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Red Velvet Yoghurt Bark

2nd June

Yesterday we received a communication from office that the status quo of Work from Home will continue till September, which essentially means we need to stay put where we are. That actually made me happy. I never cribbed about not being able to go to office, work from home suited me so much better. I could sped time in between work looking at the mango orchard or the hills from my balcony, I could read about something interesting while taking breaks, plus being able to share all meals with the family - which I couldn't in the past 15 years. 

Staying at home also means you keep getting hungry in between. While in office, the cafeteria would be visited only during the stipulated hours but at home, you feel like snacking on something or the other. So during the past one year I had to try out different in between snacking options which were light and yet interesting. I developed a liking for raw peanuts, which were filling and healthy. Even 4-5 peanuts would hold me up for a good amount of time. Then there was the option of frozen desserts, at times when I felt like grabbing something sweet. Instead of polishing off a bar of dark chocolate. I trained myself to snack on these relatively less calorie sweet delights. Once you get used to them, you will start liking them a lot. Especially during the summertime, nothing beats a quick frozen snack.

Yoghurt Bark
 

On the occasion of World Milk Day I decided to make a super easy and interesting recipe. This frozen yogurt bark studded with fruit is a fun treat for kids and adults alike. It takes minutes to prepare and is ready within 2-4 hours of freezing. You can then break into pieces and store in a ziplock bag for an instant frozen snack.

You can experiment with different flavor combination. The best thing about these barks is that any flavor combination tastes good.  The recipe is so easy, you can even let your kids make these.

Checkout some other sweets and frozen dessert from my page

  • Frozen Yoghurt Granola Cups
  • Mojito Poscicle
  • Tea Infused Caramel Custard


Yoghurt Bark


Preparation Time : 15 minutes
Freezing Time: Overnight or until yoghurt is firm

Ingredients :
  • Yoghurt / Hung Curd - 1 & 1/2 cup
  • Red Velvet Emulco  - 1 drop
  • Chopped Pistachios - 2 tsp
  • Granola - 1 tsp
  • Honey - 2 tbsp
  • Dried Rose Petal (optional) - 1/2 tsp

Ingredients :
  • Rimmed Baking sheet or freezer safe tray
  • Parchment Paper
  • Spatula
  • Mixing Bowl
Procedure: 

1.  In a medium bowl, add yogurt, red velvet emulco/flavoring and honey. Mix together to combine.

Note: Emulco is concentrated flavoring in paste form which often comes with food coloring too. It is my go to method of adding color of flavor these days. If you do not have an Emulco use flavor and color separately. You can use any flavoring of your choice in this recipe.

2. Line a rimmed baking sheet with Parchment paper.

3. Pour the yoghurt mixture on the parchment paper. Using a spatula or knife to spread the yogurt as thin as possible over the entire paper. 

4. Now sprinkle chopped pistachios, dried blueberry, granola and rose petals.

Tip: Experiment with your choice of toppings. It is always fun that way.

Cut or break into pieces and serve immediately.


How to make hung curd?

Even if you do not have a muslin cloth you can make hung curd easily with a strainer with tiny holes. Just place the strainer on a deep bowl. Now pour the curd on it and let it sit undisturbed for at least 30 minutes. The whey will collect in the bowl and the strainer will now contain the creamy thick curd devoid of any extra water.

Yoghurt Bark









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October 20

"Chefs don't make mistakes; they make new dishes" - Elizabeth Briggs

Happy International Chef's Day to all the lovely chefs (professional and home chefs), you all are just awesome! 

I mean seriously, if there is one thing the lockdown has done to most of us, is that it has brought to life the inner chef within us. Cooking was always a therapeutic thing for me. When I am upset, cooking made me happy. When I am happy cooking made me exuberant. The romance of the colors and flavors in the wok is like the best ever romance series for me, even better than the Hallmark Romances! The excitement of creating something new, serving it to loved ones and the final accolades - even if it is hard work it is all worth it at the end!


With no or limited access to restaurants, we all have started making things we never thought we could. Or never thought we needed to make, because it was always there at the tap of a food delivery app. After mastering the staples, now people are exploring and stretching their limits. I have been doing that a lot and enjoying every bit of it. Even if there had been a couple of hiccups, and recipes gone wrong here and there, one thing I noticed, the more I cooked and explored the more stronger my sense of flavors became. I could easily visualize many of the tastes of the final dish even without tasting them just by the ingredient combinations. And then adding the touch of experimentation on top of the recipe to tweak it at times and give it a nice personal twist. Never felt so happy pushing my thought limits as I feel while making something new. 


All this experimentation streak has really made me see beyond my favorite cuisines - Indian and South East Asian. I explored American, European, Arabic, Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi and even planning on some African cuisine soon. In the process of exploring food, I also started reading a lot about food. It was not always physical books but I found good content even on Instagram and facebook. There is this lady who had found an ancient diary when she bought an almirah and has taken up a project to create every dish of the diary throughout the year. Then there is another lady who is doing a series of feature on cricketers who have started on the food business, their food stories. Even some homestay pages talk about local cuisines and how to make them. In a nutshell, there is so much to know about food and cuisines that 24 hours just feel inadequate. The more you see, the more Google keeps suggesting you. Reading has always been a love for me, and I really enjoy knowing and exploring so many facets of food. It almost feels like I am in the wrong profession, I should have definitely my heart set on food domain. 

