So I branched out, and hunted through pinterest for recipes and ideas, and there are plenty of those, and some of them are genuinely amazing. But I got bored. Doing the same thing over and over is kind of a problem for me. So now, I'm back to my old copies of Delicious Magazine, and converting those to thermomix, or just cooking them sometimes. My interest in cooking has picked up again. I'm not bored. But maybe now I have something to add to the body of work on cooking with thermomix.
Last nights efforts: Lamb Kofta Meatballs in Curry Sauce
Except I used pork and veal mince instead of lamb, because I couldn't get lamb, and I prefer pork anyway.
Ingredients
500g mince
1 brown onion
2 garlic cloves
2 whitebread crusts
1/4 cup coriander leaves
1/4 cup mint leaves
1/3 cup korma curry paste (I used tikka paste that I made in the thermo, because that was what I had)
1 tbsp of grated ginger
400g can tomatos
400ml can coconut milk
1 cucumber finely chopped
3 tbsp natural yoghurt
1/4 tsp cumin
In thermo, chop bread crusts to make crumbs (about 10 seconds, speed 8)
Add onion, garlic and herbs for 8 seconds speed 6, check and then pulse a few times to get it chopped fine.
Mix bread mix with mince, then roll into balls.
Cook meatballs for 4 or 5 minutes in a frying pan, they won't be cooked through, but set aside.
Add curry past to frypan, with grated ginger and fry for 2 minutes.
Add tomatoes and coconut milk and simmer for 5 minutes
Add meatballs and cook for a further 10 minutes, the sauce will reduce and the meatballs finish cooking.
While it is all simmering together, cook some rice, and some papadums.
I've never cooked papadums before, I don't like frying stuff, it's messy, and I don't like the way oil smells, but I don't like papadums in the microwave, so I thought I'd give it a go. Some tips, don't be stingy with the oil. You need at least a centimetre and a half in your pan, any less, and it really doesn't work properly. Heat the oil, and test by dropping in a piece of pappadum. If it cooks straight away the oil is hot enough. When I did mine, I held onto the raw papadum with tongs, then gently, but quickly slid it into the oil so it was fully submerged. The papadum should puff up and get bigger, it's like magic, and takes less than 10 seconds, amazing. Pull it out of the oil (tongs, not fingers), and let the oil run off it, then put it on absorbent paper.
Serve it all with the chopped cucumber mixed through yoghurt, sprinkled with cumin on the side.
It's truly fabulous.
No comments:
Post a Comment