Turning Lamb Leftovers into Indian Lovin’s

I had made a leg of lamb for dinner a few days back and, of course, there was quite a bit of leftover meat.  When you prefer your lamb to be medium rare, you can only reheat it so many times before it turns into something tasting like burnt rubber.  I considered my options for what to do with the leftover meat and finally came to the conclusion that some sort of Somer-ized Indian lamb meatball dish was in order.

I hadn’t done anything fancy with my leg of lamb.  I prefer a flavorful meat such as lamb (when in huge meat-chunk form) to be prepared simply.  I cut small slits into the meat and stuffed the slits with garlic and fresh rosemary.  I then simply roasted the lamb until it was a beautiful medium rare.  I think that with this simple preparation, I was able to make the meat into something completely different.

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The first thing that I did was chop the lamb meat into a ground meat-like consistency.  I ended up with about 1 lb. of ground lamb.    My other food processor didn’t survive the move from Washington to Pennsylvania so Santa brought me a new one for Christmas.  This thing is a bit nicer than my deceased Black and Decker one, but oh my goodness it chopped that lamb meat like it was making bread crumbs!  And it is quiet!

Once the meat was ground, I put it into a bowl, added two eggs, 1 minced onion, 3 cloves of minced garlic, 1/2 tsp. cumin, 1/2 tsp. coriander, 1/4 tsp. salt, 1/4 tsp. freshly ground black pepper, and 1/8 tsp. cayenne pepper.  I decided against adding a filler to these meatballs like breadcrumbs in order to preserve the flavor.  The meatballs were a little crumbly because of this omission, but with a little care I was able to preserve their shape.

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I fried the meatballs in a dutch oven in vegetable oil much the same way that I would fry up regular meatballs.  Again, take care when flipping because these meatballs are much more delicate and crumbly.  And, as with regular meatballs, do not overcrowd the pan to ensure even browning of the meat without boiling it.  It takes 2-3 batches to do all of the meatballs, just set them aside on a plate as they finish browning.

As for the sauce in which these meatballs were to swim, I turned to my beloved Indian cookbook and thumbed through it considering my options.  My eye was caught by a Rogan Josh recipe for lamb.  Lamb Rogan Josh is one of those milder Indian dishes that most Americans should be familiar with at this point.  I have yet to find an Indian restaurant that doesn’t serve Lamb Rogan Josh and really, it IS a lovely dish even if it is not terribly adventurous.  Taking my cues from the recipe from my culinary tome, I concocted a sauce that was thick, tangy, and spicy.  It’s a very fast moving process a.k.a. stir-fry style in which the cooking is very hot and very fast so you will want to have everything already chopped and set out before you start the sauce so that it will be a smooth process.

Rogan Josh-ish Sauce

My Recipe (with the help of my cookbook)

-2 Tblsp. freshly grated ginger root

-6 to 8 cloves of garlic

-1 to 1-1/2 cups water

-2 tsp. ground cardamom (the original recipe called for cardamom pods which are hard to find in stores but easy to find online)

-2 bay leaves

-6 cloves

-10 peppercorns (of you don’t have whole peppercorns, don’t try to substitute ground pepper, just leave it out)

-1 small cinnamon stick

-1 large onion finely chopped

-1 tsp. ground coriander

-2 tsp. ground cumin

- 4 tsp. Spanish paprika (it has a great color and a nice flavor)

- Cayenne pepper (depending on how hot you want this dish, you can add between 1/8 to 1 tsp.)

-6 Tblsp. plain yogurt

Make a thick paste of the ginger and garlic by putting them into a small blender or food processor and then adding just enough water.  I only needed 2 Tblsp.

Heat 1/4 cup of vegetable oil in the same pot where you browned your lamb meatballs.  When the oil is nuclear hot, add the cardamom, bay leaves, cloves, peppercorns, and cinnamon.  Stir quickly and when the smell of the deep perfumes of these spices becomes strong and the bay leaves start to color, add the onions.  Stir until the onions start to take on a light caramel color.  Add the ginger garlic paste and stir for about 30 seconds. Add the rest of the spices and stir for another 30 seconds.

Now add the yogurt 1 Tblsp. at a time, stirring and incorporating completely before adding the next tablespoon.

