Categories
Afternoon Snack | 3pm Meal Dinner | 8pm Meal

Thai Style Shredded Egg Salad | A Weekly Meal Plan

Today I talk about my love for the Thai Cuisine. The recipe for this delicious Thai Style Shredded Egg Salad is my Thai cuisine experiment.

I cannot recall a day when someone recommended Thai food and I turned up my nose. With such umami of flavours, it is hard to go wrong with this Asian cuisine. One may feel that Thai culture and food are heavily influenced by India. But if you pay attention, you will observe they still retain a unique individuality and distinctness of their own.

This interesting article will give you an idea of how similar the two countries are in terms of language, ceremonies, food, and religion. The deeper you dig the more interesting it gets. As rightly highlighted in the article:

“Although Thailand has its own unique cuisine which is comprised of sweet, sour, bitter, salty, and spicy flavours it has evolved from India and Chinese influences. The influences of foreign trade played a vital role and it is believed that Buddhist monks from India, originally brought the curry to Thailand. The most popular curries today are the masaman curry which contains dried spices, including cinnamon and nutmeg, and yellow curry which is infused with turmeric, cumin, ground coriander seed and chili powder.”

Recently I learned an interesting fact from my sweet Thai masseuse. The people in Thailand celebrate a festival called Songkran which is very similar to the Indian Holi festival. They are both festivals of colours, and celebrated in spring. Isn’t that a coincidence? While Holi in India marks the onset of Spring (Basant), Songkran marks the beginning of the Thai New Year.

The Flavours Of Thai Cuisine

Coming back to the uniqueness of Thai food. I do feel there is no other cuisine quite like it. It is a beautiful balance of flavours bursting on one’s palate instantly transporting one to culinary heaven. Most recipes derive their taste from fresh ingredients and not just spices. And this cuisine offers a range of options from really simple and easy to whip up delicacies to the ones that require some expertise. But every single time it doesn’t disappoint. This reminds me, any time you happen to visit Thailand, do enroll in a cooking class if one is offered. The entire experience of buying fresh produce from the farmer’s market, to hand pounding spices and making your own fresh sauces, and enjoying the final meal is quite satisfying indeed.

Until then I have you covered with this easy-peasy Thai style shredded egg salad. It is extremely versatile and can be made from ingredients readily available all round the year. I do feel that the shredded egg is one of the key ingredients in the dish, however, vegetarians can replace it with scrambled tofu, and fish sauce can be replaced with Worcestershire sauce. Highly recommend making this salad right before serving but if you do plan on saving time, you could blanch the beans and keep their ready but do not slice them.

This recipe is adapted from Donna Hay Simple Dinners.

Thai Style Shredded Egg Salad

Thai Style Shredded Egg Salad

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes

Total Time: 25 minutes

Yield: 100

Serving Size: 4

Ingredients

  • Green or Yellow Beans- 150 gm
  • Cucumbers, sliced lengthways -3 small
  • Mint leaves- 1 cup
  • Basil leaves -1 cup
  • Coriander leaves- 1cup
  • Red chillies, thinly sliced- 2 or more if you would like it spicier
  • Lime juice- 1/4 cup
  • Fish sauce- 1/4 cup
  • Caster sugar- 2 tbsp
  • Eggs-4
  • Sesame Oil- 2 tsp
  • Roasted, unsalted cashews as toppings

Instructions

  1. Place the beans in a heatproof bowl, cover with boiling water and let it stand for 2-3 minutes
  2. Drain and run it under cold water
  3. Place the beans, cucumber, mint, basil, coriander and chilli in a large bowl
  4. Combine the lime juice , fish sauce and sugar , pour over the salad and toss to combine
  5. Then heat oil in large non-stick frying pan over high heat
  6. Whisk one egg at a time and pout into the hot pan, swirling the pan to thinly coat the base
  7. Cook for 1 minute or until set
  8. Remove from the pan and repeat with remaining oil and eggs
  9. Roll up each omelette, slice and serve with the salad and cashews
  10. Enjoy right away!
https://onewholesomemeal.com/thai-style-shredded-egg-salad-a-weekly-meal-plan/


MEAL PLAN OF THE WEEK


 

Categories
Afternoon Snack | 3pm Meal

Veggie Fritters With Chickpeas and Feta

These veggie fritters with chickpeas are a great lunch box idea – tasty, healthy and nutritious.

