So for the next 9 days I am vegetarian. It’s a Hindu thing.
Okay I’ll elaborate. The Hindu festival of “Navratri” takes place over the next nine days. It’s referred to by the elders as an “auspicious occasion” and one that symbolises the triumph of good over evil! It’s also a time where celebrations are expressed in the form of colour, family reunions, force feeding of Indian sweets by random aunties, dancing and eating (very possibly followed by more dancing and eating). Although the “eating” comes in the form of vegetarian food, it’s not really a problem for me as:
a) I’m not a huge carnivore anyway
b) I was a vegetarian for 3 of my teen years (I gave up when I moved to America-damn the USA with their tasty junk food that looks awful but tastes so darned good. I’m looking at you Mr pancakes topped with crispy bacon & maple syrup!
c) There is no shortage of delish Indian vegetarian dishes
It is slightly more of an issue for my other half however, as his dreams of kick-starting the week with Murgh Masala Monday & Tandoori Chicken Tuesday, sadly no longer exist. It is for this reason that I have decided to cook up some vegetarian dishes this week that deliver an extra portion of dishoom – hopefully easing the burn of the lack of “meatiness” in the kitchen.
Today’s recipe is spicy, filling, comforting and moreish – I don’t know how many more adjectives I need to list about this dish before it screams out MAKE ME! Enjoy and do let me know your thoughts. Oh and p.s . Happy National Curry Week!
- 1 cup chickpeas, raw
- pinch of baking soda
- 4 tbsp olive oil
- 1 tsp cumin seeds
- 3ā cinnamon stick (optional)
- 2 cloves (optional)
- 3 peppercorns (optional)
- 2 bay leaves (optional)
- 1 black cardamom (optional)
- 1 large onion, peeled
- 1 birds eye chilli (optional)
- 2 cloves garlic, peeled
- 2" ginger, washed
- 2 tsp salt
- 1 tsp garam masala
- 1 tsp paprika
- 1/2 tsp turmeric powder
- 1/2 tsp amchur (mango powder)
- 2 plum tomatoes & 2 tbsp juice
- handful fresh coriander
- Soak chickpeas and baking soda in water overnight
- Wash and rinse thoroughly
- Place chickpeas in a pressure cooker. Cover with water until the water level is 1 1/2" above the chickpeas. Add 1 tsp of salt and place lid on carefully. Cook for 12 minutes after the first whistle. Turn off heat. Allow to de-pressurise naturally before removing lid.
- If you do not have a pressure cooker, place chickpeas with salt in a pan of water (same water level as above) and bring to boil. Now reduce the heat and allow to simmer until tender and cooked all the way through. This can take between 35-45 minutes. (If the water reduces before they have cooked, add more boiling water to the pan).
- To make the masala, coarsely grind onions in a processor and place in a bowl. Now coarsely grind the chilli, ginger and garlic.
- Heat oil in a non stick pan. Once hot add the cumin alongside the cinnamon, cloves, peppercorns, bay leaf and black cardamom.
- When they begin to splatter in the oil, add the ground onions. Add 1/2 tsp salt and cook for 4 minutes, stirring continuously.
- When they turn slightly translucent, add the ground chilli, ginger and garlic mixture. Cook for 3-4 minutes until the masala turns completely golden.
- Now reduce the heat and add the remaining salt, garam masala, paprika, turmeric and amchur powder and mix well. Now add the plum tomatoes and juice and mash into the masala. When the oil begins to separate from the masala, add the chickpeas and 1 cup of water and bring to boil and cook for 5-6 minutes on high heat.
- Check for salt and adjust accordingly. Serve with hot chapatis, naan or basmati rice!
- You can add or reduce water depending on how dry or wet you would like the dish to be. Some like it to be wetter if serving with rice or drier if serving with breads.
Hi Monica
Just a quick – Thank You, Thank you,
Thank you !!!
I will be heading out in search of all the
ingredients to try this asap – looks aaaamazing !
All the Best to you all, Chris š X
Great recipe, I’m definitely bookmarking this! What makes it ‘punjabi’?
Thanks Elaine! This is a very popular Punjabi dish! The base of onions, ginger, garlic & tomato is a classic Punjabi “gravy” or “masala” š
Hi Monica,
I am trying this dish out now and I noticed that although you mention grinding chilli in the instructions you haven’t put chilli in the list of ingredients. So, what type of chilli and how many?
Hi Terry,
Apologies for the delay in replying and thanks for pointing this out! Both finger or birds eye green chillies work well in this dish. For this recipe you can use 1 whole chilli (you can obviously adjust this according to your personal hotness preference!)
Hope this helps! Thanks, Monica
hi michael. the darker color is due to the tea bags. you can omit adding the tea bags. sometimes even i don t add them. the taste would be slight different as tea flavors to add to the recipe. but not that the flavors change completely. the chole would be still delicious without adding the tea bags. the color of the chickpeas would be its natural creamish color and the color of the curry will be less darker.
for 1 cup cooked chickpeas how much teaspoon of masala required? i want to prepare masala and keep it for next use also. please help.
Hi – I would advise that you need about 2tbsp of pre-cooked masala but of course it depends on how concentrated your masala paste is. It is always better to add a small amount and ix it with the chickpeas and then taste and adjust accordingly to your personal taste preference! š
Hey I make Indian all the while at home…what is the specific ingredient which gives an authentic Punjabi taste….from the ingredients the only thing I haven’t added in my recipe is amchur…please can you let me know if it has a distinctive taste ?
Hi Anusha,
Thanks for your email. The base of onions, ginger and garlic is primarily a Punjabi style masala for channa. Also using the amchur gives it a distinctive taste. I hope this helps š
Monica