I had ordered fish cubes, shrimp, and scallops from Fresh Direct. Not really having an idea of how I was going to use them! The assortment was salmon, tuna, and some kind of flaky white fish, probably snapper. All nice looking pieces, nothing gnarly looking, all skinless.
I was craving good Indian food, sadly, take-out from the few Indian restaurants around here that are doing take-out, leaves me feeling unsatisfied and a bit duped. Out came the Indian cookbooks, and the NYT Cooking app, and I was ready to research.
I settled on
Meen Gassi. It was worth the pounding and grinding in the mortar and pestle to get the ingredients into a smooth paste. Once I got the hang of how to do it, it became easier to grind the chilis and seeds against the wall, rather than pounding at the bottom.
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midway thru grinding process |
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with tamarind added |
Scarily enough, I actually followed this recipe, the only substitution I made was chicken stock instead of water (as I had lots and lots of stock made).
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Here are the fish cubes, sprinkled with tumeric and salt |
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Onion, garlic, jalapeno, and ginger sautee-ing |
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paste added along with chicken stoc |
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fish into the pool |
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finished product |
To go with this, I was craving beans, much to Bill's annoyance, but I also had ordered some fresh spinach so I decided on
chana saag.
I cooked up 1 cup of green chickpeas instead of using the cans. Green chickpeas are young beans. They are a deep green color and take a long time to get soft. Thank goodness for the instant pot. I cooked on high pressure for 30 minutes. Tested a bean, still had a starchy core and was not very tender. Did another 20 minutes and the tester was still a tiny bit starchy, but was tender. I drained and held aside while I made the spinach sauce.
After the cooking time in the instant pot for the sauce, I got out the stick blender and blended everything into a dark green semi-soupy mess. Threw in the chickpeas and tasted. It needed a bit of salt and as I was really hungry and couldn't spend the time searching for the amchur powder, I threw in the juice of 1/2 a lemon. All was right with the world.
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Finished sauce |
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chick peas in and some garnish! |
We ate the meal with some naan. I was so happy!
Note: the fish was quite spicy and the chana saag quite bland in comparison. I didn't want two things that might blow your head off on the spice scale. So I was happy with the spice level in both. The sauce for the fish was dynamite. It would be great on any protein! I think next time I would like it to be thicker so that I coated each piece of fish nicely. But, it's a keeper!
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