c. 1980
Happy Mother's Day!
c. 1980
Posted by Indian Food Rocks at 5/10/2015 07:37:00 PM 3 comments
Labels:
More Than A Recipe,
Mother's Day
Oh noes!
I like my drink much more than every other person. Mainly because I can't drink too much. So whatever little I do imbibe, I enjoy to the last drop. So imagine my shock when I looked down into the shot glass and spied this! Oh noes!
First it was the invasion of the cuttlefish. What in heavens name creature is this? Can you fine folks help me figure out this mystery?
Happy Mother's Day to all you lovely Moms out there! My gift so far? Hormones.
Say it with me: Oh noes!
Because your turn will come soon, if it hasn't already.
Posted by Indian Food Rocks at 5/11/2008 02:24:00 AM 19 comments
Labels:
More Than A Recipe,
Mother's Day
Happy Mother's Day!
A very Happy Mother's Day to all the wonderful mothers who make this world special!
This is Medha's gift to me this year. She made it in her pottery class. It is a pinch-pot made just like how the ancient ones, the Anasazi, made a wide range of pots and containers. The plant is a little wilted because she brought it home and hid it in the backyard in a very conspicuous bright blue plastic bag. I would have missed it if she hadn't led me to it by not allowing me in a particular corner of the yard that I had no intentions of going to! The next day we had high winds and it looked like it might storm, so I asked her to bring it in. It was a good thing she did because the poor plant was already suffering. We repotted it and we are hoping that it will survive. If not, we'll just plant some zinnias in it.
I love my gift - it even has a hole in the bottom for the water to drain out from!
It's going to be an extra-special Mother's Day for all of us. My gift to her is breakfast: I am making her favorite food, idlis! The batter has already risen and is threatening to overflow. I couldn't be happier!
I hope all of you have a wonderful day!
Posted by Indian Food Rocks at 5/13/2007 01:44:00 AM 30 comments
Labels:
Favorites,
Fun and Frolic,
Mother's Day
Mother's Day and Kashmiri Lamb Rogan josh
Today was a day much like any other Sunday. Some cooking, some cleaning, some lazing under the clear Colorado sky, soaking in the sun. And, yes, it was Mother's Day. I had already been treated to a beautiful butterfly stake on Friday. She had covered hers with a grocery bag so she could smuggle it into the house as a surprise for me on Sunday. Unfortunately for her, the her two little friends decided to fly theirs home from the bus stop despite her pleas. She's learning to deal with events over which she has no control and instead of whining about it, she gave me the butterfly stake as soon as we got home. I showed her how proud I was by promptly driving it into the ground in my garden.
The butterfly card, I got this morning.
And for most of us, that was Mother's Day. A day spent with our children, basking in the warmth of their attention.
At dinner tonight, I found out that Mother's Day is not just a marketing ploy, created by the greeting card and gift companies. That it has origins much deeper. That, over a century ago, a woman named Julia Ward Howe introduced the idea of a special day for mothers so that they could work together against war.
"While the war was still in progress," she wrote, she keenly felt the "cruel and unnecessary character of the contest." She believed, as any woman might, that it could have been settled without bloodshed. And, she wondered, "Why do not the mothers of mankind interfere in these matters to prevent the waste of that human life of which they alone bear and know the cost?"
Unfortunately, Howe's version disappeared before WWI. Mother Jarvis and Anna Jarvis gave it new life in 1907. Read more about how Mother's Day endured and how there is more to it than the card and the gifts.
I feel truly honored.
War, fatherless children, displaced families remind me of the strife-stricken region of Kashmir. I have special memories of Kashmir that date back to the late 70s. It was a treat for me to be reminded of its simple yet varied cuisine by suman and her version of Kashmiri Rogan josh. I took the liberty to adjust suman's recipe to our taste.
Kashmiri Rogan josh
- 2 lb boneless lamb, diced
- 1/8 cup vegetable oil
- 7-8 cloves
- 1 stick cinnamon, broken into several pieces
- 1 large black cardamom
- 3 tamalpatra
small bay leaves - 1/4 tsp hing (asafotida)
- 3 tsp fennel seeds, roasted and powdered
- 1 1/2 tsp dry ginger powder
- 1 tsp red chilli powder
- 1/2 tsp cardamom powder
- 1 cup fat-free yogurt, whisked
- Few strands of saffron
- salt to taste
- Heat oil in a pan
- Add cloves, cinnamon, black cardamom and bay leaves. Stir these about or toss them around in the pan until they release their fragrance, taking care not burn to the whole spices
- Add the diced lamb and sprinkle the hing over it. Fry on medium-high heat until the lamb is browned, about 5 minutes.
- Add the powdered fennel seeds, dried ginger powder, red chilli powder, and salt on medium-high heat for a couple of minutes
- Lower the heat and add the whisked yogurt and powdered cardamom. Stir till it starts to simmer. Cover and cook until the lamb is cooked thoroughly.
- Add the saffron strands and simmer for a couple of minutes.
- Serve hot over steamed basmati rice.
Posted by Indian Food Rocks at 5/14/2006 10:54:00 PM 15 comments
Labels:
Meat and Seafood,
Mother's Day