Celebrations!!! Yes, we love to
celebrate each and every occasion, right from Valentine ’s Day to Eed, from Christmas
to Navroz. Our calendar is marked with festivals
and celebrations all through. Then there are birthdays and anniversaries.
As a Bengali my festival starts
with ‘poush parban’ or Makar sankranti, followed by saraswati puja (Vasant
Panchami), holi, paila boishak (Bengali new year or first day of Baisakh),
jamai shoshthi and so on. Married to a Bihari family I now also celebrate some
more occasions with much fervour. Rakhi
or Rakshabandhan is one such.
I remember one incident of Rakhi
from my childhood when I was in first standard.
Our’s was a girls’ school and there was no holiday on Rakhi as in Bengal
we observe Bhaiphonta (bhaiduj). One of my classmates Neeraj Pandey came with a
big Rakhi adorned with all Zari and decorative beads. She managed it from her
brother. The rakhi was too attractive and there was a wish hidden on my young
mind to have one such some day. Then so much water has flown into the Ganges!!!
When I came to Mumbai, didi was
the one who tied me a rakhi for the first time. It was a small decorative piece
and I loved it. After that as long as I was in Mumbai each year she used to tie
me the silk thread.
With R, Rakhi is now more serious
and busy event. Till now, R, the only daughter of the family, has to send
Rakhis to all her cousins. So, now I get enough chances to handle those silk
threads. This year, I have even bought 3 extras. They are so beautiful and
creative!!! A Superman or a Doreman Rakhi for the kids, Designer Rakhs, Rakhis
like Punjabi ChuRas and so on. One for my boudi, one for my sis-in-law and the
other one for me- 3 punjabi ChuRas apart from R’s share.
If Rakhis and gifts are one part
of the celebration then the other important part is the food of course (the one
without which we cannot think of our festivals). The menu that I decided this
time was spicy dam aloo, dhokar dalna, shemai-er payesh and sattu paratha
(chatu-r parota). Typically a mixed Bihari
& Bengali cuisine.
I am sharing the recipe of Spicy Dam aloo.
Ingredients
Baby Potato
10-15
1 big onion
finely chopped
1 medium
tomato finely chopped
Green
chilies (as per your tolerance) finely
chopped
1 Big onion fine
sliced
Garlic paste
Ginger paste
2 tblsp fresh
lemon juice
Jeera/ Cumin
powder
Dhaniya/
Corriander powder,
Lalmirch/ Red chili powder
Haldi/ Turmeric
powder
Whole
jeera/cumin seed, whole dry red chili and tejpata
Mustard oil or
any white oil
Ghee,
garammasala and sugar (optional)
Method
Wash the
potatoes and partly boil. Add some salt while boiling. You can cut them into
halves if you wish.
Peel the
boiled potatoes
Heat a pan
with 1 table spoon mustard oil.
Fry the
potatoes with ½ tbsp of turmeric. Fry till they have a golden colour.
Next add
another tbsp of mustard oil and temper the oil with some whole jeera/cumin
seed, 2 whole dry red chili and 2 tejpata
To it add the
finely chopped onion, green chilies and tomato.
Cover and cook
Now, add 1
tbsp garlic paste and cover again
This should be
cooked in a low flame.
Now in a small
bowl make a paste with 1 tbsp ginger paste, 1tbsp jeera, dhania and ½ tbsp lal
mirch powder, salt turmeric and water.
Add this to
the cooked onion and tomato mix and fry. You can add a pinch of sugar at this
time. I add this as a part of traditional Bengali cuisine. This doesn’t make
the dish sweet but adds to the taste and flavor.
When the mix
releases oil add the potatoes and let them be cooked in the spices for
sometimes. After they are well cooked in the spices, add water and increase the
flame.
Cook in a high
flame for 5 minutes or till the water dries. This is a dry dish, so do not keep
lot of gravy.
Now add the lime
juice and mix it well and switch off the gas.
If you want
you can add some ghee and garam masala at the end. I usually avoid this but
this time I added as a part of festival dish J.
Maam...it looks so tempting....
ReplyDeletethank you Hridoy
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