Add the water and stir.  When the water is hot, gently add the meatballs to the sauce.  Turn the heat to low, cover, and cook for 30-45 minutes.  Because you are cooking meatballs instead of meat chunks, it doesn’t need to cook quite as long.

If, at the end of this time, the liquid is still very thin, turn the heat to medium and uncover the dish and let some of the liquid evaporate.  Keep an eye on it, though and don’t let it burn.

I like to serve saucy dishes like this with some rice.  Obviously, the preferred rice is Basmati rice, but I didn’t have any on hand at the time, so I used the regular (and cheap) long grain rice and added some bay leaves, cloves, and cardamom to the water.  You get a flavorful rice that is totally worthy of this dish.

When we have Indian dishes like this, I like to serve them in their own small bowls.  The main dish in it’s own small bowl, and the rice in it’s own small bowl.  I then make Naan, and we eat with our fingers.  It helps with the whole experience of eating an ethnic food that is otherwise completely foreign to us.  I think it’s a neat way to pay homage to the dish.

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This was a great dish and a brilliant way to use some leftover lamb meat.  I have to say, I’m pleased with myself.  I hope you try this and like it as much as we did.  Enjoy!

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Homemade Yogurt: Another Save from the Dreaded Grocery Store

I hate shopping.  For anything and everything.  I’ve had furious arguments with horrible insensitive men who assume that all women want to shop all day for clothes and shoes because I really don’t think that there are many people out there who hate shopping more than I do.

Alas, it is a necessity in my life.  I have to do it at least once a month.  I can handle those enormous once a month trips, I can handle it.  What irritates me are all of those smaller trips in between where only one or two things need to be procured.  A gallon of milk.  Diapers.  A special ingredient for the dinner I want to make.  I hate those trips.

Luckily, as time goes on, my shopping has become more efficient and I am able to minimize the number of those small runs.  I’ve learned to stock my home in such a way that it lasts the full month, but I’ve also learned to make a lot of things homemade so that I don’t have to worry about buying them.  One of these things is yogurt.  My son eats yogurt for breakfast every morning and I like to always have yogurt on hand because I LOVE Indian food and yogurt is a big part of that cuisine.

It was actually from an Indian cookbook that I was able to first learn how to make yogurt.  I messed it up quite a few times, but I figured out a few tricks that might help.

Start off with a quart of milk.  You can use any milk you like, I use whole milk, but you can use 2% or 1%.

Bring the milk to a boil in a large heavy pot and stir constantly.  When the milk starts to rise, remove it from the heat.  Allow the milk to cool slightly.  Don’t let it get to room temperature, you want it to be warm to the touch, but not hot.

You need some “starter” for this.  Starter is about 2 Tablespoons of yogurt that you have.  You can use purchased yogurt from the dairy aisle.  That’s what I use.

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Put the yogurt in a heat-safe large bowl and whisk it until it is smooth.  Slowly add the warm milk, whisking all the while.

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Make sure that the yogurt and milk are thoroughly incorporated.

Now you need to let the yogurt set up.  You need a warm place for this.  I like to use my oven.  If your oven has a “WARM” setting, start this while the milk is still boiling.  If your oven doesn’t, the simply set the oven to it’s lowest temperature (mine goes only as low as 170 degrees F.) and let it preheat while you are preparing the yogurt.  Turn the heat off before you put the bowl inside and make a warm and snuggly place for the bowl to sit.

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I put a thick dish towel on the oven rack, the bowl on the towel, and then another thick towel over the bowl.  This needs to be a gently warmed environment so the yogurt sets up correctly.  It’s not as hard as it sounds.  It takes 8 hours for the yogurt to set up.  Take a peek about 4-5 hours in and if the oven isn’t warm, set the warmer on again for 5 minutes and turn it off before it gets too hot.

Do this right and you’ll have your own homemade yogurt.  And you won’t have to go to the store to buy one lousy little tub.  Your welcome.

Enjoy!

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Holy Cilantro, Batman!

