11 November 2009

Watalappan: Spiced Coconut Custard



You know how sometimes people say "we should have you over for dinner," but it never happens. This was not one of those times. Less than a week after said small-talk we were officially invited to have a homemade Sri Lankan dinner at a friend's house. Yay! and then Argh! What should we bring? I wanted to bring Pineapple Upside Down Cake. Pineapple is tropical and should go well with the Southeast Asian food, yes? But the idea was tossed around that I make an authentic Lankan dessert. I'm a good girl and I did my research. Watalappan was the answer. Many sites describe it as "the King of Custards" and how can you go wrong with that!




Watalappan recipes online are pretty much the same. The ingredient quantities differ and some people use more or less spice but generally Watalappan is a coconut/jaggery/cardamom custard. Some recipes call for creamed coconut (not the same and coconut cream) but I chose the version(s) that used coconut milk. Chao Koh brand coconut milk and coconut cream have a good flavor and consistency and are not too expensive. Lately the coconut cream has seemed a tad watery, hopefully this is not a permanent problem. I was more concerned about finding jaggery. The Cook's Thesaurus describes jaggery
Pronunciation: JAG-uh-ree, Notes: This is a tan, unrefined sugar that is common in India. It's made from the sap of palm trees or sugar cane and is much more flavorful than granulated sugar. It's often sold in solid cakes, but it should crumble when you squeeze it. Look for it in Indian markets. Substitutes: Mix 1 C dark brown sugar + 2 teaspoons molasses OR palm sugar OR piloncillo OR brown sugar OR maple sugar OR date sugar
I found palm sugar at the local international market (the small round cakes in front) and was satisfied that this was the best I would find in our small town, but no! The shop keeper pointed out a entire box of jaggery (the cone shape on the left). Woot! The recipe has so few ingredients that the difference in flavor of jaggery versus brown sugar is noticeable.






Dissolve the jaggery in water over low heat. A fork works well for crumbling. To me, the jaggery tasted like pumpkin and brown sugar, but nobody agreed with that assessment. It's good; that's all you need to know.



 

It turns out that custard requires eggs! Who knew? And a darn lot of them too! This one uses ten - I've never used ten eggs at one time. Look at them. They are sooooo yellllooowww.




After adding the coconut milk and the spices to the dissolved jaggery, mix it slowly into the beaten eggs. Make sure the sugar mix has cooled down so it doesn't cook the eggs. It's not very pretty at this point (in fact it never looks that great, but it tastes great).






At this point I was unsure how to steam the custards. Evey recipe said STEAM but I don't have a steamer. I tried two methods; one of which worked and that's the one I will describe. It's the oven method (in case you were wondering the stove top method tasted okay but the texture was way off). I buttered the ramekins, filled them not quite to the top and secured two layers of wax paper over the top with a strong rubber band. Luckily the ramekins fit snugly in the oven safe pot. I filled the pot with water until it was halfway up the side of the ramekins and then covered the pot with a lid. I put this heavywobblyliquidy bit of fun in the oven and let it steam for an hour. Ta da!



 

The large bowl on the left was the less-than-success stove top method. I know it rattled around too much on stove and I think some liquid got in under the rubber lid making it spongy and not creamy. The ramekin oven version looks odd but tastes creamy and rich, some might say royal. As it turns out, this custard is so awesome that the friends who made the dinner had made the exact same dessert!


ready to travel


Sultana raisins and coconut cream - ready to eat! 

Recipe Time: Watalappan (Spiced Coconut Custard)
serves 12

10 Eggs
2 Cups thick Coconut milk
1 lb Jaggery
½ cup water
Pinch of Cinnamon, Nutmeg & Salt
1 tsp Cardamom

butter
rubberbands
wax paper
ramekins

  1. Add the jaggery to the water and boil until the jaggery has melted.
  2. Lightly beat the eggs.
  3. Allow the sugar mixture to cool. Add the coconut milk and the spices to the sugar mixture.
  4. Add melted jaggery and coconut milk a little at a time to the eggs and continue to beat.
  5. Pour about 4 oz into each greased ramekin
  6. Cover with wax paper and place in a ovensafe dish with a lid.
  7. Add water to the baking dish until it reaches halfway up the side of a ramekin.
  8. Steam in a 350 F oven for 1 hour.
  9. Sprinkly with golden raisins before serving.


10 November 2009

Smoked Paprika and Potato Soup


The last day of the farmers' market is a crazy day. Do we really need more produce if we never can or freeze? But there won't be good tomatoes until next year! It's rainy and cold, no one will be there. My life is a barren wasteland without fresh fruit! But every time I buy onions I get a bad batch. And so on ...but you can never go wrong with potatoes. Unless of course you have too many spuds and not enough space.


I wasn't going to post this recipe since it doesn't "come from somewhere," unless you count my desperate state as a destination, but once I tasted the spicy soup I don't regret only taking pictures at the halfway mark. This is a quick recipe and most of the time takes place in the microwave. The soup is also fairly hands-off except for watching the onions in the beginning and watching the knife when you cut the microwave softened potatoes into large chunks.


The flavor comes from a rough-chopped yellow onion cooked in a few teaspoons of olive oil with smoked paprika, dried parsley, dried thyme, salt and black pepper. Just throw it all in the bottom of your soup pot while you microwave eight medium potatoes (or whatever you've got on hand).


When the potatoes are fork tender carefully remove them from the microwave - those little devilspuds are HOT! The eight potatoes magically equals eight cups. How convenient. After the onions become translucent add four cups of chicken stock and the potato chunks. Let it simmer, check your Facebook, stir it around, get a drink, think about serving it, then decided to blend it with an immersion blender.


less creamy


more creamy
I'm always looking for a reason to use the immersion blender, mainly because it is the one kitchen gadget we own. For creamy but not overly smooth texture I removed roughly a cup of the soup before blending and then added that back to the blended portion. You do whatever makes you happy.

Recipe Time: Smoked Paprika and Potato Soup
serves 8

4 cups organic fat free or low-fat chicken broth
1 cup onions
8 cups potato
1 Tbsp parsley
1 Tbsp dried thyme
1 Tbsp olive oil
2 Tbsp paprika
2 tsp table salt
2 tsp black pepper
  1. Microwave the potatoes until they are fork tender.
  2. While the potatoes are cooking roughly chop the onion.
  3. Cook/sweat the onion in a stock pot with the oil and the seasonings until the onion turns translucent.
  4. Add the chicken stock and simmer.
  5. Cut the cooked potatoes into large chunks.
  6. Add the potatoes to the soup and simmer about 10 minutes.
  7. Eat or blend the soup with an immersion blender for a creamy texture.
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