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The Dal Cookbook: Bestsellers Cooking Grub Street

Autor Krishna Dutta
en Limba Engleză Hardback – sep 2013
2015 Gourmand Awards WINNER BEST INDIAN CUISINEDal is to India what pasta is to Italy. Cheap to produce, highly nutritional, suitable for long storage and capable of being cooked in a basic pot on an open fire, dal has been providing nourishment to millions of Indians for millennia. It truly is a pan-Indian dish consumed by rich and poor alike. It is high protein and has practically no sugar in fact it is known as poor man s meat in India hence doctors now include this as an essential item in a diet for diabetics. Dal is a genuinely impressive dish of infinite variety there are at least 50 recipes for this humble food. There are multiple ways of cooking it, wide-ranging seasonings are used and there are diverse supplements to serve with it. Over the centuries Indian cooks became innovative and with locally available ingredients they dished out dal to satisfy a regional palate. In the process they also invented new dishes using dal lentils such as kedgeree (khichari a risotto made with lentil), dosas (pancakes mixed with lentil flower), vadas (lentil cakes), dhokla (baked lentil cakes), papadam (dried lentil snack) and pakoras (fritters dipped in lentil batter)."
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781909166059
ISBN-10: 1909166057
Pagini: 141
Ilustrații: full colour illustrations throughout
Dimensiuni: 172 x 244 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.64 kg
Editura: GRUB STREET
Seria Bestsellers Cooking Grub Street


Descriere

2015 Gourmand Awards WINNER BEST INDIAN CUISINEDal is to India what pasta is to Italy. Cheap to produce, highly nutritional, suitable for long storage and capable of being cooked in a basic pot on an open fire, dal has been providing nourishment to millions of Indians for millennia. It truly is a pan-Indian dish consumed by rich and poor alike. It is high protein and has practically no sugar in fact it is known as poor man s meat in India hence doctors now include this as an essential item in a diet for diabetics. Dal is a genuinely impressive dish of infinite variety there are at least 50 recipes for this humble food. There are multiple ways of cooking it, wide-ranging seasonings are used and there are diverse supplements to serve with it. Over the centuries Indian cooks became innovative and with locally available ingredients they dished out dal to satisfy a regional palate. In the process they also invented new dishes using dal lentils such as kedgeree (khichari a risotto made with lentil), dosas (pancakes mixed with lentil flower), vadas (lentil cakes), dhokla (baked lentil cakes), papadam (dried lentil snack) and pakoras (fritters dipped in lentil batter)."