I am always looking for ways to include chickpeas in our diet. Not only are they full of nutritional goodness but also quite versatile to work with and extremely delicious and filling, don’t you agree? Fortunately, Indian cuisine has a plethora of lip-smacking recipes to choose from. Some of them are listed below:

  1. Punjabi Chole 
  2. Chickpeas in coconut milk
  3. Ragda
  4. Chana Madra
  5. Ganthia

The list is endless really. But the palate is insatiable. Having had my fill of most of the Indian recipes, I was craving for something which didn’t compromise on taste and yet could be somewhat of a complete meal, when I came across this chickpea and feta fritters recipe in a Donna Hay cookbook, I had to try it. Not only did we love it but I have made it multiple times hence and is a regular lunchbox feature too. To make it a complete meal, I serve it with a wholemeal wrap or chapati smeared with a greek yogurt mint dip or red bell pepper hummus from Marks & Spencer.

It really is that goooood! So, without further ado, here is the veggie fritters with chickpeas recipe for you to try.

Lunchbox recipe. Eat as is or in a wholemeal wrap. Tastes best with a mint-yogurt dip


Chickpeas,Veggies and Feta Fritters

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cook Time: 20 minutes

Total Time: 35 minutes

Yield: 100

Serving Size: 4-6

Ingredients

  • Boiled Chickpeas or Canned Chickpeas- 2 cups and a little extra
  • Grated carrots, medium sized- 3
  • Grated pumpkin - 2 tbsp
  • Baby spinach, chopped fine- 1 tbsp
  • Eggs- 4
  • Chopped mint leaves- 1 tbsp
  • Chopped coriander- 2 tbsp
  • Feta cheese, crumbled - 1.5 cups
  • Rice flour- 1/2 cup
  • Chopped green chilies -1 (optional)
  • Carom seeds- 1/4 tsp
  • Baking powder- 2 tsps
  • Salt and black pepper- To taste
  • Oil for shallow frying

Instructions

  1. Coarsely blend the boiled chickpeas in a blender . Be careful not to over blend , just a few seconds at a time or mash with a fork. Keep aside 2 tbsp and transfer the rest to a mixing bowl
  2. Squeeze away excess water from grated veggies and add it to the same bowl followed by spinach, mint, coriander and feta. Mix well with a fork
  3. Lightly beat eggs in a bowl and add it to the above mixture followed by rice flour, baking powder, salt and pepper
  4. You can swap eggs with flax seeds as shown here
  5. At this stage if you find the batter too runny, add the reserved chickpeas batter and adjust salt
  6. Heat 2 tbsp oil in a non-stick frying pan and reduce the heat to medium
  7. Using a tablespoon, add large spoonfuls of the mixture to the pan avoiding overcrowding
  8. Continue to cook on a low flame , flipping sides till its golden brown and crispy
  9. Drain on a kitchen tissue so it absorbs excess oil
  10. Serve hot with a side of mint yogurt dip or enjoy in a whole-wheat wrap with a hummus of your choice
https://onewholesomemeal.com/veggie-fritters-with-chickpeas-and-feta/

Categories
Tips and Tricks

Weekly Meal Plan | The Why, When and How

Have you wondered about having your own personalized meal plan? Well, here is your quick guide to a weekly meal plan. I tell you all about the why, when and how.

There are just 24 hours in a day. But the to-do list of most families these days has more than 24 items, doesn’t it? One needs to work, exercise, eat healthy, socialise, find time for hobbies, travel, be there for friends and family, care for the environment, visit the shrink/s once in a while and these are just the basics for a family with two adults. Add to the mix young kids and the list increases tenfold. Planning one’s day becomes an indispensable tool if anything needs to get done.

