Tea and Sweet Things
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A t the end of a meal, in the late afternoon, for a morning starter, a cup of really good tea with something sweet and delicious. Chai (it just means tea) is ubiquitous in India. it is the national drink and it is prepared in so many ways that you can be delighted again and again as you try new versions in restaurants or on your own.
Chai culture in India began with the British. the British East India Company brought back tea from Assam and the ruling British contingent drank the same tea and the idea that this was right and good took hold all over the subcontinent. But tea—black with milk and sugar— was never up to the Indian palate's demand for exciting flavors, so maslala chai, blending spices like cloves, cardamon, ginger, and cinnamon (and many others) was inevitable.
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The sweets on India are varied and spectacular in color, shape and flavor. If you're reading this, you've heard of gulab jamun (mini donuts in syrup) and kheer (rice pudding) and perhaps gajar ka halwa (the scrumptious carrot cake), but they aren't a scratch on the surface. An online search turns of lists of "35 best" out of so many. Ladoo and Burfee, Kalakand, Jalebi just to start and then explore away.
The Tea
is a new whole world of flavors to explore. Black tea is the base of delicious masala chai and Assam, in northeast India is where the richest black tea is produced. It's brisk, with a malty flavor the blends beautifully with aromatic spices.Upton Tea Imports Season's Pick is an organic loose leaf that I find delicious. The company has yeas from aal over the world. I won't give you a recipe here. I feel chai has such a strong need for personal preference that i can only give general instruction. So it will be up to you.
Chai Spice Blend
Ginger, clove, cardamom, cinnamon, peppercorns (black, green, pink), fennel, are what I use, sometimesbarely crushed, sometimes ground to powder. I make a blend, try it, tweak it, change it completely.
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Since the Tandoori Oven is the standard for cooking marinated meats in Indian cuisine, baking is the preferred method. Not by me. Sauté in a cast iron pan on high to sear the meat and seal in the juices. If you are adept, you'll get a nice char to add that mokey flavor. Don't cook completely because it will finish in the sauce.
AThe sauce is yours, but the spicing should mimic your marinade. Onions, no onions, puréed tomatoes, tomato paste, heavy cream or just a touch of cream with cashews, peppery heat or mild. Isn't it wonderful to have choices?
Somewhere around 1992 I promoted a restaurant with a cooking demonstration at Bloomingdale's. There was a fair crowd and the chef (cook, really) used a wooden spoon to add the spices and adjust them during the cooking. Three people argued with me to provide precise measurements. I couldn't. I had to explain that each cook is seasoning to taste, his taste, probably his approximation of his mother's taste. So, have fun with it.
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Jordan Singer
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Santiago Roberts
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