Showing posts with label Biriyani Recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biriyani Recipes. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 January 2014

Ambur Mutton Biryani | Ambur Biryani | Easy Mutton Biriyani



So without much delay, let me wish all you wonderful friends & readers 'A Happy & Prosperous New Year'. How did the new year go for you all? Hope it was a colorful and bright one :) I have yet another reason to celebrate this new year. My blog turned one this year. To be exact, day before yesterday. The blog did bring out a year of fun, learning & a new excitement for me. I do not want to bore you guys with long speeches of my enthusiasm. 

So what am I bringing you today? It is not a sweet or dessert. By now, you must be knowing that I celebrate the anniversaries & occasions with chicken & mutton rather than sweets & cakes :) This is yet another amazing biriyani recipe that has been a constant hit in our kitchen. Actually I am only the photographer for this recipe. Everytime, to be frank every Sunday, it has been Deeps who makes this at our home :) We always are on the lookout for different varieties of biriyani & the famous South Indian Ambur biriyani was on our list for a long time. Once we tried it it become quite a regular at our place. Even our guests are a huge fan of it :) So try it out, you guys will definitely fall for it !!

Ambur Biryani is one of the famous food recipes of South India which emerged during the Nawab of Arcot's regime. This was served for the army of Carnatic as it was difficult to prepare Rotis or Parathas to cater to the need of lakhs of jawans. Today, it is served in all Muslim weddings along with Chicken Kebabs & sweet dishes. Courtesy: Wikipedia


 

Recipe Source : Adapted from Here

Marination Time : 1 hour

Preparation Time : 10 minutes

Cooking Time : 40-45 minutes


I Used:

Basmati Rice - 2 ½ cups
Water - 4 ½ cups (2 ½ * 1 ¾ cups)
Mutton - ½ kg
Onion - 3-4 nos - medium - sliced
Tomato - 2 small nos - chopped
Ginger-Garlic Paste - 1 tbsp
Mint leaves - ½ cup - chopped
Corainder leaves - ½ cup - chopped
Red Chilly powder - 1 tbsp
Coriander powder - 1 tbsp
Turmeric powder - ½ tsp
Oil - ¼ cup
Ghee - ¼ cup
Salt - As Needed



To Marinate:

Red Chilly powder - 1 tbsp
Coriander powder - 1 tbsp
Turmeric powder - ½ tsp 
Garam Masala - 1 tbsp
Yogurt - ½ cup
Ginger-Garlic paste - ½ tbsp
Lemon juice - 2 tsp 
Whole Spices:

Cinnamon  - 1 inch stick
Cloves - 2
Cardamom - 2
Bay leaves - 2
Star Anise - 2

To Grind:

Cashews - 10
Fennel Seeds - ½ tsp
Cumin Seeds - ¼ tsp
Green Chilly - 2
Garlic - 3

The Way:

Preparation:

  1. Marinate mutton with the ingredients listed under 'To Marinade' for about 45-60 minutes
  2. After an hour pressure cook the marinated mutton with sufficient water until done and keep aside
  3. Wash and soak the rice for about 10-15 minutes
  4. Add 2 tbsp of ghee in a pan & fry the soaked basmati rice for 2 minutes
  5. Grind the ingredients under 'To Grind' into smooth paste and keep it aside

Cooking:

  1. Heat ghee and oil in a wide bottomed pan. Add the whole spices to it and fry them in a low heat until a nice aroma comes out
  2. Now add the sliced onions and fry till it becomes translucent. Add ½ tbsp of ginger & garlic paste and saute for 2-3 minutes until the raw smell goes off
  3. Then add red chili powder, coriander powder and add turmeric powder. Fry well and add the chopped tomatoes along with salt and fry them for 3-4 minutes
  4. Finally add the mint leaves & coriander leaves and mix it all together. Add the pressure cooked mutton and mix well 
  5. Now add the ground paste and saute it for another 5 minutes in low flame
  6. Then add the fried basmati rice to the gravy and water and mix well. Sprinkle some coriander leaves.
  7. Taste the mix for salt and hotness. Add if required to suit your taste buds
  8. Cover the pan and cook in medium fire for 15 minutes
  9. After 15 minutes check if the rice is done and water has evaporated completely. Else  reduce the flame further and cook for another 5-10 minutes
  10. Once the rice is done, off the flame and leave the pan in the heat of the stove till you serve
Serve with onion-cucumber raita, mint-coconut chutney & mutton gravy of your choice.

