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Vegetarian
salad recipes
Aubergine Raita
Raitas, there are many types of them, are a very popular
side dish in India. There are made of yogurt, water, spices and some kind of
vegetable, or sometimes fruit. A very refreshing dish in hot weather.
Serves 4
-
1 aubergine (egg
plant)
-
1 litre of yoghurt
-
1 teaspoon cumin
seeds
-
1 piece of ginger,
finely chopped
-
1 very small pinch
of asafoetida
-
1 fenugreek
-
a pinch of salt
-
1 tablespoons
ghee or sunflower oil
Prick the skin of the aubergine and bake in oven mark 6/
200C until soft.
While aubergine is cooking, whisk the yogurt with a cup of water and the
salt in a large salad bowl.
In a small sauce pan or wok, fry the ginger, cumin, fenugreek and asafoetida
for a minute in the ghee or oil and add to the raita.
When aubergine is cooked, cool in water for a few minutes, then cut in half,
scrape the flesh of the skin and cut it in very small pieces, or better,
blend it roughly, then add to the raita. Cool in the fridge for half an hour
before serving.
Cucumber Raita
Another very refreshing dish.
Serves 4
-
1 cucumber (egg
plant)
-
1/2 litre of yoghurt
-
2 teaspoon cumin
seeds
-
1teaspoon coriander seeds
-
1 good pinch
of rock salt (can be got in Indian store, if not available, ordinary stal will do)
-
1 tablespoon fresh mint
Grate the cucumber and drain the juice.
Roast the cumin and the coriander together on a dry pan untill they
start changing color, then grind them, together wit the rock salt.
Mix the spices, the grated cucumber and the yogurt thouroughly.
Garnish with chopped fresh mint. Cool in the fridge for half an hour
before serving.
Avocado Salad Gratinée
For two
Cut 2 ripe tomatoes in 8 bits (not slices). Peel one ripe avocado and cut in bits as well.
Put in oven proof dish. Add chopped spring onion if you like. Mix well. Sprinkle with
fresh thyme or basil. Cool in fridge for a couple of hours.
Just before serving, sprinkle generously with grated cheese. Roquefort is best, but
expensive and not always available. Any blue cheese or crumbly goat cheese could do (but
cheddar, won't!). Top with crushed almond, sunflower seeds, pine kernels or hazel nuts.
Put under a very hot grill until the cheese starts to melt and the nuts to brown, or just
grill the nuts in a very hot frying pan, stirring constantly, and throw over the salad.
Sprinkle with olive or nut oil, and bring to the table. Mix well just before serving.
Apple Chutney
We have many apple trees in our gardens on
Clare Island, so in the Autumn, we
usually do a lot of this chutney, which last well into the new year!
Peel the apples and cored them, then grate them or put them
through a food processor.
Get the cardamom seeds out of the pods and grind them to a fine powder
Put the apples and the ginger in a sauce pan with the cider vinegar and and
cook gently at first, stiring occasionnally. Once the apples have started to
soften and sweat, add the sugar, the ground cardamom and the chilli powder.
Simmer for 20 minute or low heat, then put into sterilised jar right away.
French beans and coconut salad
Delicious refreshing on a hot
summer day!
- 1 coconut
- 1 lb French beans
- 3 limes or 2 lemon
- 2 green chillies or one large piece ginger (optional)
Cook the French beans in boiling water until tender. Drain, rinse in cold
water and put in a bowl in the fridge.
Break the coconut and grate the flesh. Mix with the juice of the limes and
lemon.
Split the chillies lengthwise and take out the seeds (which are the hottest
part), or peel the ginger, then chop finely. Add to coconut and mix well,
then add mixture to the French beans, mix and leave to cool in the fridge
for an hour or two before serving.
Coconut Chutney
A South Indian favourite, generally served with Dosas, but brown bread would do as
well.
- The flesh of one fresh coconut thinly chopped
- 3 cloves of garlic
- 2 medium onions, chopped
- Fresh mint leaves
- Salt to taste
- 1 tablespoon oil
- Mustard seeds
- Cumin seeds
- Curry leaves
In a blender, mix the coconut into a paste. Add the onion, the garlic, the salt and the
mint leaves and blend into a smooth paste. Put into a bowl in the fridge. Just
before serving, heat the oil in a wok, sputter the mustard seeds, then the cumin seeds,
then finally the curry leaves and garnish the chutney.
Thanks to Tina, of Mysore, for the recipe!
Pol Sambo
This is a favourite recipe of Sri Lanka, where they put plenty of chillies in it, and
serve it as a side dish with (red) rice. This recipe include coconut, a food consider by
Indians to be satvic.
- 1 fresh coconut
- 3 limes
- a handful of fresh chillies (optional)
- one piece of fresh ginger root (optional)
Grate the coconut flesh and mix with the lime juice, and the finely chopped chillies (if
you like it hot), or the grated root ginger (for a milder version). Leave in the fridge
for an hour or two before serving as an accompaniment with rice or salads. If fresh
coconut isn't available, just use desiccated coconut, add a bit of water to the lime
juice, and leave it in the fridge overnight.
Potato and seaweed salad
Unlikely as this may seem, this is a wonderful combination. You need waxy
salad potatoes (Ratte is perfect for that recipe). Unfortunately these are difficult to find in
Ireland and the UK. You might have to grow your own!
- 1lb waxy potatoes, cooked, peeled if you like and diced
- 1 red onion or shallot, or a bunch of spring onion, finely chopped
- 2 tablespoon or pickled ginger, chopped small (optional)
- 2 sheets of Nori seaweed (that the stuff they use for sushi
rolls), chopped into small narrow strips.
- 2 table spoons olive oil
Boil the potatoes. As they are boiling place the rest of the ingredients
in a salad bowl. Do not overcook the potatoes. As soon as they are cooked,
but still firm, drain them and toss them in the salad bowl while still
steaming hot. Add all the other ingredients, give the salad a stir, and serve warm.
More recipes:
Soups
Main
courses
Deserts
Ghee
Herbal teas
See also our
article on Eating a yogic diet
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