Background:

May be because I had subway for lunch today I am craving steaming hot rice and sambar with beans curry. As part of my continuing efforts to document the dishes I do make at home, here is a recipe that works well with any of the following. String beans, Cabbage, Carrot, Green plantain, Cluster beans, Flat beans, Snake gourd…

Stuff you will need:

Vegetable of choice 2 lbs
1/4 Coconut - shredded
Green chillies - 4 - sliced
Curry leaves - 1 twig
Salt to taste
Mustard seeds 1 tsp
Jeera/Cumin seeds - 1 tsp (Optional)
Urad dhal - 1 tsp
Turmeric - 1 tsp
Oil - 2 tsp to temper/season
Asafoetida - 1 pinch

How to make it?

Grind green chillies, curry leaves and coconut to a rough mixture. In a wok or large pan heat the oil and season with mustard, urad dhal, turmeric and asafoetida. When the mustard bursts, add vegetable and mix in. Add salt and sprinkle water. Cover and cook till vegetable is done i.e. cooked yet firm. Add the coconut-green chilli mixture and fold in. Turn heat off.

Serve with hot rice and sambar or rasam or just mix it in with rice and eat as is.

Serves four

Special Notes:

Add the coconut mix at the very end. Do not let it cook. The heat in the vegetable is enough to take away the raw taste. Adjust amount of water sprinkled depending on what is being cooked. I have noticed cabbage does not need water since adding salt will cause it to water. String beans on the other hand requires about half a cup of water to cook well.

Tags: , ,

5 Responses to “Poduthuval aka Kari aka Curry - Vegetable steamed and garnished with coconut.”

  1. Lux,
    Authentic “kanna” poduthuval i guess :). There is a slight variation to the grind stuff that you can do and end up with a different great taste. Basically for cauliflower, egg plant, kovakkai… you get it - season and boil as usual and grind ginger,cocunt , cilantro and green chillies and garnish at the end. This tastes great for both rasam , kootu(without coconut) and amazing for rotis. I make these the days its rasam/kootu for lunch and rotis for dinner :)

  2. @Maggie: Thanks for the tip! Will definitely try that out. And yes its authentic “Kanna” poduthuval :)

  3. Hi Lakshmi,

    Am blogging your poriyal as a model recipe in the 1001 Poriyal cookbook at http://ramkicooks.blogspot.com

    Thanks for the recipe

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Lemon and rice make for a spicy lunch « A Reluctant Chef
  2. May be its called love? « Musings

Leave a Reply