Being a child of routine, planning my day came easily to me. However, I really struggled with planning meals. I would make a meal plan and fail miserably when it came to adhering to it. Mainly because it did not satisfy our greedy palate. And the result? I wouldn’t meal plan. As a result, I ended up cooking the same old regulars due to no planning.

A complete Indian Vegetarian Thaali

Why I Meal Plan.

“I” being the operative word here. Some reasons why I do it might be different from yours. But we all would have to agree it makes life easier, especially the weekdays. I live in one of the most efficient cities in the world, work from home most days and I have a fairly flexible schedule with full-time help. I also love cooking and trying new flavours and cuisines. And so does my family. 

So, my reasons to plan a weekly menu are:

  1. It helps me delegate the mundane and routine tasks to the help and frees up my time to focus on the more important stuff.
  2. Grocery shopping becomes easier and efficient. 
  3. Ensures I rummage through the pantry stock and see what’s expiring and what needs to be finished first.
  4. Keeps me in control of what we are eating as a family even on the days I am not the one cooking. I try my best whilst planning that all food groups are represented in each meal and if not each meal, then at least each day and that we eat seasonally as much as possible. 
  5. Caters to everyone’s different tastes and even picky eaters will have something they like in every meal. Side note. Do not expect overnight results though. It takes time to build good eating habits and with time and patience magic does happen.
  6. Different flavours and cuisines are represented and we eat and try much more than just delicious Indian food 

A complete Indian Vegetarian Thaali with a Non-Veg Option (chicken)

When I Meal Plan

Sunday evenings, after the kids are in bed, is my time to sit with my planner and a hot cuppa. I set aside a minimum of 90 minutes to put it down on paper. A rushed and quickly put together meal plan is a futile meal plan which ends up in the trash bin as quickly. So, please do not rush it. Pick the time and day that works for you to devote your hundred percent to this activity.

How I Meal Plan

Some old, some new, and borrowed few is my mantra.

We have some family favourites that feature regularly on the menu whilst I try a few new recipes each week. It is a hobby that today is also my work. Some recipes I find online, some I ask friends for their tried and tested recipes to include in the weekly meal plan.

Tips For Your First Weekly Meal Plan

  1. Pick your grocery shopping day and plan the menu around it. For me, it is usually Monday. This means Monday meals are fairly simple and with easily available ingredients in the pantry.
  2. List down all your family favourites for all three meals, on paper, not just in your head. Remember when you write things down, your brain takes it more seriously and makes it happen. Sounds like too much gyaan? It isn’t! It is tried and tested and it works.
  3. Pull out your favourite cookbooks or food blogs or recipes that you have been “meaning to try”. Pick up to three recipes and write them down.
  4. If eating seasonal is your goal, then make sure if not all, most recipes listed have ingredients that fit the bill.
  5. Keep your social calendar handy especially if it involves eating out during the week.
  6. If you have young kids and lunchbox needs to be sent, make sure to take that into account. For example, we as a family are trying to cut down on bread and eat more whole grains. Therefore I pack more Indian breakfast in the lunch box. This also means prepping well the night before depending on how much time and help you have in the morning.
  7. Take into account diet restrictions, if any, and look for making one meal which even the family members with no diet restrictions can enjoy. Say for example, because my husband has a sedentary job and hence needs lesser carbs in the night, I will plan dinners around that.
  8. List down the especially busy days – mornings or evenings and highlight them so you put something simple to put together on those days or use leftovers.
  9. Celebrate leftovers! In humid Hong Kong food sitting in the fridge for more than a few days isn’t really the best to eat. So, we either control how much we cook or finish leftovers the very next day (or two). It is one of the things I do before I go to bed – check what is left over so we can find ways to use it the next day. So, make sure you leave room in meal plans for those “hiding in a little box” yummies
  10. Communicate! I cannot stress this enough. Having your family on board would make it so much easier for your meal plans to be successful.  Ask them what they would like in their lunchbox as their Friday treat or if the husband has been craving something specific. And remind them that you are trying to make them all happy. One day at a time! This means someone who doesn’t like to eat chicken, on a particular day will have to eat just rice and daal and maybe a small nibble of the chicken dish because his brother loves chicken and because he gets to eat his favourite fish the next day. This also motivates kids to try different things rather than saying an outright no without trying.
  11. Remind yourself- I am only human!  It is okay if your meal plan doesn’t look straight out of BBC Goodfood Magazine or any of those “50 best meal plans for You” websites. A plan which you can stick to and food that makes you and your family happy and satiated is the best one FOR YOU!
  12. Flexibility is the key. Allow yourself to be not married to the meal plans especially when you are starting off. It is okay to not adhere to a few meals due to a last-minute social engagement or because you didn’t feel like it. The idea is to make your life easy and not end up feeling stifled. This brings me to the last one
  13. Leave room for take-out or eating out if that is something that you enjoy as a family. For example, weekends for us are mostly doing things with friends and eating out, so some meals are not planned at home accordingly.

