On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 7:41 AM, Abhijit Menon-Sen <[email protected]> wrote:

> At 2009-06-03 22:09:54 +0530, [email protected] wrote:
> >
> > Please...offlist if necessary...send me the recipe, meaning, the
> > proportions, for this.
>
> I saw no reason to take it off-list, especially since Radhika wants the
> recipe too.


OK.

>
>
> You use approximately twice as much fine rice powder as (preferably
> fresh, but we've often used frozen too) grated coconut. You have to wet
> the rice a little (you want wet rice powder, not dough) and mix with the
> coconut and salt to taste. Layer them roughly inside the magic cylinder.
>
> Personally, I put in a tiny bit more salt than one might normally think
> necessary, because then you can eat the resulting puttu on its own, and
> it's delicious. Otherwise you eat it with sugar. Or a banana. Or kadala
> curry, of course.


Fine. All this I understand.

>
>
> > But tell me some substitute for the "kutti"
>
> Ah well, now if you don't have a small cylindrical metal child handy…
> let me describe the process, and you can improvise. The device is meant
> to hold the raw material in its cylindrical shape while conveying steam
> through it. What one does is to put a little water in a pressure cooker,
> switch it on and put the cylinder—open—on the spout. When steam starts
> to come out of the top, you put the lid on the cylinder and steam it for
> 5min.


Now this part I don't. What do you mean, put the vessel "on the spout"? My
pressure cooker has a body and a lid with a spout that spews out water
vapour. Am I supposed to put it on top of the lid, on top of the spout? Or
steam it in the body of the presssure cooker as usual?

And...I don't have a cylinder (not even one I gave birth to), far less a
lid...what do I do?

>
>
> You might try adding a tiny bit more water to the mixture, and moulding
> it into laddoo-like things for steaming. Or maybe you could steam them
> in an idli dish, if you have one of those. You won't get cylindrical
> puttu, but it should taste just as good. You'll have to experiment with
> the timing. The properly cooked puttu should hold together, but be moist
> and a little crumbly.



OK, I'll try doing this....can I use idli plates? Inside the pressure cooker
which will be closed but not have the weight on?

>
>
> ., is your recipe different?


Tambram "puttu" is made with chhana dal (gram dal) , and enormously
different from, and enormously more laborious than, this puttu you have
described....

Thanks, will let you know how this turned out.

Radhika! I want your dessert recipe now. Please. I am not a creative cook,
and need a stimulus package of recipes....

Deepa.

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