08.07.2020:
I sent my mother the colourful picture of ingredients for rasam and she promptly replied saying “you’re
making rasam!” She has been trying to get me to make ‘Bajico’ for Skip,
a term coined by him for a concoction my mother makes to cure runny noses and
sore throats, with basil, ginger, clove and honey. I’ve never been fond of rasam or kashaya
(herbal drink) and I drink only when I’m forced to. Now, the times they are
a-changin’ and I make it a point to cook with and eat immunity boosting foods.
I
usually buy a handful of gooseberries once a month. While Skip seems to enjoy
eating them raw, I can’t help crinkling my face in disgust while chewing them. Besides
being rich in other nutrients, gooseberries are high in antioxidants and a good
source of Vitamin C which help boost your immunity. I used to love eating the Gooseberry Muraba
that my grandmother would prepare (gooseberries cooked in sugar syrup). She’d
have a bottle packed for me every time my parents visited her at Mysore. I’d
pick a wrinkled gooseberry dripping with the sugary syrup, pop it into my
mouth, chew on the sweet flesh and then keep rolling the seed inside my mouth
until I found an ideal target to send the seed flying at. (Target usually being
Sky).
I
had a box of gooseberries lying in the fridge when I came across the recipe for
Gooseberry Rasam by Anju Ganapathy Aunty. Radha was surprised too when she saw
me make Rasam until I took my phone out to click pictures.
You
may have this Rasam with rice or have it plain. It has a slight bitter
aftertaste of the gooseberry which is negligible while having with rice. It’s a
great recipe to incorporate gooseberry into your diet and simple to make. You
may adjust the quantity of the ingredients to suit your taste.
GOOSEBERRY
RASAM
Ingredients:
Gooseberry
– 6
Salt
– as per taste
Ginger
- 1 inch
Water
– 3 ½ cups
Cumin
seeds – 1 tsp
Black
peppercorns (crushed) – 1 tsp
Jaggery
– 1 tbsp
Garlic
(crushed) - 1 tbsp
Rasam
powder – 1 tsp
For
tempering
Ghee-
1 tbsp
Oil
– ½ tbsp
Asafoetida
(hing) – a pinch
Mustard
seeds – ½ tsp
Curry
leaves – 8-10
Method:
1. Deseed the gooseberries and chop it into tiny bits.
Blend the gooseberry with ginger and a teaspoon of salt till it is ground well.
2. Transfer contents to a pan. Add water and bring to a
boil.
3. Reduce the flame and let the contents simmer for 5
minutes.
4. Add the cumin seeds, pepper, jaggery, garlic and
rasam powder. Stir well and let it simmer for another 5 minutes. Turn off the
heat.
5. For the tempering:
In a separate pan, add ghee and oil, add a pinch of asafoetida, add the mustard
seeds. Once the seeds splutter, add curry leaves. Once the leaves begin to curl,
turn off the heat and pour the contents into the Rasam.
6. Done.
Recipe
Notes:
· Be
careful while tempering the Rasam, when hot oil is added to the Rasam, it will
splutter.
The taste must be divine !!
ReplyDeleteYes, but if you have it plain, it does retain a slight tartness from the gooseberry. I didn't mind it. Please do make it and let me know if you liked it too 😊
DeleteGood one during cold season and immunity booster
ReplyDeleteYes and an easier way to consume gooseberries.
Delete👌👌👌👏👏👏
ReplyDelete😊
Deletegrand
ReplyDelete😊
Deletevery good for immunity
ReplyDelete