But when there is no immediate chance of switching the work domain do what you can do best - make things you never tried before, taste things which are not in your usual list of items, read more about the story around a particular recipe and so on. Its not just enough to create a recipe. You need to feel the food, its elements, why you need to add certain aromatics or spices, what happens when you change a few things here and there. Food is as much as a science as any other sciences. 

Coming to today's recipe. I am not at all a sweet loving person. And I was completely opposite as a kid. I used to gorge on sweets. But I think once I hit the teenage, the love for sweets was replaced by love for savory things and its still the same. But having said that, I do love to east sweets occasionally. Especially during the festivals or just a random afternoon craving on a hot day. Only thing is I do not life sweets which are overtly sweet. Mild sweet stuffs are more my forte. This recipe was the outcome of a blueberry frozen dessert I had read about once. A couple of days ago it felt really hot in the afternoon and I wanted to have something cold and nice. Since I didn't have ice cream on me, I thought of whipping up a small batch of frozen yoghurt cups. Fortunately I had granola in the pantry. So wanted to add a nice crunchy layer below the creamy yoghurt layer. A little butter an honey mixed with the granola tasted so divine that I almost felt like gorging on the entire base I had prepared as is. I had to really fight the urge! For the yoghurt part I was wondering what flavor to add. I didn't have any fruits at that time so the  next best option that came to my mind was rose. Rose flavor beautifully compliments any sweet dish, thus incorporating the same into a frozen dessert form was a risk worth taking. And the risk taking did payoff. Apart from looking super pretty, it tasted so lovely and refreshing too. I added ample amount of rose petals to add to the aromatics as well as the overall look of the cups. See for yourself if you like them or not.

This recipe is perfect for the hot summer days. But since it is festive time, sweet little things to munch on is never a bad idea. This recipe would be loved by both the young and old alike. So don't wait, go ahead and give it a shot. Psst...it event tastes divine when it melts!

October is also marked as the Breast Cancer Awareness month to help increase attention and awareness for this disease. It is also called the pink month. Hence this pink themed recipe as a small step towards spreading the awareness and removing any taboo talking about it. Cancer is a reality which I have seen closely even in my family. Both the person who is going though this and the family needs all the empathy we can extend at their hour of need. This post is dedicated to all the brave folks who are putting up against this with a smile and to all those women who need to be cautious about even the slightest change in their bodies. We are all in this together.

Preparation Time : 10 minutes
Freezing Time : 2-3 hours (minimum)
Serving :  4  cupcake cups


Ingredients for Yoghurt:
  • Yoghurt (Dairy or non dairy) - 250 gm 
  • Rose Syrup - 2 tbsp
  • Pink food color - 1 drop / Beet root powder - 1/2 tsp
  • Dried rose petals (optional) - 2 tsp
  • Castor sugar / powdered sugar - 3 tsp * (adjust as per taste)
Ingredients for Base:
  • Granola - 4 to 5 tbsp 
  • Honey - 1 tbsp
  • Butter - 1 tbsp
Ingredients for Garnish:
  • Dried Rose petals 
  • Honey
Equipment:
  • Muffin mold - 4 cups

Method:

1. Start by melting the butter in a microwave safe bowl. I usually put it in microwave mode for 30 seconds if I am using butter directly from the refrigerator.

2. To the melted butter add the honey and mix well.

3. Now add the granola to this honey-butter mixture. Fold in. 

Tip: Adding honey and butter gives it a yummy taste to the granola.

Note 1: I used Kellogs cranberry granola. You can use anything of your choice.



4. Now prep up the yoghurt. In a bowl add the yoghurt, rose syrup, food coloring and rose petals. Mix it well.

Pro Tip: If you do not have yoghurt you can make this with any dahi as well - homemade or store bought. Just convert it into hung curd by pacing it into a strainer or muslin cloth and letting it hang for about 30 minutes till the water is drained and it becomes nice and thick. Converting it into hung curd will result in a thicker and more creamy outcome whereas if you do not remove the water it will end up being a little glassy.



5. Now take the cupcake molds. I used silicon ones. Brush the base and sides with butter. Now spoon in a layer of granola mix evenly on the base of each cup. Press the granola mix firmly to the bottom. They should occupy about 1/3rd of the cups. Now transfer this to the freezer for about 15 minutes to harden the base.



6. Take out the mold. Arrange a few petals along the sides of the mold ( they will be visible once you demold the cups). Then top each off with the yoghurt mix.  Sprinkle a few rose petals on top. Transfer the cups back to the freezer and let it set for minimum 2-3 hours. 



Tip: You can also add some chopped nuts on top

Take them out when you are ready to eat. Top them off with honey and have them right away.















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About me

I am a software engineer by profession and a writer at heart. Born and brought up in Kharagpur, I moved to the city of dreams Mumbai when I got my first job. Till then I had not cooked a single dish in my life. Not even Maggi or tea. My dad had a strong belief that his little princess never will be in a situation where she had to cook for herself. Hence I was not allowed to spend time in the kitchen till I was studying.


So when I faced the daunting task of living alone, dabbas came to initial rescue. After that I managed a whole year on just boiled vegetables and rice. And then I landed in US. The bounty of fresh produce and cooking ingredients available in the super marts eventually lured me into making my very first meal ever. There was no turning back after that. I finally discovered how much I was in love with cooking and being creative in the kitchen.


This blog is a humble attempt to present our culinary heritage to one and all and document some of the very traditional recipes which gets passed on through generations just by word of mouth.


So just sit back with a cup of tea or coffee and enjoy the curries and the stories related to each.


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