Tag Archives: Akki Roti

Akki Roti with eggs and greens

The Head of Creative Culinary at ph4 Food and Beverages, which runs The Permit Room and Toit, talks about learning from the expert in traditional Coorgi cuisine: his mother.

Chefs don’t usually get a lot of time at home. I live in a family home in Bengaluru so I am spending a lot of time with my parents. It has given us the time to bond better.

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At home, it is traditional Coorgi food that we are cooking. My mom is the expert at making it. I am helping her out, brushing up (my skills) and being hands-on like never before.

My father cooks once in a while. He has his signature dishes, like pork ribs. He has not had the time and we are not getting things very easily. So, we’re trying to cook with what we have and what we saved, instead of trying to go out and buy things.

The most famous staple Coorgi dish is a pork dish called pandi curry which I have been making for a while now. There are also a lot of rice accompaniments that we do that need a little bit of experience to perfect.

There is a flat rice cake called paputtu. It is like idli, but made with coarser grains of broken rice and topped off with freshly grated coconut. We made that for breakfast. Then there is a rice ball, called kadambuttu, which we are making at home.

We had preserved some small mangoes ( sakkare guthi variety) in the freezer. We do that as a family; we get them in season and we keep them for the whole year. So, we made a mango curry with some mustard, curry leaves (just a basic tadka ) with a bit of jaggery and some spices.

Once in a while, I whip up something with what we have at home. The other day I had a packet of instant noodles; I think it was a very mellow-flavoured one. I had some elk sausage in the fridge so that added some depth to the noodles. I had done it once before; it turns out great. I think a friend got the sausages for me from Germany a long time ago. That stuff is nuclear-war proof. Nothing happens to it (laughs).

Akki Roti with eggs and greens

Ingredients

Eggs 2 nos

Cooked rice (day-old is also okay) 1 cup

Rice flour 1/2 cup

Salt to taste

Spinach (can use any local greens) 1/4 bunch

Onion, 1/2 sliced

Dried red chilli 1 nos

A pinch of mustard

Oil 2 table spoons

Chopped cashews 5 nos

Curry leaves a spring

A pinch of mustard

Ghee 2 teaspoons

Preparation

1.For the akki roti : Mix the cooked rice and rice flour (in increments) to make an evenly mixed dough where you can still lightly see the rice grains.

2.Make small rotis using a roti press and cook on a tava and finish on open fire to get the char.

3.For sauteed greens: Heat oil in the pan, saute mustard, onions and chilly. Add the greens, cook till done.

4.To temper: Heat the ghee in a small pan, add the mustard, red chilli and cashews. Heat till cashews turn slightly brown and crispy. Add the Curry leaves and finish.

5.Finally, Make a soft scramble with the eggs, once all the other components are ready. Assemble the greens and scramble on the akki roti and garnish with the cashew tempering.

6.Recipe by chef Kavan Kuttappa

Chef kavan Kuttappa | Photo Credit: Special arrangement

Regarding work, we had just finished trials and were about to launch a new menu at The Permit Room and then this happened. So, what I am doing right now is spending the time documenting. As chefs, we don’t like to really sit down and document recipes but I have been getting more time, so that is what I have been focusing on.

A lot of focus has also been on taking care of the staff, which I feel is very important.

Overall, our company (pH4 Food and Beverages) has about 450 employees. In Bengaluru, The Permit Room has about 50 employees who stay in staff housing and Toit, owned by the same company, has over 100 employees.

The staff stay in accommodation that the company provides. We are cooking meals (rice, dal and vegetables with egg once a week) for them at the restaurant everyday and delivering it. They are not hungry, if nothing else, and they have a roof over their heads. [Ensuring] this has been a major responsibility and task.

In this series, India’s popular chefs and restauteurs share their lockdown cooking habits and recipes with us.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Food> Recipes / August 10th, 2023

Mountain Calling: Hyatt Centric rolls out special brunch menu dedicated to Coorg cuisines

We recommend Pandi Curry, Koli Curry and Baimbale Curry.

Hyatt Centric rolls out special brunch menu
Hyatt Centric rolls out special brunch menu

Chef Gaurav Ramakrishnan introduced a special Coorg cuisine brunch at The Bengaluru Brasseri recently. The special brunch includes dishes like Pandi Curry, KadambuttuKummu Curry, Akki Roti, and more. We started off our brunch with Murgh Lasooni Tikka and Indonesian Grilled Fish. The former is a delicacy marinated in yoghurt and a few seasonings while the latter was flavourful and a bit on the spicier side. 

