcase my love for food and experimenting with flavors
and try to replicate international recipes using Indian spices. I was thrilled to discover, that using
staples in my pantry, but with different proportions and technique, I had a
completely new dish to serve up. Mexican, Caribbean, Thai food was suddenly an
option and I was lovin’ it. I discovered
that we may be worlds apart, but many of these International cuisines used
standard stuff I used in my Indian kitchen! What a thrill that was!
My focus was and still is, on simple recipes that do not require me to buy expensive or difficult-to-pronounce-and- procure
ingredients, but mixing and matching what was in the fridge to a couple of
store bought items, like the recipe I have for you today.
In fact, I have another sauce that can be used with the noodles and that is coming up soon! Flat rice noodles, 2 ways.
I like this sort of thing , two ways with one ingredient, when I bring in one packet of noodles, I can never finish it off at one go and I do not want to repeat the same recipe and so having an alternative is great.
In fact, I have another sauce that can be used with the noodles and that is coming up soon! Flat rice noodles, 2 ways.
I like this sort of thing , two ways with one ingredient, when I bring in one packet of noodles, I can never finish it off at one go and I do not want to repeat the same recipe and so having an alternative is great.
Green Noodles
Recipe Courtesy: Cara Hobday’s
Noodles Asian Style.
1 Garlic clove
1 Tsp. Salt
1 Tbsp. Black Peppercorns
2 oz. Fresh cilantro (leaves and stems)
2 Tbsp. fresh Parsley, chopped
2 Scallions, chopped
1 fresh Red Chili, sliced (add more if you want the noodles to be HOT)
3 Tbsp. Fresh Lemon juice
2/3 cup Coconut Milk
2/3 cup Coconut Milk
2 Tbsp. Peanut butter
8 oz. Flat Rice Noodles
Lemon Quarters to serve
Make the sauce: Grind Garlic,
salt, peppercorn and cilantro together. Add parsley, scallions and red chili
and make a rough paste.
In a saucepan, add the above
paste, lemon juice, coconut milk and peanut butter, mix well and bring to a
boil, stirring occasionally.
Meanwhile, boil water in another pan, switch off the heat and add noodles, cover and let it stand for 5 minutes or as per directions. Drain well.
Final assembly: Toss the noodles
in the sauce until evenly coated. Serve immediately with lemon quarters.
Notes:
· The noodles are mild, if you want, amp up the
heat by adding another red chili. Lemon juice is a must to add a burst of fresh
flavor.
· Leftovers make a great lunchbox option. The
flavors soak into the noodles and taste great. Gently re-heat before serving.
·
This is not a complete meal, add a protein on
the side.
16 comments:
flavorful...
VIRUNTHU UNNA VAANGA
Hi Manasi ,
Green noodles Delicious Dish !!!
Surely it's a must try recipe:)
Inviting you to
www.southindiafoodrecipes.blogspot.in
The green noodles looks so fresh and yumm. I am getting hungry now, have only yogurt with me, guess doodha chi tahan taakvar bhagvavi lagnar ahe mala. and yes oh Yes, Mr. Ash was the gawker in most restaurants and he always asked McDonald's guys to skip the sausage and egg in an morning sandwich. They always gave us THE LOOK.
Love Ash.
Yummy, something new
http://shwetainthekitchen.blogspot.com/
delicious and so inviting.. It is new also
Great-secret-of-life.blogspot.com
Recipe khoop chan ahe,I read cookbook like story books as well during bedtime :))
They look so inviting!
Thanks.
Hope you try and like it! Do let me know :)
Ash, what I liked in this recipe, when I saw it was, it used most ingredients from our regular Indian pantry. All I had to buy was Rice noodles and parsley,not a bad deal for me!
Thank you.
Thanks, hope u try it.
Thanks Runner Girl! Hehehe! another cook book addict, it is a reat read, isn't it!
Highly irresistible and super tempting.
Very tempting recipe!
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