Notes:

  • Rice : Water ratio of 1:1 ¾ works perfectly well for me. I use India Gate basmati rice for making this biriyani
Cheers,
Chitz

Monday, 25 March 2013

Vegetable Biriyani


'Biriyani', the mention of this word alone is enough to fill my mouth with water sufficient to sail a ship !!! Back at home this is not a very frequent dish. Mom used to prepare this maybe once in a month or so.. But once you are abroad or living with a group of friends the scene shifts completely rite?? I am not completely certain of the reasons, but this dish will find its way at least once a week or many a times more than that. Can be the lack/shortage of 'Thalapakattu Biriyani kadai' or other wonderful restaurants that serve you this, in every other street of the city where you live. Or the very pride that you feel in front of your friends when you are done with the preparation & the aroma fills your home.. And most importantly, this one 'one pot meal' along with a simple raita is enough for your Sunday menu or when friends come along for a casual weekend get together. So anyways, the reasons are plenty and so is the way in which this awesome food is prepared.



And the version here is one which I learned from Deeps.. My mom makes the biriyani in slightly different styles, maybe I would post that sometimes later. Of all the homemade biriyanis that I have had, I would given Deeps' version the numero uno position. I simply love the correct blend of the spices & masala.. More importantly, the rice doesn't get burnt or stuck to the bottom of the pan nor does it break. You can see the long grains of the rice coated with masala inviting you very dearly.. Ohh my.. I am literally drooling writing this up. And mind you, veg biriyani was never in my list when there is a never ending palette of chicken, mutton, prawn etc etc etc biriyanis. But believe me, I started loving veg biriyani also very much, after I laid my hands on this version.



But there was only one disadvantage.. Every Sunday, I would be his apprentice and clean up chicken or cut vegetables and he would be the chef. And I did not  learn how to make this. That's when the realization stuck me. Then, there was no stopping.. I donned the hat of the chef, learned and made it on my own. Yes, it came out very well and hence it has found it's way onto this space now. Over to the recpie..



Recipe from Deeps:


Preparation Time : 20 minutes

Cooking Time : 40-45 minutes


I Used:






Basmati Rice             -  3 cups
Water                      -  5 ¼ cups (3 * 1 ¾ cups)
Onion                       -  3 nos (medium sized)
Tomato                    -  1 no (medium sized)
Carrot                      -  2 nos (medium sized)
Beans                       - 15-20 nos
Potato                      -  2 nos (medium sized)
Green Peas               -  ½ cup (I used frozen ones)
Mint leaves               -  10 sprigs
Coriander leaves       -  10 sprigs
Green Chilly                    -  2 nos
Ginger Garlic paste    -  1 tbsp
Lemon juice             -  ½ a lemon's
Cinnamon stick         -  1 inch piece
Cloves                     -  4 nos
Cardamom               -  3 nos
Bay leaf                   -  2 leaves
Chilly powder           -  1 tsp
Coriander powder     -  2 tsp
Turmeric powder     -  ½ tsp
Biriyani masala          -  1 tsp
Garam masala            -  1 tsp
Ghee                      -  As needed
Salt                        -  As needed



The Way:

  1. Rinse the rice and soak it in water
  2. Cut the vegetables - onion, tomato, carrot, beans & potato into thin slices
  3. Defrost the green peas
  4. Separate the mint leaves from the sprigs
  5. Chop the coriander leaves & green chillies
  6. Heat little ghee in a pan. Add the sliced carrot, beans & potato and fry for a few minutes. This is for the veggies to remain intact & not break when we add rice. Keep this aside
  7. Heat ghee in the same pan. Add cinnamon, cloves, cardamom (remove the pods & add the seeds inside), bay leaves (crush them before adding) and saute
  8. When the combined aroma of the spices start coming, add the sliced onions. Saute the onions till they become soft & oil separates from them
  9. Add ginger garlic paste and saute till the raw smell goes off
  10. Now add tomatoes & green chillies and saute till the tomatoes become soft
  11. Add the ghee tossed vegetables, green peas & half the mint leaves
  12. Add chilly powder, coriander powder, turmeric powder, biriyani masala & salt. Add one cup of water and mix well
  13. Cover the pan and cook until the vegetables are almost done
  14. Once the vegetables are soft and cooked, add rice and the remaining 4 ¼ cups of water
  15. Add garam masala, lemon juice, coriander leaves & remaining mint leaves and mix well
  16. Now taste the mix for salt and hotness. Adjust to your taste buds accordingly
  17. Cover the pan and cook in medium fire for 15 minutes
  18. After 15 minutes check if the rice is done and water has evaporated completely. Else  reduce the flame further and cook for another 5-10 minutes (It took me 5 extra minutes)
  19. You can see that the rice has neither stuck to the bottom of the pan & nor has broken down. Long beautiful grains of basmati rice gives the biriyani a rich look
  20. Once the rice is done, off the flame and leave the pan in the heat of the stove till you serve

Notes:

  • Rice : Water ratio of 1:1 ¾ works perfectly well for me. I use India Gate basmati rice for making this biriyani
Chitz