When you are having one of those lazy Saturdays when you are not up for cooking something elaborate for "brunch" but would rather like to keep it low-key and quick, this is exactly the dish for you. On weekends, I'm a person that begs to differ; differ from what I feed myself over the week for breakfast. Our Saturdays in the basil household, begin a little late with a rigorous circuit and core strengthening workout class at the gym. The class itself lasts for an hour and a half but its unrelenting effects last for a day and a half, absolutely in the literal sense. Sunday is a no-workout day or in other words a "rest" day in my exercise schedule but I always intend to do some yoga at home. Though that's never seemed to materialize simply because Saturday kind of exhausts me and there's always the abyss-like pit of "to-dos" that I end up falling into. Rice noodles come in two varieties broadly - Thai variety and the Indian variety. This savory flavoring works well for both but I enjoy the Indian version better because the gooey-ness is absent here. If you were to ask a "maami" (auntie) from Chennai, she would very well launch into a lengthy discourse on how the noodle (sevai) is to be made. In South India, they actually make the rice noodle from rice flour using a noodle-maker (achu). Evolution is necessary if you want to stay afloat in turbid seas filled with the tantalizing, blood-thirsty jaws of to-do lists. x-(
Here's the 10-minute version with the instant rice noodles. We lapped it up in a jiffy and I made a healthy watermelon-grape chiller to wash it down with!
Ingredients -
1) Instant rice noodles - 2-3 cups cooked and drained as per instructions on package.
2) Mustard - 1 tspn
3) Red Chilies - 2
4) Bengal gram dal - 1 tbspns
5) Black gram dal - 1 tspn
6) Curry leaves - a few (washed)
7) Asafetida - 3 pinches
8) Coconut - 3 tbspns (grated)
9) Oil - 2 tspns
10) Salt - to taste
Method -
1) Let the rice noodles cool well. Fluff with a fork.
2) In a pan, heat oil and add the seasonings from 2-7 in that order making sure each is crisp but not charred before tossing in the next one.
3) Stir in the coconut and add salt. Continue sauteing for a minute.
4) Dunk the cooled noodles and mix together on a low flame for 5 minutes until the salt and the flavors have all blended together.
5) Serve as is or with whatever accompaniment you'd like - sambar, tomato chutney - anything pairs up well!
Watermelon-Grape Punch -
No fuss here! Blend together, some watermelon chunks and red seedless grapes. Strain to get a clear juice or go the healthy way and drink it up with the pulp like we did! A mint leaf on the top makes a cute picture and a nice excuse to nibble on it. :)
3 comments:
Wow!!!Looks so nice..never tried this recipe before...am sure it will be very tasty..thanks for posting such lovely recipes:)
How can you not have made thenga sevai?? Are u kidding me?
I have tried lemon sevai only till now ...but sure i will try this and post it soooon:)
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