And You’re Ready To Meal Plan

That’s it! With all this infonnution (yes, I invented that one ! It is a portmanteau of the words, information, and ammunition) up your sleeves, you are all set to create your very own personalised Weekly Meal Plan! It really is that simple! Remember to have fun with it!

Some of my go-to blogs while making my weekly menu:

Culinary Nirvana Life

The Culinary Peace

Bon Appetit

And  last but definitely not the least here is what our’s looks like this week:

MONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAYSATURDAYSUNDAY
BREAKFASTBoiled Eggs + ToastCheese DosaSabudana KhichdiIdliTomato UttapamPoha with scrambled eggs
Frittatas
SMOOTHIECelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Blueberries , Flax SeedsCelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Apple, Flax SeedsCelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Banana , Flax SeedsCelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Dates , Flax SeedsCelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Strawberries , Flax SeedsCelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Oranges , Flax SeedsCelery, Cucumber, Baby Spinach, Cherries , Flax Seeds
KID LUNCHBOX Spinach-Toor-Masoor Daal +Rice Eggs & Veggie Fried RicePasta in Spinach SauceDiced Chicken Meatballs Fried Rice cooked in coconut creamAvocado Parathas + Red Bell Pepper HummusNANA
KID SNACK BOXDried Mango + NutsCherry TomatoesDried Jackfruit + NutsCelery Sticks + HummusTreat Friday- Oreos + NutsNANA
ADULT LUNCHBOXRice + White Matar Sabzi+ SaladBaked Chicken +Stir fried string beans Rice+ Rajma +SaladRoti+Hummus + Stir fried Tofu +Salad Greens (DIY wrap)Pan fried Sesame Salmon + Choi Sum stir friedNANA
LUNCHRice + White Mater Sabzi+ SaladEggs & Veggie Fried RiceRice+ Rajma +SaladPan fried Sesame Salmon + Mint-Lime-Cucumber Salad +Sticky Rice Avocado Parathas + Red Bell Pepper HummusChicken Kebab Wraps
Leftovers or Eat out
SNACKS
Banana MuffinBanana-Dates SmoothieCherry TomatoesBanana MuffinCherry TomatoesCrackersBanana-Dates Smoothie
DINNERRice + Split Green Moong Daal + Bhindi Pasta in Spinach Sauce + 3 Bean SaladChicken Meatballs + Rice + Yellow Moong DaalThai Style(in red sauce) Baked Fish + Bok Choi stir fried + Yellow Moong Daal+ Sticky Rice Kadhai Paneer+ Bhindi Fry+ Mixed Daal+Rice LeftoversAloo Parathas or Leftovers or Eat Out
Categories
Lunch | 1pm Meal

Bharwa Baingan | Stuffed Eggplant

Are you Team Baingan (eggplant/aubergine) or are you not? I am one huge fan. And this Bharwa Baingan might just me my favourite!