We then decided to check out their special brunch dishes. We started off with boiled rice and Pandi Curry. Boiled rice with pandi curry is like a staple diet in the Coorg region. The pandi curry was made using chilli powder, green chillies, masalas, and Kachumpuli (a dark-coloured vinegar). The delicacy was flavourful and complemented the rice very well. 

Kadambuttu

We went for another round of boiled rice, but this time along with the Koli Curry. This Coorgi-style chicken curry was cooked with grated coconut, tamarind paste, green chillies, and red chilli powder. The dish was more on the spicier side but we loved having it with the steamed rice. 

Next, we tried the Akki Roti with Baimbale Curry. The curry was made with bamboo shoots along with cumin and mustard. The base of the curry was cooked using coconut paste. The dish was delicious and left us craving more.

Koli Curry

Our brunch came to a close with a couple of desserts – Thambuttu and Kaavale Puttu. The former was made with mashed banana pulp and roasted broken rice along with grated coconut while the latter had ripe jackfruit pulp, ghee and cardamom. This dessert was steamed and served in banana leaves. 

If you are looking for a place to try out special Coorg delicacies, the special brunch at The Bengaluru Brasseri is one you should definitely look at. 

₹1,799++ for two. At Hyatt Centric, MG Road 

Email: alwin@newindianexpress.com
Twitter: @al_ben_so

source: http://www.indulgexpress.com / Indulge Express / Home> Food> Bengaluru / by Alwin Benjamin Soji / February 24th, 2023

Gourmet Meal: Kodava Pandi Curry

The mouth-watering ‘Kodava Pandi Curry’, eaten with ‘Akki Roti ‘or ‘Kadambuttu’ (Rice Dumplings), is the staple diet of Coorg.

Gourmet Meal: Kodava Pandi CurryKodava Pandi Curry. Picture Courtesy: Anuj Kumar, Executive Chef. 

Generally eaten for breakfast, the ‘Pandi Curry’ is a specialty of Coorg and is cooked on all special occasions here.

 

To prepare a delicious Kodava Pandi Curry meal, you will require the following ingredients in addition to 1 kg of pork:

Ingredients:
1).  Half a kg of Onion
2).  Two hundred and fifty grams of Garlic
3).  Ten Green Chillies
4).  One inch of Ginger
5).  One tea spoon of Jeera
6).  Two or three Cloves
7).  A bunch of Coriander

Gourmet Meal: Kodava Pandi CurryKodava Pandi Curry. Picture Courtesy: Anuj Kumar, Executive Chef. 

Cooking Instructions:
1.    Roughly grind the ingredients to form the main ‘Masala’ used to marinate the pork.
2.    Add one tea spoon of Red Chili powder, ½ a tea spoon of Turmeric and Salt to taste.
3.    Keep the mixture marinated for 20 minutes.
4.    Place the marinated meat in a heavy bottom pan, and keep this on the fire for 45 minutes, depending on how tender the meat is.
5.    Once the meat is cooked, add 2-3 table spoons of the ‘Pork Masala’ (available at stores in Coorg).
6.    Add ‘Kachimpuli’ (Coorg Vinegar) and let the meat cook for a few minutes.
7.    Garnish with chopped Coriander and chopped Curry Leaves.

The ingredients for the ‘Akki Roti’ include:
1.    A cup of Cooked Rice
2.    A cup of Rice Flower
3.    A pinch of Salt

Procedure:

1.    Mash the Cooked Rice.

2.    Add the Rice Flower to the mashed Rice and knead it to form soft dough.

3.    Make a ‘Chapatti’ (Indian bread) out of the dough on the ‘Tava’ (Frying Pan).

Your delectable ‘Kodava Pandi Curry’ dish is ready to be served!

Gourmet Meal: Kodava Pandi Curry
Divya Madaiah

Divya Madaiah is a homemaker and a buisness woman. She caters snacks for all occasions and has taken training in baking and making desserts. Her hobbies include cooking, gardening, listening to music and reading..
source: http://www.coorgexperiences.orangecounty.in / by Divya Madaiah / Jul 14th, 2010