How to make a Chocolate Cake?


A few days ago, I came across a wonderful video on making chocolate cake. He calls it mud cake, but I'm quite sure you won't mind whatever the name may be. All you want to do is relish the aroma and push your hand in to take a huge byte.

Chocolate cakes are quite tough to make, but with practice, they can be so much fun to do. Hope you guys will enjoy this tutorial. Our chef is good at making chocolate cakes. If you want to have more recipes from this guy, subscribe to his youtube channel. He calls it Nicko's Kitchen.

Butterscotch Coffee!

Five ingredients are all you'll need for this sweet sipper. Individual servings of the warm coffee creation are topped with whipped cream and fun garnishes made from melted butterscotch chips.

Preparation time: 20 minutes

You Will Need
1 cup butterscotch chips, divided
8 cups hot brewed coffee
1/2 cup half-and-half cream
5 to 8 tablespoons sugar
Whipped cream in a can 


What to Do
1. In a microwave-safe bowl, heat 1/2 cup butterscotch chips at 70% power for 2-3 minutes or until melted, stirring occasionally.

2. Cut a small hole in the corner of a pastry or plastic bag; insert a #4 round tip. Fill with melted chips. Pipe "mom" eight times onto a waxed paper-lined baking sheet. Refrigerate until set, about 10 minutes.

2. In a large bowl, stir the coffee and remaining butterscotch chips until chips are melted. Stir in half-and-half and sugar. Serve in mugs with whipped cream and "mom" garnishes. Recipe Adaptation from Reader's Digest. 

Homemade Mango Chutney

So before the summer ends completely and monsoon arrives, I want to capture the flavor of the fruit mango into my recipe and relish it for latter season.
Call it pickle or chutney, or chunda, murabba or just any name.
~ This is a sweet-sour-tangy recipe of the raw mangoes made in lowest amount of time and energy involved.
Traditionally my grandmother used to make with lots of pain by keeping the jar of raw mangoes and sugar out in sun for numerous days and kept stirring it every day till the sugar melts and mixes well with the raw mangoes turning into glossy look.
~ But here I’ve come up with a quickest delicious homemade mango recipe. Make today and relish it for next one month by storing it up in the freeze. Almost like any jam or marmalade.

Sweet-Sour-Tangy-Raw Mangos

The ingredients used are easily available at home. This is an absolutely delicious dish could be enjoyed as a great accompaniment with almost anything. Relish directly with Roti, Parathas (pan fried Indian flatbread), Thepla (fenugreek flatbread), in sandwiches...
~ Utterly, no age-bar to enjoy this sweet-sour-tangy dish!

Ingredients for Mango Crunch
Ingredients for sweet-sour chutney of Mango:
  • Raw, sour mangoes – 2 Nos
  • Black-pepper – 10-12 pods
  • Cinnamon stick – ½ inch
  • Sugar – 1 cup (100grms)
  • Fennel seeds (saunf) – 1tsp
  • Salt – 1tsp
  • Turmeric power- ½ tsp
  • Red chili powder- 1 tsp
  • Oil (refined) - 2 tablespoon
  • Raisins (Dry grapes) for garnish (optional)

Method of making Mango Chutney:

Making of Sweet and Sour Mango chunda

  • Peel the raw mango and cut into 1" cubes.
  • Put a griddle or flat pan on medium heat.
  • Heat oil, and latter the crushed black pepper and cinnamon stick keep stirring often until little fragrant.
  • Now add the raw sour cubes of the mango in the same pan. Mix it well and leave it for new 5 minutes on medium heat.
  • Then add the turmeric and chili powder with the salt. Cook again for two minutes.
  • Now you will see the mangoes turning soft and bit glossy.
  • Then add the bowl of sugar into it. Mix well and keep stirring so that the sugar is dissolved and turns into syrup. Just in case after adding the sugar it is still dry, add few spoons of water into it.
  • Stir often till the sugar turns syrupy. Allow them to cook for next 10-15 minutes.
  • In the mean while add the raisins/dry grapes into it.
  • When almost all the water is evaporated and the mangos are soft, golden, transparent and cooked. Remove the pan from the fire.
  • Add additional raisin for garnish(optional).
  • Then at last but not least sprinkle the roughly crushed fennel-seeds to enhance the aroma of the dish.
  • Allow to cool and then put into a sterilized jar. Store for up to one month and eat with almost anything…bread, roti, paratha or just like that anytime!

Note:
  • It is always best to used non-stick pans for the recipes which involved cooking of sugar.
  • Keep stirring it so that the sugar does not stick at the corners of the pan.
  • Keeping size as cubes of the mango, helps in retaining the shape of the piece.
  • Some like to shred/grate the mangoes…but I like to keep the cubes to feel the crunch while eating it. Grated mangoes might turn messy while continuous stirring.
  • The spices are only to enhance an aroma with a tiny tint of flavor. The spices should not be used in such a way that empowers the flavor of the sour-sweet-tangy mangoes.
  • Some like to add cumin seed instead of fennel seed. Though I prefer my choice of ingredients, rest is your wish. Play/experiment with spices is all we ask you when we make recipes.
  • Store it in a sterilized jar in the freeze for almost a month…You cannot store it longer..as it is going to be so delicious and will get over no sooner you make it.

The chapatti and the cook

Necessity is not always the mother of invention, carelessness is. Sometimes, you just don’t take enough care to dough your flour properly and end up with dough for making chapatti instead of Bhakhri.

By the way, Bhakhri is a Gujarati supplement with vegetables and eaten mostly for breakfast and dinner here in Gujarat. Gujarati Patels are said to not start their day without a full blown Bhakhri. Bhakhri is the hard, thick, rough (and tough for oldies) version of chapattis. One big Bhakhri serves two or three chapattis, or maybe even more. I guess that’s imaginable enough.

That sunny afternoon, as mom was out of town, I was cooking Bhakhri and Cereals for lunch. The scene was that I was more interested in watching that saas-bahu serial than I was in cooking. Actually, when no one is home, it’s okay to watch such things. No 0ne questions a loner’s manhood. Believe me, I watched four serials consecutively and all of them had the same plot, same old drama with just actors changing.

Kind of same is with cooking. The same flour, the same oils, the same spices, the same people to eat the cooking everyday.

Anyway back. So, I just ended up putting two glasses of water in the dough. Gosh, there drowns my lunch, I thought. But I just kept working on the dough. And before the dough could become flour juice, I added more flour to it. To my amazement, I had ended up with chapatti dough. That’s pretty good, I said. Now there’s only one problem – how do you make chapattis out of it?

I browsed all my kitchen utensils; the bowls, the cups, the chhaliyas, the dishes, glasses, spoons and all of it to get a fair knowledge of perfect shapes in the kitchen.

Then in the deepest part of my fridge I found a plastic vessel. Wow! perfect head for chapatti. I started swinging my hands over small pieces of dough with belan, no matter what shape they turned into. I was feeling creepy, cause some looked like complete disasters. But that vessel came handy. I just put the head over my disaster chapatti and thud…thud…thud…. Three times I hit it hard and beautiful round chapatti mesmerised me.

Have you ever noticed that we all love perfect shapes? Remembered Chetan Bhagat’s words – Why don’t evolution figure out that men liked beautiful women? And if it does, why does it mess up things so many times? Basically, why learn to make chapattis with hand when you can just trim them off with a plastic vessel?

Them comes roasting the chickens..I mean..chapattis. Hope that’s what it’s called. A cook who doesn’t know cooking may also not know how to describe it. So, just don’t expect that.

I roasted chapattis. I’d watched mom doing it so that wasn’t that tough. Except that some of them just burned themselves head to toe, some of them just went on to make history – they filled air and fluffed air like some rugby ball.

To my surprise, I got to eat chapattis I roasted myself. And it was a wonderful experience. Doing something you never thought you would just give you a worldful of happiness.

Indian Recipes - Paneer Masala

Matar Masala Paneer

This is one of the first recipes on this good-food blog. Here, we shall prefer the recipes which are delicious and have minimum ingredients, perhaps which are easily available in the shops.
~ So all the good-food lover and passionate makers, roll on your sleeves, tie back your hair neatly, and move to kitchen for today to make, as here is the very quick, easy and healthy recipe for your desire of appetite.

Pax: 2-3 Nos.
Ingredients of Matar Paneer Masala:

Matar Paneer Masala
  • Mutter (green peas) - 250gms
  • Paneer (cottage cheese) (8-10 pieces) - 300gms
  • Medium Onions (paste) -2 Nos.
  • Cloves garlic (crushed) - 6 Nos.
  • Grated ginger - 1 tbsp
  • Tomatoes (2medium size) (paste) - 150gms
  • Salt - to Taste
  • Sugar (optional) - 1 tsp
  • Turmeric powder- ½ tsp
  • Coriander powder - 2 tbsp
  • Red chilli powder (to taste) - 1 tbsp
  • Jeera (cumin seeds)- 1/2 tbsp-
  • Bay Leaf- 1
  • Vegetable oil (2table spoon) -1/2 cup

Making of Matar Paneer Masala:

Making of Paneer masala

  • Take a pan and heat the oil in it.
  • Now add Paneer cubes into it, let the heat be medium.
  • Toss them until golden brown.
  • Take the golden paneer cubes and place/soak them in the bowl full of water.
  • Now in the same pan with the left over oil, add the cumin seed and bay leaf.
  • Let it crackle a bit then add the paste of red ripe tomatoes.
  • Keep the high heat and let it cook for 2-4 minutes. Keep stirring.
  • Now add ginger-garlic paste and cook again for next 5-7 minutes.
  • Cook until it starts to leave oil from the sides.
  • Now add the paste of onion. Mix it well and cook for next 10-12 minutes.
  • Then add the dry spices with half cup of water to avoid burning of spices.
  • Saute the spices all together until all the water evaporates and oil gets separates.
  • Then add salt and a pinch of sugar with the 1-2 cups of water.
  • Also add green peas. Let it simmer a bit.
  • Then add the fried golden paneer cubes and let it simmer again next for 10-15 minutes.
  • Garnish with fresh green coriander leaves or cream or a nice dollop of butter on top.
  • Serve hot with rice or bread/chapati.

NOTE:
  • Soaking the golden brown fried paneer(cottage cheese) in the water helps to retain the soft texture.
  • Add onion first or tomato first…it depends on your choice of cooking, though for this recipe I prefer to add tomato first, it retains the gravy in red color.
  • Indian cuisine is all about experimenting in flavors and spices. Some like to add additional spices, like black pepper, cinnamon stick or garam masala. Though I have only added Bay leaf into it and was removed as soon as the tomatoes were added.
  • A pinch of Sugar always enhances and enrich the flavour.
  • I hope this recipe excites you...so do try at home and let us know your experience.
  • Also let us you what would you like us to make or any particular recipe! ~ Bon Appetit