Malai Chop (Paneer Sandwich)
Malai Chop (Paneer Sandwich)
Malai Chop (Paneer Sandwich)
Paneer made out of 2 lt milk; 2 tsp flour; 5 cups sugar; 12 cups of water; 1
tsp soapnut (reetha) water; For the stuffing: 150 gm khoya; 2 tbsp finely
chopped almond; 1 tbsp chopped pistachio; 4 tbsp coarsely powdered
batashas (puffed sugar); 1 tsp green cardamom powder; milk as needed.
FOR THE STUFFING: 1. Mashkhoya. Mix with all the other
ingredients for the stuffing and enough milk to make a thick cream. 2.
Boil the sugar with the water. Make a thin syrup. It should just feel slightly
sticky. 3. Grind the paneer in a mixie. Knead once more with your hands.
4. Mix the flour well. 5. Divide into 24 portions and shape each into a
square. 6. Drop the paneer pieces carefully in the boiling syrup. Boil for 5
minutes. 7. Add half a teaspoon of the soapnut water. This will make the syrup
froth. 8. Cover and cook for 20 minutes. As the syrup gets lightly thickened,
and 1 tablespoon of hot water. Do this a few times. In between add the rest of
the soapnut solution as well. 9. When done, the paneer pieces will float
on top. 10. Remove from fire. Take the paneer squares out of the syrup and
drain. 11. Take one square. Smear some of the stuffing. Cover with another.
12. Make twelve sandwiches similarly. 13. Chill & serve.
Ledikini, pantua:
And this is how you go about it: make a nice, soft dough with the flour, a tiny little
bit of baking powder, sugar (say, about 2 tablespoons?) and quite a bit of ghee.
It’s not going to be a dry, tight roti dough— it should feel oily and smooth. Oh
yeah, and the cardamom powder as well, but go easy on it (trust me, I’ve done
this). Right, now you make little balls with the dough with the nokuldanas inside
them, and fry them in batches of three or four (again, the voice of experience—
one by one takes too long and is often over-fried. Too many, the whole lot breaks
or sticks to the sides. Or both) Fry till they’re brown, but keep stirring and gently
rolling them over in the oil, or, as I said, they stick to the bottom and the sides.
Then, when the whole lot is done, make a thick (and we’re talking icky thick here)
sugar syrup (lots of sugar in boiling water) and drop them in. carefully.
This is the way to do it: heat the oil and ghee till you can smell the ghee. If the
utensil’s non no-stick (he he) and turning red/brown, you’re wither careless or
not very experienced in the kitchen. In which case I take no responsibility. Right,
so if you’re the kind who can tell when the oil’s reallt hot by looking at it, take it
off the flames at this point. Let it cool for about twenty seconds or so, then,
slowly, carefully, drop the ledikinis (and ALL other sweets) into it. Keep rolling
them over gently with those perforated hatas you get for fishing out fries and
stuff from oil, and put the (*insert appropriate utensil name*) back on the flame,
and turn it on high. You can’t be too careful with the flame. Too high, your sweets
are a scorched, half-done mess. Too low, it’s a ball of flour and milk dripping with
cold oil.
Chhanar jilipi:
Make the dough the same way, divide it into little balls, lengthen each like you
would a rough solid cylinder of plasticine, give them a jilipi shape (sort of
imperfect overlapping supposedly-concentric circles), deep fry the same careful
way, dip in rosh, serve. Or better, eat.
Kheerer chop: flour and sugar; 1 ½ -2 litres of milk; shuji/ sooji/ dunno what
it’s called in English; a couple of pieces of bread, toasted stiff (but not brown) and
powdered; a sliver of nutmeg, powdered; ghee and oil – the previous lethal
combo.
Right, deep breath. You could mess this up royally, and you probably shall, but
let’s think happy thoughts anyway, okay?