I wanted Indian food tonight.  I love Indian food.  It is, without a doubt, my favorite ethnic food.  I love it so much that I wanted to learn how to cook it after years of gorging myself on Indian takeout and curry buffets.  I did a lot of research on a good Indian cookbook and one name kept popping up:  Madhur Jaffrey.  She is one of the world’s bestselling Indian cookbook authors, so I went out and bought her book “Indian Cooking.” Boy am I glad that I got it, too.  There are FANTASTIC recipes in this cookbook.

Tonight I cooked a dish called Hare masale wali murghi which is a lemony chicken with cilantro.  LOTS of cilantro.  (If you don’t like cilantro, you are as crazy as the people who don’t like Bleu cheese.  You can’t change my mind on this.  If you dislike these two things, you are looney toons.)  This is also a really easy dish to make.  I had all of the ingredients on hand and I was able to have a lovely dinner on my table in about 45 minutes.  Here’s the recipe, but let me say again that if you love Indian food, you really should consider buying this cookbook because it really is just awesome.  I make homemade yogurt for my son because of this cookbook!

Here is the recipe:

Two 2.5 cm (1 inch) cubes fresh ginger, peeled and coarsely chopped

240 ml (1 cup) water, divided

6 Tblsp. vegetable oil

1 kg 175 g (2-1/2 lb.) chicken pieces, skinned

5 cloves garlic, peeled and very finely chopped

200 g (3 cups) cilantro (weight without roots or lower stems), very finely chopped

1/2- 1 fresh, hot green chili, very finely chopped

1/4 tsp. cayenne pepper

2 tsp. ground cumin

1 tsp. ground coriander

1/2 tsp. ground turmeric

1 tsp. salt or to taste

2 Tblsp. lemon juice

Put the ginger and 4 Tblsp. water into the container of an electric blender.  Blend until you have a paste.

Put the oil in a wide, heavy, preferalby nonstick pot over medium high heat.  When hot, put in as many chicken pieces as the pot will hold in a single layer and brown on both sides.  Remove the chicken pieces with a slotted spoon and put them in a bowl.  Brown all the chicken pieces this way.

Put the garlic into the same hot oil.  As soon as the pieces turn a medium-brown color, turn the heat to medium and pour in the paste from the blender.  Stir and fry it for a minute.  Now add the cilantro, green chili, cayenne, ground cumin, ground coriander, turmeric, and salt.  Stir and cook for a minute.  Put in all the chicken pieces as well as any liquid that might have accumulated in the chicken bowl.  Also add 150 ml (2/3 cup) water and the lemon juice.  Stir and bring to a boil.  Cover tightly, turnheat to low, and cook for 15 minutes.  Turn the chicken over.  Cover again and cook another 10-15 minutes or until the chicken is tender.

If the sauce is too thin, uncover the pan and boil some of it away over a slightly higher heat.  YIELD:  6 servings.

Now that you’ve looked the recipe over, I will offer my tips.  I used boneless skinless chicken breasts today.  It’s something that can be found in many American households these days and they are convenient for quick weeknight dinners.  However, chicken with the bone still in them will yield much more flavor.  The sauce for this dish is so flavorful that I wasn’t missing anything.

I didn’t have turmeric today.  It would have added an extra tang to the dish as well as a gorgeous color.  If you don’t have it or can’t find it, make the dish anyhow and just omit it.  It’s still really delicious.

Pre-Chop

Since we are dealing with screaming hot oil in this recipe, you want to go ahead and do all of your chopping and measuring before you even begin cooking.  Once you start, it’s going to go really fast.  When you put the garlic in the hot oil, watch it like a hawk because it can burn very quickly and then it will turn bitter.

I went ahead and used a little bit of zest from my lemon to add to the sauce.  The real flavor of citrus comes from the zest rather than the juice.  It was a nice note in the complex taste of the dish.

Lemony Indian Chicken

This is the finished dish.  There’s no pretty picture of the final product today because….well…I got excited and started eating before I remembered the need for a picture.  Sorry about that, but I’m sure you understand!  Please try this recipe and PLEASE consider buying this cookbook.  I’m not being asked to pimp this cookbook or anything, (It doesn’t need pimping!) I just really really love this cookbook and it’s one of maybe three cookbooks that I can’t live without.

Enjoy everybody, and if you’ve never tried Indian food before, let me know and I can suggest some dishes to try that will hook you!

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