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How do you make the perfect daal?

8 replies

Tatties · 07/02/2008 13:28

I have made it before but always feel it is missing something. How do you make yours?

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motherinferior · 07/02/2008 13:30

My (Indian) mother's recipe is:

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.

needmorecoffee · 07/02/2008 13:30

lentil dhal? Fry onions in about three times the ghee you would imagine, add the garlic and spices and fry some more. cook lentils seperately so you can skim icky bits then add to onion stuff when cooked.

Tatties · 07/02/2008 13:38

Fantastic! Thank you very much

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shrooms · 07/02/2008 16:56

A very easy storecupboardy one I do is fantastically yummy:

One large onion chopped very finely, fried gently till soft then add about 200g red lentils and fry for a bit. Add 1 tsp hot curry paste and about two tbs mild curry powder (not as good as grinding your own but still makes great dahl! And also a tsp of cumin seeds.

Add some garlic paste or a tsp garlic powder but no salt till it's finished cooking or the lentils toughen.

Add a third of a block of creamed coconut or 1 can of coconut milk, and 1 tin of chopped tomatoes. Stir around fro a while will everything is hot then add about 1-2 pints of water or enough to cover the mixture, stir and simmer for 30 minutes.
Season with salt to taste then serve with chapattis, naan, or spinach rice ect. One of my fave meals!

Tatties · 07/02/2008 20:56

Thanks shrooms, sounds good

I did a melange of MI and needmorecoffee's methods (didn't have all the ingredients for yours MI but I will do it one day!)... and it was good. I hadn't heard of baking it in the oven before, and that seemed to really make a difference.

Thank you!

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needmorecoffee · 08/02/2008 09:09

I think it makes a differnce just cooking dhal (lentils) first. Cos then you don't get that sort of beany flavour and you don't overcook the spices.

missingtheaction · 08/02/2008 09:33

ooh that really does make your Mother Superior

Tatties · 09/02/2008 16:50

Needmorecoffee, yes I do think that made a difference too, it tasted very fresh and zingy

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