The gooey, metallic texture, and taste which some people tend to dislike, is what makes it extremely palatable to me. No kidding! The same isn’t true for the rest of my family though. The only way they will eat it is in bharta (roasted eggplant mash)or prepared Greek style with tons of parmesan. And I do not blame them. Eggplant is an acquired taste and more often than not, tastes best when cooked with citrus or tangy ingredient like tomatoes.

One of my childhood favourites is Methi-Baingan or eggplant cooked in mustard oil tempered with lots of garlic and panchforan (a five-spice mix) and flavoured with tomatoes and fresh fenugreek leaves. It is the best and will forever remain close to my heart but this Bharwa Baingan might just give it a close competition. It is THAT good!

I tried it first courtesy a friend who cooked it using her friend’s recipe. When I posted the behind the scenes images on my Instagram stories, another chef friend from my Taj days gave some fantastic suggestions which I incorporated when I made it again. It turned out amazing.

Let’s Get The Baby Eggplants Out

Baby eggplants are what we use for this dish. Not only do they cook quicker, but are also easy to work with. Make four slits but not all the way through and let them soak in cold saltwater for 15 minutes. Then drain and wipe off the excess moisture with a kitchen towel.

In a deep bowl, mix together coarsely ground roasted peanuts, toasted sesame, minced garlic, red chili powder, turmeric powder, desiccated coconut, coriander powder, and salt. Use your fingers to mix together the ingredients so the flavours get well incorporated. This is going to be our filling for the eggplants.

 

Prepare a wide dry plate. Spoon 1-2 tsp of the mixture into the slit eggplants making sure to fill them all the way to the top and place it on the prepared plate while you get ready for the tempering.

To a thick bottomed wide pan or skillet, add oil, and once hot, add the mustard and cumin seeds and curry leaves. Once the seeds start to crackle, add the stuffed eggplant, and reduce the flame to low. Cover and cook until 70% done.

Then add the remaining peanut-sesame masala mixture. Stir and mix on a low flame for a minute and add chopped tomatoes. Cover and cook for 5 minutes or until tomatoes are mushy and eggplant cooked through.

Turn off the heat and add fresh tamarind juice (prepared by soaking tamarind pulp in warm water, letting it sit in the water for 15 minutes and then straining) and jaggery. Mix well and let it sit for 10-15 minutes so the flavours absorb and serve hot with ghee rice or chapatis.

Bharwa Baingan (Stuffed Aubergine/Eggplant)

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes

Total Time: 35 minutes

Yield: 100

Serving Size: 2-4

Ingredients

  • Baby eggplants, slit partially into fours-10-12(refer image above)
  • Roasted whole peanut- 1 cup
  • Roasted sesame- 4 tbsp
  • Desiccated coconut -3 tbsp
  • Turmeric powder-1 tsp
  • Chili powder- 1.5 tsp or as per taste
  • Coriander powder- 1.5tsp
  • Minced Garlic- 3-4 medium sized pods
  • Salt-1.5 tsp or as per taste
  • Mustard Seeds-1/2 tsp
  • Cumin Seeds-3/4 tsp
  • Curry Leaves- 10-12
  • Tomatoes- 1cup, finely chopped
  • Tamarind water-2 tsp
  • Jaggery-2.5 tsp
  • Chopped coriander-2 tbsp or as desired
  • Oil-3-4 tbsp