Put the milk on to boil, with about 2 tablespoons of sugar (or 1 ½. Depends on
how sweet you like your kheer) and about a teaspoon of shuji/ sooji. Turn down
the flame after a while, otherwise it’ll scorch. Now, when the whole affair thickens
and occupies about half the volume it did before (and there are no scorches or
spilt white stuff on the kitchen floor) you can pat yourself on the back, add about
2 tablespoons of shuji, mix it well, add powdered toast, fold well, let it try and
tighten (but not scorch! …you can tell how my efforts went, can’t you?) slightly
more, then sprinkle the powdered nutmeg, mix it in again, and take it off the
flames.
You should be a pat hand at the dough and the sugar syrup by now. Only this
time, the stuff shan’t float in the rosh, it’s only meant to cling to the chops and
give them that extra sticky sweetness. So, right, you make the balls (look, stop
smirking every time you read that, okay? We’re trying serious cooking here!
*huff*), put a small amount of the kheer (the one you just made. Yay!) inside, seal
it my stretching the dough over it firmly but gently, pat it into a rough oval shape
with your palms, and fry till each one’s golden-brown. Then toss them in the
clingy syrup and we’re done with this one.
Nimkis in rosh:
Here’s a breather. This is really, really easy. Buy a packet of lightly salted nimkis
(the less salty, the better), make a thick, thick rosh, stir the nimkis into it, and
keep stirring till they soak all the rosh. Do NOT let it cool. Have it straight off the
flames. It’s fast, easy, and delicious.
Goja:
The same dough (you should have some in the fridge wrapped in a moist cloth by
now. Just in case). Roll the dough in a large…er, fellow bongs, what’s a good word
for lechee? (and NO, it’s not what you think. I’m sorry to disappoint you, boys
and girls, but we’re REALLY cooking here. I’m not Gytha Ogg)
Anyway, you know what I mean, just flatten the dough with your palm (and not a
rolling pin), and make sure it’s between ½ an inch and an inch thick. Then cut it
into rough squares, diamonds, rectangles – whatever’s your favourite shape of
the week. Just not circles, okay? That’s a disaster. Then fry them, one by one,
over a high flame, dip them in rosh, and let the syrup dry on and cling to the
gojas. Some people sprinkle coconut shavings (narkel kora) on them while the
rosh is still sticky. Some sprinkle more sugar.
Suit yourselves.
Pranhora:
Right. Now I’m in trouble. I really don’t know what chira/chire is in English. I’m
not entirely sure there’s a easily recognisable word for it, actually. So, if you figure
out what it is, yay, you just got yourself into more cooking.
So, you soak the chira (that’s how I pronounce it, Bangal
trait apparently) in just about enough lukewarm water. The
chira, and this is important, should not be soggy. It’ll
just soften a bit and maybe swell just that much. Now,
preferably, you should make it into a paste on what we call
a sheel-nora, which is a stone slab and a stone pestle
respectively, used to grind spices and make pastes by
rolling the pestle over the slab from top to bottom, and
putting crushable and grindable stuff in between. Has been
known to be used as a weapon of mass destruction, so
perhaps it's better if we just stick to the food processor.
Just, don't make it into a smooth paste, alright? Leave it
at the slightly grainy stage.
Now, mix this grainy paste with dry kheer (you may do without the sooji/shuji
and toast bit this time, though a fistful of shuji is always advisable), flour, a pinch
of baking powder, ground large-cardamom seeds. Make rough ovals from this
dough and fry ‘em. You should be the reigning champion of this by now.
The pranhoras stay in the rosh. You don’t pick them off after they’ve had a good
soak.
Lobongolotika:
If you’ve done the kheerer chop, this is like, child’s play. Absolutely.
So, hmm…you make the kheer the same way, you make the dough the same way,
and then, you do the little trick. You *clears throat* make balls with it, roll each of
them into a flat circle (they should be largish) and cut them into half.
Actually, wait, this gets a little complicated. Do it my way. Don’t cut it into half.
Make a normal sized flattened thing, put some kheer in the middle, and wrap the
sides over the filling to give the thing a triangular shape. The foldings should
overlap and be securely glued together with water. But don’t drench!!! Just wet a
fingertip (in water) and press the sides closely together. Then put a clove in the
intersection (or roughly the middle) of the folded sides. Then fry the lotikas, and
dip in the rosh.