Chutneys are popular throughout South Asia . They are prepared with coconut, garlic, tomato, papaya, grape, pomegranate, mango, dates, raisins, etc. In India, every state or every region has its own version of chutney. For us Bengalis, it's eaten at the end of a full course meal before the dessert. Earlier it was compulsory to make chutneys each day at lunch, dinner to end meals. Our chutneys are generally sweet. A normal Bengali meal would start with a spinach preparation, pakoras, dal, vegetable, fish curry, end up with a chutney. A kheer dessert for dinner may me.
These days life got fast, busy. With more women venturing out, these elaborate meals are vanishing, at least on weekdays. All chutneys, pakoras, desserts are made on weekends now. Health is a reason though. But yes I miss those good old days when a bite in the pakoras or picking up the chutney with one finger, placing it on my tongue, licking it would take me into seventh heaven.
Feminists please do not run after me, when it comes to my loved ones, I am a poor example of feminism. I have never seen our moms or their generation to complain about staying in kitchen for a longer period or doing other household chores. I believe kids at home demand mothers to be with them more than anything else, if of course situation permits.
I don't understand finance, but know that a nanny can't substitute mom. Career may wait, the formative years of a child will never come back. How many cases of drug abuse and violence among the youth was there during our childhood? Drug Rehab Centres offer cure, not prevention. Well there can always be arguments, counter arguments which is healthy.
This fat, old lady is again off track. I am taking too much liberty exercising my right to freedom of speech. Well I had never been articulate. Better start with the most famous, common Bengali recipe of chutney..... Sweet Green / Raw Mango Chutney, given their generally sweet tooth.
INGREDIENTS :
Green Mango[unripened] : 2
Sugar : 1/4 cup[adjust according to the amount of sweetness you prefer]
Salt : 4 pinches.
Turmeric Powder : 2 pinches
Black Mustard Seeds : 3 pinches
Dry Red Chilli : 3-4
Bayleaf : 1
Cumin Seeds :1 tsp
Coriander Seeds : 1 tsp
Oil[preferably Mustard] : 1 tbsp
PROCEDURE :
Cumin Seeds :1 tsp
Coriander Seeds : 1 tsp
Oil[preferably Mustard] : 1 tbsp
PROCEDURE :
Wash mangoes, cut half. You may avoid peeling, keep the skin on instead. Discard seed.
Cut horizontally, then vertically. That means each half would fetch four pieces.
Wash them again taking in a bowl. Add salt, turmeric; mix well. Keep aside for 15- 20 minutes.
Meanwhile dry roast dry red chillies, cumin and coriander seeds. Coarsely grind them in a grinder. Keep aside.
Heat oil in wok. Temper with mustard seeds, 1 dry red chilli, bayleaf. Once they splutter, add marinated mango pieces. Stir, cover. Turn heat to low.
Give a stir every 2 minutes till the mango pieces are soft, about to melt. Add sugar, stir, cover. As sugar melts, add a small tea cup water.
When raw mango chutney turns into a creamy consistency without melting the pieces totally, it's done.
Transfer onto a bowl, garnish with dry roasted ground spices. Later mix well before serving.
Mum is the best guide to bring up a child. That is perfectly alright though for some career women because of dollar and cents, they got to work. I suppose to each its own, this green chutney is fab. I am lining it as the recipe when we need such a punch.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely Navaneetham... you will love this chutney....
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ReplyDeleteThank you so much for this recipe & detailed description...
Thank you Swati
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