Instructions

  1. Slit the eggplants vertically but not all the way through and let it soak in cold salt water for 15 minutes. Then drain and wipe off the excess moisture with a kitchen towel.
  2. In a deep bowl, mix together coarsely ground roasted peanuts, toasted sesame, minced garlic, red chilli powder, turmeric powder, desiccated coconut, coriander powder and salt. Use your fingers to mix together the ingredients so the flavours get well incorporated. This is going to be our filling for the eggplants
  3. Prepare a wide dry plate.Spoon 1-2 tsp of the mixture into the slit eggplants making sure to fill them all the way to the top and place it on the prepared plate while you get ready for the tempering.
  4. To a thick bottomed wide pan or skillet, add oil and once hot, add the mustard and cumin seeds and curry leaves. Once the seeds start to crackle, add the stuffed eggplant and reduce the flame to low. Cover and cook until 70% done.
  5. Then add the remaining peanut-sesame masala mixture. Stir and mix on a low flame for a minute and add chopped tomatoes.Cover and cook for 5 minutes or until tomatoes are mushy and eggplant cooked through.
  6. Turn off the heat and add fresh tamarind juice(prepared by soaking tamarind pulp in warm water, letting it sit in the water for 15 minutes and then straining) and jaggery. Mix well and let it sit for 10-15 minutes so the flavours absorb and serve hot with ghee rice or chapatis.
https://onewholesomemeal.com/bharwa-baingan-stuffed-aubergine-eggplant/

 

Categories
Dinner | 8pm Meal Lunch | 1pm Meal

Lauki Chana Dal | Bottle Gourd with Lentils

Lauki Chana Dal is the perfect one-pot meal to give you the wholesomeness of bottle gourd and lentils.

As summer peaks it gets harder to spend time in the kitchen. But also, Mother Nature makes sure we stay hydrated by flooding us with the best summer bounty. Most veggies available through summer have high water content. This makes it easy to digest while having a cooling effect on our system. The gourd family is one such. Vegetables from this family such as cucumbers, angled luffas, pointed gourd, bottle gourd are all high in water and fibre, making them an almost complete meal in themselves.

Bottle gourd is one such staple summer veggie in our household. It is a popular vegetable in the south and southeast Asian region where summer gets extremely hot and sultry. Growing up, this vegetable featured regularly on our menus throughout the week during summer. Many of us from India also know it as Lauki. It is usually not a very well-liked vegetable due to its watery taste. However, if prepared well most people do grow to like it as my fussy husband has 😉 I remember enjoying it with hot ghee rice and chilled yogurt on a hot summer afternoon with some raw onions mixed with pickle masala on the side.

The Benefits of Lauki Chana Dal

Although very healthy, the veggie is low in protein. But that problem gets addressed as soon as you add Chana dal (split chickpeas) to it. It also makes for a much more delicious one-pot meal. Using mustard oil enhances the flavour multiple-fold but feel free to use the oil of your choice. Another key ingredient is fenugreek seeds. They are well known for their multiple benefits. However one needs to be careful while cooking with fenugreek as using an excessive amount makes the food bitter and so does overcooking it.

Using a pressure cook reduces the cooking time to a great extent, however you could use a normal thick bottomed wok as well. Here is a stepwise instruction with images to make this tasty dish.

First, I peeled and cubed a small-sized bottle gourd and kept aside. Then to hot oil, I added fenugreek (methi)seeds, finely chopped garlic, asafoetida, and green chilies (as per taste) and sautéed on medium-low flame for a few seconds making sure the methi doesn’t burn.

To that, I added pre-soaked chana dal (washed and soaked in water for 30 minutes) and turmeric and mixed everything well.

The last step – I added the cubed bottle gourd and salt, mix, and pressure cooked for 5 minutes till the pressure set in. Then turned off the heat and let the pressure release on its own and took off the lid and cooked till the water (good quality bottle gourd releases a lot of water) reduced to the desired consistency.

If you are using a normal wok, just cover and cook till done, keeping the flame to medium-low and stirring intermittently. There is no need to add additional water.

This curry is enjoyed best with hot rice and daal but tastes good with chapatis too.

