Sunday, July 19, 2009

Kathi rolls

Prêt à manger
A delicious street food, this makes a great prepare-and-store item that you can keep in your fridge as a snack to reheat and eat, or carry in as a work lunch, or prepare as part of a picnic meal. As per Wikipedia, the roll originated in a restaurant. On my visits to Calcutta, I found the ubiquitous "egg-roll" street carts to prepare absolutely brilliant versions of their own.

Materials:

- 1lb beef (you could mix stew cubed meat with some bone-in cuts to get a better stock, but is not essential)
- 8 peppercorns
- 4 cloves
- 3 medium onions
- 1 small piece star anise
- 1 tabespoon fennel
- 1.5" stick cinnamon
- 2 bay leaves 
- 1 black cardamom1
- 2" piece ginger (optional)


For the rolls: 6-8 plain (or wholewheat, or spinach) tortillas, 3-6 eggs

Preparation:

Place spices in a bouquet garni bag and put, along with beef and 2 cups water, in a heavy stock pan (or Dutch oven). Add one onion (peeled, but whole) and ginger and bring the mixture to a boil. Cover and simmer until meat is tender (could take up to 1 hour, sometimes more depending on the meat).

For the next step - you could wait until the meat is cooked, you can even keep the cooked meat (plus stock) in the fridge (or freezer) and go to the next step on another day, or you can do this while the beef is simmering.

The next step is to fry the two remaining onions (sliced fine) in oil (and perhaps a tablespoonful of ghee for a richer flavour), until they are golden brown. One advantage of waiting until the meat is cooked is that you can use the stock to brown the onions, which increases the depth of flavor in the final dish. Once the onions are ready, add the chunks of meat (you can discard the bouquet garni) and stir fry gently, adding spoonfuls of stock, until you see the oil separate out the sides.

In a large'ish bowl, beat the eggs. Heat a frying pan (non-stick or other) and pour a small amount of oil into it. Dip one torilla in the egg batter and place in pan and cook both sides on low-medium heat until the egg is cooked; keep it soft - don't let it turn brown and crisp. Then - spoon a portion of the beef and onion mixture into the middle of the tortilla and roll - using a spatula to press down as you do, so that the roll stays - er - rolled (they tend to spring open... in which case you would have an unsprung-roll).

Serving:

Eat hot, or allow to cool and store in containers in the fridge. These can be eaten cold but are not as tasty; heat for about 30 seconds in a microwave or in a pan until heated through. Before serving, you can garnish each roll with a fresh relish of diced onions, chopped cilantro, squeeze of lemon, chopped green chili peppers or red chili pepper powder.

1 comment:

  1. i love them egg rolls...u put beef in it!! u know didi won't like it at all 'eye am tailing eet right naow' (didi =mamata banerjee)..i hope u feasted on them..paro

    ReplyDelete

Search This Blog

Followers

About Me

I was born and raised in India and attended school and college there. In May 2007, I completed my PhD (in Neuroscience) at the Center for Neural Science at New York University and stayed on there as a postdoctoral fellow until early 2009. Currently (as of 2025), I am in the Department of Neurosurgery at Stanford University.