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Recipe by Route 79

Recipe by Route 79

Description[]

Tonight - being a Saturday night - Ms.79 and I decided to cook a simple but delicious dinner for ourselves: simply saag. A simple, uncomplicated, wholesome and very fulfilling Punjabi dish that we try to make a tradition of cooking every Saturday morning - to eat on Saturday night. Wonderfully simple - very nutritious and extremely delicious! And here follows the recipe:

Ingredients[]

Ingredients

Ingredients

Directions[]

Chopped-up greens and spicach leaves cooking for about 60 mins

Chopped-up greens and spicach leaves cooking for about 60 mins

011103-3
Zap in short bursts

Zap in short bursts

If you zap in long bursts it will male a load of mess in the kitchen

If you zap in long bursts it will male a load of mess in the kitchen

Two heaped spoons of polenta

Two heaped spoons of polenta

Stir in the polenta mixture until cooked

Stir in the polenta mixture until cooked

Cutting off a knob

Cutting off a knob

Stiring the butter in until it melts

Stiring the butter in until it melts

Simmer for another half-hour and give it a stir every few mins

Simmer for another half-hour and give it a stir every few mins

it's been going for 1

it's been going for 1.5 hours now and should be at the thinkness that you prefer

Finely chopped onions frying until goldeny-brown

Finely chopped onions frying until goldeny-brown

Add the pre-pulped garlic,ginger and chiliw and stir fry for a few mins

Add the pre-pulped garlic,ginger and chiliw and stir fry for a few mins

Adding the spices

Adding the spices

Cooking out the onion/spice mixture

Cooking out the onion/spice mixture

Adding the "tarka" mixture to the saag

Adding the "tarka" mixture to the saag

Stiring it in thoroughly - no heat

Stiring it in thoroughly - no heat

Ok - It's done now

Ok - It's done now

Serve with warm roti and a side salad and a glass of red

Serve with warm roti and a side salad and a glass of red

  1. Wash all the leaves in your kitchen sink - and then chop them up in batches into coarse ribbons on a chopping board.
  2. Dump the chopped-up leaves into a large-ish pan one-third full of boiling water on the stove.
  3. Boil the leaves for about 45 minutes on a semi-agressive simmer
  4. After about 45 mins of semi-agressive simmering - use a magi-mix blender to “zap” the mixture in 5 or six very-short bursts in order to break-down the coarse, stewing ribbons of leaf into more finely shredded bits:
  5. After another 20 minutes of simmering - give the mixture a good stir -
  6. Put two heaped dessert-spoons of maize-flour (polenta/cornmeal) into a glass and then add some water from the tap. Give it a good stir - ensuring that there are no lumps - and then add to the simmering saag mixture.
  7. Let it simmer for a few minutes - and then chop a generous knob of butter and add to the pot - stirring until melted.
  8. You will especially enjoy the fact that at this point - the saag is not simmering as such - instead large bubbles start to form just below the surface of the mixture - and erupt like mini-volcanoes - making a gloopy sound - and splattering your kitchen in a 2 metre radius around the pot. So make sure that you keep a lid handy - just haf-covering the pot so that some of the water evaporates and thickens the mixture.
  9. Simmer like this gently for another half-hour - stirring occasionally - and then turn off the heat after it has reached your desired consistency.
  10. Then get another small pot - put in a little oil - heat up and then add onions. Fry until the onions are slightly golden-brown.
  11. Then add the ginger, garlic and chillie. Stir-fry for a few minutes until the smell of it all spreads across the kitchen.
  12. Then add the spices to the browned onions: 2 teaspoons salt, 3 teaspoons turmeric, 3 teaspons garam masala, two teaspoons ground coriander. By now - the special aroma will be wafting its way out of your kitchen and into your garden - and from there - onwards into the kitchens of your next door neighbours. They will be envious.
  13. Then add the onion-spice mixture to the saag pot - and stir until well mixed:
  14. Then - when you are ready to eat - heat-up the completed saag until it’s just about to boil - serve into a bowl and accompany with either fresh roti - or naan bread (or pitta bread) and a fresh salad of chopped cucumber, halves of cherry tomato, chunky strips of carrot, halves of small radish, and chunkily-chopped red-Onion - all tossed in a few dashes of tangy vinegar. Simply delicious!
  15. If there’s any saag remaining in the pot - just put it away into a microwaveable container with a lid - and store in your fridge. It will keep for around 2 days. Just take out of fridge at any time and put container in microwave for a few minutes of reheat - stirring and reheating until piping hot. You can even store in freezer - and will keep for weeks like that. Just make sure you defrost for a few hours before attempting to reheat in microwave.
Variations

You could also try making “aloo saag” or “paneer saag” with the leftovers: in either case you simply get some cubes of Potato or paneer and fry them until golden brown - perhaps adding some more masala spice and salt to the frying cubes - and then stir them into the saag and serve piping hot.

Recipe by Route 79[]

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