Lauki Chana Dal


Lauki-Chana Daaal (Bottle Gourd with Split Chickpeas)

Ingredients

  • Lauki/Bottle Gourd, cubed- 1 small size (1.5 cups)
  • Pre-soaked Chana Daal/Split Chickpeas)- 2 tbsp
  • Finely chopped garlic -4 pods
  • Green chilies-1-2 or as per taste
  • Methi/Fenugreek seeds-1 tsp
  • Asafoetida-1/2 tsp
  • Turmeric-1 tsp
  • Salt-1.5 tsp or as per taste
  • Mustard oil-1 tbsp or any oil of choice

Instructions

  1. Heat oil in a pressure cooker or a thick bottomed wok then reduce flame and add asafoetida, fenugreek seeds, green chilies and garlic and sauté for a few seconds till the fenugreek seeds start to release an aroma and change colour . Make sure to stir continuously and not increase the flame as the seeds burn fast and that would spoil the dish
  2. Then drain and add pre-soaked chana daal and turmeric seeds and mix well
  3. Finally add the chopped bottle gourd and salt and pressure cook for 5 minutes from the time pressure sets in
  4. Then turn off the heat and let the pressure release on its own and take off the lid and cook till the water (good quality bottle gourd releases a lot of water) reduces to desired consistency.If you are using a normal wok, just cover and cook till done, keeping the flame to medium low and stirring intermittently. There is no need to add additional water .
https://onewholesomemeal.com/lauki-chana-daal-bottle-gourd-with-lentils/

 

Categories
Breakfast | 8am Meal Dinner | 8pm Meal

Savoury Masala Oats | Tasty And Healthy

I have a love-hate relationship with Oats. I love to hate it! But there are people in La Familia who like it and couldn’t stop raving about it especially after having the ready-to-eat Masala Oats version from a popular Indian brand.

Oat-hater me hesitatingly and grudgingly accepted it was quite delicious indeed. Now, a more sensible version of me would have simply reordered from my Indian grocer’s and be happy with it. However, I am neither simple nor sensible and do like a good challenge. So, I did the unthinkable! I tried to create my very own version minus the not so great stuff which these ready to eat versions have!

Now, I have never cooked oats in my life. So it did take me a few attempts to perfect this recipe. But once that was done, I was pretty chuffed with myself. I cannot call myself an oats-hater anymore, maybe a grudging lover. I have used chicken stock here and have to admit that it is one ingredient that imparts the maximum amount of flavour. If you follow a vegan or vegetarian diet feel free to substitute it with vegetable stock but try not to use water. Pretty please! Also, I skipped salt as both cheese and stock have a lot of salt. You can add salt as per taste and the stock used.

Here is an easy to follow video of the masala oats recipe. For detailed steps scroll down.

I used the old fashioned rolled oats. You can use steel-cut or instant versions without much effect on the taste. You might need to adjust the amount of liquid to be added and the cooking time would differ as well. Try this recipe for yourself and don’t forget to share how you like it!

Masala Oats by OneWholesomeMeal

 


Savory Masala Oats

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes

Total Time: 20 minutes

Yield: 100

Serving Size: 3-4

Calories per serving: 250

Ingredients

  • Old Fashioned Rolled Oats- 1 cup
  • Chicken or Vegetable Stock-2 cups
  • Chopped onions-1/2 cup
  • Minced garlic- 1 tbsp
  • Chopped and blanched veggies of choice-1 cup (I used carrots, orange bell peppers, cauliflower and green peas)
  • Stir-fried tofu cubes -1/2 cup (optional)
  • Garam Masala-1 tsp
  • Turmeric powder-1tsp
  • Spring Onions, chopped fine- 3 tbsp for garnish
  • Grated Cheddar and Pepper Jack Cheese-1/2 cup
  • Butter-2 tbsp+1 tbsp

Instructions

  1. Melt 2 tbsp butter in a pan and roast the Oats till just brown.Keep the flame low all the time and e careful not to over roast
  2. Transfer and keep aside and in the same pan melt the remaining butter and add garlic and cook till brown followed by chopped onions. Keeping the flame to medium-low fry the onions till nice and brown
  3. Add butter-roasted oats, chicken/veg stock,turmeric powder, garam masala and mix well. Cook covered for a minute till the oats are almost done
  4. Add blanched veggies and tofu and mix well
  5. Add shredded cheese, mix, taste for salt and add salt if needed
  6. Garnish with chopped spring onions and serve hot!
https://onewholesomemeal.com/savoury-masala-oats/

 

 

 

 

 

 

[kkstarratings]