Being a South Indian and a person who loves simple cooking, I tend to lean towards basic dals. I welcome simple yet fulfilling dals with oodles of enthusiasm. Today's recipe is one such dal prepared with tomatillos and tomatoes - the green, tart and red, savory balls respectively.
Tomatillos are an unknown entity in an Indian kitchen since they are mostly cultivated in the Western hemisphere. However it is not hard to adapt tomatillos in Indian cuisine. They come with a paper thin husk, which needs to be removed before cooking. They are not to be confused with the unripe, green tomatoes available in India. Today's recipe is based on my MIL's green tomato pappu.
For 2 Servings, the following ingredients are required:
1/2 cup toordal
4 tomatillos
1 big sized tomato - chopped into cubes
2 green chilies - chopped fine (I used Serrano peppers. Adjust the chilies quantity if using other varieties.)
1 & 1/2 tsp salt or as needed
A pinch of turmeric powder
For tadka: 2 tsp oil, 1 tsp mustard seeds, 1 tsp cumin seeds, 8 - 10 curry leaves, a pinch of asafoetida powder
Making Dal:
- Remove the husks, wash and then chop the tomatillos.
- Wash the toordal and throw away the cloudy water. Then add about a cup of water and turmeric powder to the toordal. Cook the toordal in a pressure cooker till it turns soft. Alternatively, you can cook on stovetop in a pan and adjust the water quantity accordingly.
- In a sauté pan or kadai, heat the oil and add the mustard seeds and cumin seeds. When mustard seeds start to pop, add the curry leaves and asafoetida. Next add the green chilies and saute for about 30 seconds and then add the chopped vegetables. Sauté them till they turn mushy.
- Remove the dal from the cooker and mash it with the back of a ladle. Add this mashed dal and salt to the tomatillo mixture and mix well.
- Let it simmer for a couple of minutes more and then turn off the stove.
- Serve it with steamed rice / rotis. Ours was served with kohlrabi parathas.
Note:
1. The tart tomatillos acts as the souring agent in this dal recipe. If you find your tomatillos not that sour, then tamarind can be added.
2. You can add the chopped vegetables and chilies directly to the toordal while cooking it.
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I like little bit of sourness in dhal. It looks absolutely my kind of comfort food.
ReplyDeleteTangy and yummy.
ReplyDeleteDhal looks comforting and inviting! Love the idea of adding tomatillo to dhal :-)
ReplyDeletedelicious and nice to go with chappathis.
ReplyDeleteSimple and a comfort side dish for chapathi's
ReplyDeletewow this is an interesting dish thanks for the recipe :)
ReplyDeleteSuch a comforting pappu..love the addition of tomatillo...
ReplyDeleteThe Tomato Dal looks very yummy. Nice click.
ReplyDeleteParippu and rice is my comfort food. Like them with roties too, but i love them with rice :-).
ReplyDeleteDrool.
dhal and chapathi looks so tempting! Lovely click.
ReplyDeletelooks yummy and nutritious! there is an award for you in my blog, please get it :)
ReplyDeleteYumm... cannot imagine dal without the tartness of the tomatoes.
ReplyDeletesuch a simple yet delicious curry..
ReplyDeletesharing an award with you in my blog :)
ReplyDeleteYYUMMMMMMAYYYY!!! This is delicious. Great call on the taramind. I added some cayenne too because we didn't have chillies. Very good thank you.
ReplyDeleteYuummmmaaaayayy!!!! This is a delicious dish. Good call with the taramind. We added cayenne because we didn't have any chillies. Very good, thank you!
ReplyDeleteI'm basically growing all these ingredients in my garden (serrano peppers, tomatillos, and tomatoes), so I decided to give this a try. Holy smokes was this good! I will definitely be making this again. Thanks for the recipe!
ReplyDelete