Wednesday, January 13, 2010

PONGAL RECIPES




Pongal celebrated through the first four days of the Tamil Month of Thai (Mid January to Mid February), is a popular harvest festival in Tamil Nadu. The word Pongal, which literally means 'boiling over', refers to rice cooked in milk and jaggery. The preparations for the Pongal festival are quite elaborate. Pongal or sweet rice is the main preparation of the festival.



Pongal is prepared in new big earthen pots called 'Pongal Panai' in the open and allowed to boil over signifying prosperity and bountifulness of crops. Sweet rice is cooked in a new earthenware pot in the same place where the puja is to be performed. Fresh turmeric is tied round the pot. A delicious concoction of rice, moong dal, jaggery and milk is boiled in the pot on an open fire. As the Pongal is being cooked, it boils over. The boiling over and spilling out of the contents of the pot is the auspicious sign that the family waits for. The ready Pongal is garnished with cashew nuts and raisins fried in ghee. The whole preparation is usually done on a predetermined time which is considered auspicious. The preparation is offered to the Gods along with vegetables and lentils, newly harvested sugarcane and bananas. Later the family sits down to a ritual meal. The ingredients of this preparation have some symbolic meaning attached to each. Rice and milk are signs of prosperity, sugarcane for happiness, while turmeric augurs the good things to come.







It is a festival honouring and giving thanks to the gods - especially the Sun God and Indra, the lord of the rains and the cattle for the plentiful paddy crops in the field during the mild winter months in South India. Two varieties of Pongal- the salty one known as 'ven pongal' and the sweet one known as 'Sarkkarai pongal' are prepared on the second day.



Besides the preparation of Pongal or the special sweet rice, the festival of Pongal is also the time to prepare some of the mouth-watering Tamil delicacies like Sakkarai Pongal, Payasam, Aval Payasam, Dal Payasam and Murukku. Here are some of the recipes that are easy to prepare yet deliciously tasty.







Sakkarai Pongal

Ingredients (Serves 5)



Raw rice:- 200 gm



Moong dal 25 gm



Jaggery 375 gm



Grated coconut 50 gm



Ghee 150 gm



Cashew nut 20 gm



Raisins 20 gm



Cardamom powder ½ tsp



Honey (optional) 15 ml



Method--

Cook moong dal and cleaned rice, till half done. Drain the excess water and keep them aside. Now, dissolve jaggery in water and heat it separately. Pour the jaggery to cooked mixture. Roast cashew nuts, raisins, and grated coconut in ghee. Add this to the mixture and stir well. Also, add some extra ghee while serving.



Fry cashew nuts and raisins in ghee and keep aside. In a cooking pan, heat 100 ml of water and the grated or broken jaggery. Allow the jaggery to melt and form thick syrup and be mixed with the water properly. Add the rice, moong dal and grated coconut into the syrup and stir well to mix them up. Add honey, raisins and roasted cashew nuts and the remaining ghee. Cook the entire content for 10 minutes. Remove from flame and sprinkle powdered cardamom. Serve hot.





Vermicelli Payasam

Ingredients (Serves 2-3)



Vermicelli (Saemiya) 200 gm



Sugar 300 gm



Cashew nuts 20 nuts



Raisin 10 nos



Smashed Cardamom 4 seeds



Milk 250 ml



Ghee 2 tsp



Vanilla essence few drops



Method--

Fry cashew nuts and raisin in ghee until golden brown. Then fry the vermicelli in a pan till it changes color. Boil the milk and separate the cream from it. Now add little water, sugar and cook the semiya in it. After a while add cardamom and few drops of vanilla essence in the mixture. Keep on stirring the mixture to prevent the formation of lumps. Garnish the preparation with cashew nuts and raisins.



Boil milk in a bowl and add the vermicelli to it while stirring well. Cook for about 10-15 minutes over a medium flame. Add sugar and stir well to mix the sugar with the content. Continue it until the sugar gets dissolved completely. Add cardamom and fried cashew nuts to it. Add the few drops of vanilla essence for an added flavor.





Aval Payasam

Ingredients (Serves 2)



Milk 1 litre



Aval (rice flakes) ¼ cup



Sugar 1 cup



Cardamom powder ½ tsp



Cashew nuts few



Raisins few



Method--

Boil milk in a pan. Add the Aval or rice flakes into the boiling milk. Stir constantly until the quantity reduces to one-half. Add sugar and the powdered cardamom into the consistency and stir well. Add the cashew nuts (preferably roasted) and the raisins and serve it hot.





Dal Payasam

Ingredients (Serves 2)



Moong dal 1 cup



Powdered jaggery 1 cup



Gram dal 1 spoon



Cardamom



Cashew Nuts



Method--

Cook moong dal and gram dal in plain water in a pressure cooker. Mix jaggery in a little water and bring to boil. Add the cooked dal mixture and let it cook for a while so that the entire ingredients mix well. Then take it out from flame and add cardamom powder. Garnish the cooked dal payasam with cashew nuts (preferably roasted in ghee) and serve hot or cold.





Murukku

Ingredients (Serves as snack)



Raw rice 4 cups



White gram half cup



White sesame seeds 25 gm



Cumin seeds 25 gm



Asafoetida powder 2 tablespoons



Butter 100 gm



Salt to taste



Oil for frying







Method--



Wash and clean the rice. Allow it to dry. When it gets dried completely, grind to make it powdery. Fry the gram. Grind it in the same way and keep it aside. Mix the powdered rice, powdered gram, white sesame seeds, cumin seeds, asafoetida powder, butter and salt together. Take a little of this mixture and add water to make a dough-like consistency. Now twist and roll this dough to make Jalebi-like circular shapes of the Murukku (chakkli). Heat the oil in a pan. Test how hot it is by dropping a pinch of dough into it. If the drop springs to the top with bubbles all around it, then the oil is just ready to fry the Murukku. Deep-fry the Murukku gently into the hot oil and fry golden brown. Take out from the pan when it is done and drain it in a newspaper to discard the excess oil in it. When it becomes a little cold but still crisp, store them in an airtight container and savour it with hot tea or coffee.

PONGAL

Pongal festival is on January 14, 2010.


Pongal is a highly revered festival celebrated in Tamil Nadu to mark the harvesting season. An important festival in India, Pongal is celebrated by offering prayers to the Sun God. Pongal gifts are exchanged among family members, relatives and friends. Houses are cleaned, and all maintenance jobs are done before this festival. Held in the middle of January, it is a time when the people of Tamil Nadu get ready to thank God, Earth and their cattle for the wonderful harvest they have reaped. During the four-day pongal festival, different varieties of Rangoli are drawn in front of the houses early in the morning.