If all you know about East Indian food is papadums and samosas, you're going to love pakoras - East Indian-style fritters. The batter is made from chickpea flour - known as "besan" or "chana flour" in East and West Indian groceries, and "gram" flour in English.
The filling is up to you: diced vegetables of all kinds. Just make sure you use firm vegetables (i.e., stay away from delicates like peas, snow peas, celery, sprouts). I'm not a beer-drinker myself, but as with samosas, word is that pakoras are great with beer, and thus a great party snack. Keep in mind, though, that pakoras are very high in protein. Don't over-indulge.
Ingredients:
Besan/ gram/ chickpea flour (or grind your own from dried chickeas using a coffee/ spice grinder). Water to form a batter. Salt and black pepper, to taste. Crushed red pepper flake (optional). 1/2 tsp of mild curry powder or ground cumin. Do not put in too many spices, as they'll tend to ruin the oil. Small onion(s), cut in eighths. Any combo of potato, eggplant, zuchinni, cauliflower - all cut into large chunks. Keep in mind that potato takes longer to cook than any of the other veggies. So make the potato pieces smaller. I suppose you could also (separately) use large, firm pieces of cheese.
Preparation:
Place the chickpea flour or ground chickpeas in a mixing bowl.
Add salt, pepper, chili flake, and curry powder or cumin.
Now slowly add about 1/4 cup of water at a time, and mix with a fork. When you have a thick batter that isn't runny, add another 1/8 cup of water and mix thoroughly. (Basically, keep in mind that this batter is going into hot oil. So the more watery it is, the more likely you are to be spattered with hot oil. But the batter shouldn't be so thick that it hangs from the veggie pieces in blobs.)
Add all the diced, raw veggies to the batter and gently mix so that the pieces are all coated.
If you used your hands, wash them and dry carefully. (As always, be careful around hot oil.)
Using a deep, heavy cookpot, heat 1-2 inches of cooking oil (canola or vegetable) on high. Test with a tiny drop of batter. It should start cooking immediately, and float fairly soon after. Remove the test piece with a slotted spoon. (If you
Presentation:
Serve with tamarind dipping sauce, raita (sour cream w/ small-diced cucumber), mango chutney, sriracha hot sauce, plum sauce, or even ketchup.
(c) Copyright 2006-present, Raj Kumar Dash
Raj Kumar Dash, also known as the very opinionated Elvis Parsley, the "Curry" Elvis, was taught cooking at his mother's side. A trained cook, he writes about various world cuisines, the health-related aspects of food, food TV shows, and pretty much anything related to the food industry. You can find his new food site (still in revision) at http://www.curryelvis.com/, and four older cooking blog archives by starting http://curryelviscooks.blogspot.com