Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Food/recipes

For related content, visit our food content hub.

Does anyone have a fabulous dahl recipe?

18 replies

hoxtonchick · 11/04/2006 20:13

as my kids love it, & i want to be able to cook a decent one. tia.

OP posts:
motherinferior · 11/04/2006 20:16

I use Madhur Jaffrey's in Eastern Vegetarian Cooking. You can borrow my copy, if you like. I do have my mum's dal recipe somewhere, will send it to you. It's very nice. In fact I should do it Blush

motherinferior · 11/04/2006 20:17

Have just sent it off. It has my mother's characteristic exhortations to lay my hands please on some curry leaves, darling, they make all the difference, yada yada yada.

marthamoo · 11/04/2006 20:26

I have a non curry leaf, probably not at all authentic, one which is very nice Grin Where d'you get curry leaves from anyway? I used to have a plant on the garden of my last house with curry smelling leaves - would that be it?

hoxtonchick · 11/04/2006 20:27

thank you! i do like your mum's recipes though, you sent me her keema one before. (p.s. mil is behaving herself again so you're allowed to make lemon drizzle cake).

OP posts:
motherinferior · 11/04/2006 20:27

Asian shops have them sometimes and delis do as well. I've just looked at it; it's a very nice recipe and frankly would be nice if curry leaves were omitted.

motherinferior · 11/04/2006 20:28

I seem to have lost the kheema one, actually, could you send it back Grin?

hoxtonchick · 11/04/2006 20:42

yes please to yours too moo :o.

OP posts:
marthamoo · 11/04/2006 20:43

I am not going to post my recipe now I've read MI's Mum's!

marthamoo · 11/04/2006 20:44

No, it's embarrassing...it's nothing like that, it's only got about 3 ingredients and 1 pan Grin

hoxtonchick · 11/04/2006 20:46

oh go on!

i have to admit that the chidren ate the remains of last night's takeaway for their tea Blush...

OP posts:
hoxtonchick · 11/04/2006 20:46

oh go on!

i have to admit that the chidren ate the remains of last night's takeaway for their tea Blush...

OP posts:
marthamoo · 11/04/2006 20:58

All right. So long as you know it's not the Real Deal (though if you make it with reduced fat butter it's only 4.5 points on WeightWatchers!)

25g butter
1 tbsp curry paste (I like Patak's)
2 onions (chopped)
2 cloves garlic (finely chopped/crushed)
1 tsp turmeric
250g red lentils
About 1 and a half pints veg stock
4 tbsps chopped fresh coriander

Melt butter and curry paste in big frying pan, fry onions til starting to brown and crisp up, add garlic and spices (not coriander). Add lentils and cook for a few mins, add about 1 pint of stock and bring to the boil. Simmer for ages (the longer the better - 40 mins at least) and add more stock as needed. Stir coriander in at last minute.

My kids love it with rice, naan bread and yoghurt and cumboober (ds2's word for cucumber).

motherinferior · 12/04/2006 14:10

Marthamoo says I should post this, so here goes:

A dal recipe (easiest and best)

¾ cup mung dal
½ cup red lentils (masoor dal)
put the two together , wash well, cover with water and allow to soak
for about an hour.
Then drain, cover with fresh water (about 4 to 5 cups), and bring to
the boil with
1 onion, roughly chopped
1 fat clove of garlic, smashed and chopped
2 tomatoes, chopped
a pinch of turmeric
salt to taste
Once it has come to the boil, shove it into the oven, gas mark 5, and
leave it there for half an hour to forty minutes, until the dal is
well cooked, and the whole thing can be mashed together. Remove and
set aside.
Now take another pan (small frying pan or karhai), add 2 tablespoons
of oil and heat. Add
a teaspoonful of black mustard seeds
a sprig of curry leaves (do try and find this; it makes all the
diff.)
1 -2 dry red chillies
½ teaspoonful of whole cumin seeds (jeera)
¼ teaspoonful fenugreek seeds (vendhyam)
a pinch of asafoetida (don't leave this out, it gives the genuine
flavour)
When the mustard seeds splutter, and the other spices have toasted
and are fragrant (but not burnt, please), add
1 finely chopped onion. Let this brown. At the last moment add
a good bunch of washed and finely chopped coriander. Let it turn in
the oil, and just crispen up. Then pour the whole fragrant seasoning
(bhagar or taalippu) on to the cooked dal. Check for salt, give a
good squeeze of lemon. Enjoy.

You probably get quite an insight into my mother from it.

marthamoo · 12/04/2006 18:30

I am going to make yours one day, MI - but mine is nice too, honest Grin

JTN · 17/04/2006 19:48

great recipe thanks MI everyone lovedit in our house do you have any other good indian rccipes

I could do with one for Paneer with peas i see it in tescos but it never tastes thatt good when i make it , cheers

JTN · 17/04/2006 19:48

great recipe thanks MI everyone lovedit in our house do you have any other good indian rccipes

I could do with one for Paneer with peas i see it in tescos but it never tastes thatt good when i make it , cheers

JTN · 17/04/2006 19:48

great recipe thanks MI everyone lovedit in our house do you have any other good indian rccipes

I could do with one for Paneer with peas i see it in tescos but it never tastes thatt good when i make it , cheers

RuthT · 18/04/2006 20:21

This is the best lentil curry ever. It tastes better the second day and I don't know one person who hasn't tried it and then made it themselves.

Steve's Red Lentil Dhal

(Based on a recipe from Sainsbury's magazine)

1 onion, finely chopped; 1 carrot, grated; 1 red chilli, shredded; 1 tsp brown mustard seeds; oil; 1 tsp tumeric; 250g red lentils; 1 tin coconut milk (½ if it is very thick); 1 tomato, skinned and chopped; 3cm ginger, cut into ½ cm slices; salt; juice 1 lime; good handful fresh coriander; good knob butter; 3-4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced

Soften the onion in the oil then stir in the mustard seeds and chilli. Fry another 2 min, stir in the carrot and lentils and add the coconut milk and enough water to cover plus the ginger and tomatoes. Simmer gently until the lentils are soft (ca. 40 min.) topping up with water as necessary. Taste and adjust the seasoning then take off the heat and stir in the juice and chopped coriander. Heat the butter in a small pan until foaming, then add the garlic and fry gently until discoloured, turning once. Tip into the dhal; it should splutter slightly.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread