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HOGGER & Co. media

photographing what everyone wants to remember. since 2006

  • Work
  • Work With Me
  • Weddings + Engagements
  • Publications
  • Travel - Canada
  • Travel - USA
  • Travel - International
  • Prints
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    • Aruba: One Happy Island
    • Beers Around the World
    • Boston City Guide
    • Downton Abbey: Filming Locations
    • New Mexico: White Sands 5 tips
    • New Orleans City Guide
    • Puerto Rico: San Juan Guide
    • Stockholm: 10 Things to Do
  • Blog
    • PHOTOHOGGER
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Breakfast Beyond Eggs: Appam and Stew

Here's a little background on my childhood. I was born in Kerala, South India and grew up in Botswana, Africa, so breakfast was always very fresh and very local.

I was lucky to have farm fresh eggs for breakfast in the mornings. And incredibly fresh chicken. I have literally never eaten chicken as delicious as that, since. In fact, I have since stopped eating chicken!

But I digress.

With my South Indian background, eggs are just ONE of many options for breakfast, and sometimes are just an accompanying dish to other staples, like Upma which is something of a dry porridge made out of semolina flour. Upma with a side of eggs and optionally a banana with a sprinkle of sugar is delicious. Say what? Yes, it is certainly an acquired taste, but worth trying if you ever have the opportunity to do so.

Then there is my all-time favorite breakfast for special occasions: appam and stew. Appam is a fermented pancake made out of white rice. It's a breakfast treat, saved for birthdays, Christmas and New Year. And recently, my Mom has been making it for us whenever we go back to visit Toronto.

Sounds weird to have "pancakes" with something savoury like a stew, but appam is not a sweet pancake. If you've ever tried Ethiopian injera, it's similar but not quite as sour as injera and not served cold as injera.

So, if you're adventurous to try a different type of breakfast other than eggs, I'm sharing my Mother's recipe for Appam and Stew, which is her Mother's recipe and definitely tried, tested and true.

My mouth is watering already.

Thanks for the recipe Mummy! xo

Breakfast_Appam_HOGGERCo.01.jpg

Ingredients for Appam:

  • 2 cups White Rice
  • 1 teaspoon Yeast           
  • 1 teaspoon Sugar          
  • 1 and a half Table spoon Semolina    
  • 1 egg white
  • A little Milk

Preparation:

1) Wash rice and soak for 2 to 3 hours to grind.

2) SEMOLINA: Just before grinding the rice (in a blender), mix semolina in a cup of water and cook in low heat stirring constantly till it turns to a thick batter. Take off from the stove and leave to cool.

3) YEAST:  Take litle luke warm water in a deep bowl and add the yeast and the sugar on top of the yeast and close it with a plate and leave it to rise for 10 to 15 minutes.

4) RICE: Drain water from the rice and grind the rice in a blender (USING ONLY MILK) little milk at a time to a smooth consistency. Batter should not become too loose by adding more milk (so be careful with that while pouring the milk). Divide rice and grind into two batches, instead of allat once. That will give more room to grind.

5) Add the cooled semolina mix and the risen yeast mix into the rice batter and mix properly and leave it to ferment for 6 to 8 hours. You may leave it in the oven, overnight. In warm countries it rises faster than in colder countries.

6) BEFORE MAKING APPAM: Take egg white and beat well with little milk and add this along with salt and one table spoon of sugar into the batter  and mix well and keep it for another one hour before starting to make the Appams.

7) HINT: IF THE BATTER IS TOO THICK YOU MAY LOOSEN IT

                BY ADDING MORE MILK AND MAKE THE APPAMS

                THE SAME WAY YOU MAKE PANCAKES USING

                A NON STICK PAN OR A CAST IRON PAN.

8) Don't FLIP the pancakes, just wait until they bubble and are cooked in the center.

Breakfast_Appam_HOGGERCo.02.jpg

CHICKEN STEW OR VEGETABLE STEW RECIPE:

(Ingredients are the same whether you cook chicken with potatoes or only use vegetables)

1) One small chicken whole or Only the chicken breast : 500gm.

2) Ingredients:

  • Onions, 3 medium size
  • Green chillies, 3 (or more)
  • Ginger, 2 teaspoon (if paste) or a medium size
  • Garlic, 2 teaspoon (if paste) or three small cloves
  • Cinnamon sticks, 4 whole
  • Cloves, 5 whole
  • Cardamom, 4 whole (you can use powder too)
  • Fresh Curry leaves 2 or 3 stems. (You can use Corriander leaves instead, if curry leaves aren't available)
  • Black pepper, quarter teaspoon at the end

3) You can add any of these vegetables or all while cooking the 

     chicken:-  Potatoes, Carrots, Beans, Cabbage, Cauliflour,

     Peas, Tomatoes etc or just potato with chicken. I prefer that.

4) Preparation: Heat pan, pour oil and put the chopped oinions,

    cinnamon, cloves, cardamom and let it cook a bit.

    Then add the green chillies, ginger, garlic, curry leaves.

    Mix and after a little while add the chicken, salt with little water to

    cook the meat. (At this time, you can add the vegetables of your

    choice)

    Once the meat is cooked add 3cups of whole milk. If you want

    more gravy add more milk.

    Now add  the black pepper powder, mix and boil again (not long

    though) and serve with Appams either with Chicken stew

    or Vegetable stew.

Options: Whole milk or 2% milk or Evaporated milk or Coconut milk.

                  You can use any of these of your choice.

tags: Breakfast, appam and stew, cultural, eggs, indian food, kerala
categories: Breakfast, Eggs, India, Recipe
Tuesday 03.26.13
Posted by Smita Jacob
Comments: 3
 

TRAVEL: India, Delhi: Yo China!

Location:

Third Floor, City Square Mall, Rajouri Garden, Delhi

www.yo-china.com

Definitely one of the highlights from our trip to Delhi was eating chinese food.  That may sound weird, but chinese food in India is simply superb!  It's spicy and flavourful in the way that chinese food isn't in the west.  The closest you can get to that taste is haka chinese and Spadina Garden comes close, which is why it's a fave of mine.

We were treated to an open menu dinner by the wonderful owners of Yo China!

The service was outstanding, and the presentation of the dishes, exquisite.

Just take a look:

Honey Chilly Potato Fries, which is their signature dish - crispy potato fingers, stir fried in the wok with honey chilly sauce & sesame seeds

Honey Chilly Potato - RS 79

Chilli Chicken, Dry:

Chilli Chicken Dry  - RS 89

Prawns tossed with ginger lemon coriander sauce:

Prawn Singtu RS 159

Chicken Satay:

Chicken Satay RS 139

Legendary Malha Sizzler:Babycorn, Beans, Broccoli, Mushroom and black mushroom, red and yellow peppers tossed in the legendary Malha sauce served on a sizzler

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="576" caption="Chicken Satay RS 139"]

Legendary Malha
Sizzler

 

[/caption]

Dumplings

Dumplings

Inside the dumplings

Lobster (off menu)

ChickenFried Rice 69

American Chop suey

Devil's Chocolate Cake With Ice Cream

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="342" caption=" Yo ! Snicker Sundae"]
[/caption]

By the time the lobster came out, we were fully stuffed 'cause the portions are massive.

And then when the dessert came out, well, I wasn't going to refuse this:

Highly recommended!!!

All around a fantastic place to get chinese food!
tags: Chicken, Chinese, Delhi eats, Delhi yo china chinese food, Foodhogger, India Delhi eats, India eats, Toronto, Urbanspoon, chinese food, chocolate, city square
categories: Chinese, India, Indian, Travel
Monday 08.30.10
Posted by Smita Jacob
Comments: 2
 

TRAVEL: India: Delhi: Haldirams

Location:

somewhere in Delhi

www.haldiram.com

Anyone who has ever visited an Indian family's home or is Indian is familiar with the Haldiram's symbol.  See below (image from Google)


No Indian tea-time is complete  without Haldiram's.

A bag of bhel puri or chiwda will always be kicking around the cupboard of an Indian home.

So think of the impact of going to a Haldiram's RESTAURANT.  I was amazed, astounded, in awe of the industry that is Haldiram's.

Look at the number of servers behind this counter as you walk in:

now that's service !

There were three people asking me what I'd like.

And then there's the sweets.  My God, the sweets!  Imagine the biggest Indian Mithai (sweet) shop you've been to in Toronto, then triple that!  Row after row of delectable goodness...all so fresh, too!

sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeets

Then there's the "restaurant" part of it, more like fast food, where you pre-order then wait in line and bring back your goods to round tables that you stand at to eat.  It was lunch time when we went and incredibly packed so at least they've figured out that putting chairs into the equation would be a waste of time.

The chinese food was delish!!!  Made specifically for taste buds that can appreciate spice.  I don't know why fries are a chinese dish in India, but we saw it a lot.  Spicy fries.  Can't complain though, I'd never be able to get spicy fries in the Western world unless I made it myself.

the chinese food (with fries)

The channa batura was....well, see for yourself.

channa batura!

HUGE!

You even have to go through a security check/terminal to enter Haldirams.

Now, that's hard-core!

tags: Delhi Haldirams, Foodhogger, Foodhogger vegetarian, Haldirams, Haldirams foodhogger, Haldirams in India, New Delhi, Urbanspoon, behl puri, bhel puri or chiwda, chiwda, chiwda haldirams
categories: Chinese, Chocolates, Dessert, Ice-cream, India, Indian, Lunch, Noodles, South Indian, Travel
Thursday 06.17.10
Posted by Smita Jacob
Comments: 3
 

TRAVEL: India!

Foodhogger is off to India to savour all that is India: dosas, idlis, vadas, jalebis, curries, not to mention the fish, that I so love!

See you in a few.
Photo from: sachinkelkar.blogspot.com
tags: Fish, Foodhogger, India, India eats, Urbanspoon, curry, dosas, fish fry, idlis, jalebi, kerala fish fry
categories: India, Toronto, Travel
Friday 01.29.10
Posted by Smita Jacob
Comments: 1