Well, many of you must be knowing Atul Lahkar, a master chef from Assam, at least by his growing reputation. Some of you might have already got a chance to watch him cooking many authentic Assamese cusines in his famous crockery show called "Byanjan" telecasted in News Live TV channel. And I am sure there would many of you who have had at least a complete Assamese thali in his famous restaurant in Guwahati, called "Kharika" situated near Ganeshguri Chariali, Guwahati.
We have come across his wonderful site recently and again he has done a very good job showcasing so many traditional Assamese recipes with his own innovative touch. The site is:
http://chefatullahkar.com/index.html
If you go through his site, you would realize, Assamese food has been made popular by effort of many individuals and Atul Lahkar is certainly is one of the pioneers in this field. Happy reading
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Xukan Machor chutney (Dried fish chutney)
This is not a typical Assamese side dish as a matter of fact. This particular preparation is a derivation of its famous Manipuri cousin called Irumba. In fact we have taken the liberty to change to cater to your taste bud by modifying it a little. Though many tribes and communities do prepare variety of dried fish recipes, in Assamese food habit dried fish dishes are not very common.
In this post, we are going to share a kind of chutney, a side dish which you can have along with your main course or simply with steamed rice or even roti. We would also share another dried fish preparation, a spicy curry with brinjals in our subsequent posts sometime soon.
For you to enjoy this dish, the primary qualifying criteria would be you should be able to bear the "smell" of the dried fish and the other important one is you should be able to bear the "heat" of the recipe as it is nth degree hot.
Ingredients:
250 gm of dried fish. You can take some 10 small dried fish or 5-6 medium sized dried fish. You can take what Bengalis’ called Shutki. Normally for this recipe, you would not use chunks of big dried fish.
1 medium sized potato
1 tomato
1 medium sized red onion
15 green chilies (yes, that’s right)
5 dried red chilies (again correct, if you can get hold of a dried Bhut Jolokia, then that’s best)
5 cloves of garlic
1 inch ginger
A bunch of fresh coriander leaves
Method:
1. Peel the potato and boil the potato and green chilies thrown together in a sauce pan with water covering half of the potato. Do not over boil as we need the green chilies to be intact in shape. Use potable water to boil as we need the water in which you boil the chilies.
2. On a pan put the dried fish and the dried chilies and pour a little water so that the fish and the chilies do not get burnt. Keep the pan on flame for amount 10 minutes on medium low heat.
3. On your gas stove, or electrical ring, place the tomato directly and keep turning it on all sides so that it gets roasted uniformly.
4. Chop the onion into fine chunks. Peel the garlic, cut the ginger into small slices.
5. Put all the ingredients in a bowl and add some salt and little bit of mustard oil. Throw in the fresh coriander leaves to the mixture and using a round ladle or your hand mash all the contents to a homogenous paste. You can put the mixture into a blender or a grinder, if you want, but do not grind it to a liquidy paste. Leave it in a mashy form.
6. Serve it with steamed rice or roti.
In this post, we are going to share a kind of chutney, a side dish which you can have along with your main course or simply with steamed rice or even roti. We would also share another dried fish preparation, a spicy curry with brinjals in our subsequent posts sometime soon.
For you to enjoy this dish, the primary qualifying criteria would be you should be able to bear the "smell" of the dried fish and the other important one is you should be able to bear the "heat" of the recipe as it is nth degree hot.
Ingredients:
250 gm of dried fish. You can take some 10 small dried fish or 5-6 medium sized dried fish. You can take what Bengalis’ called Shutki. Normally for this recipe, you would not use chunks of big dried fish.
1 medium sized potato
1 tomato
1 medium sized red onion
15 green chilies (yes, that’s right)
5 dried red chilies (again correct, if you can get hold of a dried Bhut Jolokia, then that’s best)
5 cloves of garlic
1 inch ginger
A bunch of fresh coriander leaves
Method:
1. Peel the potato and boil the potato and green chilies thrown together in a sauce pan with water covering half of the potato. Do not over boil as we need the green chilies to be intact in shape. Use potable water to boil as we need the water in which you boil the chilies.
2. On a pan put the dried fish and the dried chilies and pour a little water so that the fish and the chilies do not get burnt. Keep the pan on flame for amount 10 minutes on medium low heat.
3. On your gas stove, or electrical ring, place the tomato directly and keep turning it on all sides so that it gets roasted uniformly.
4. Chop the onion into fine chunks. Peel the garlic, cut the ginger into small slices.
5. Put all the ingredients in a bowl and add some salt and little bit of mustard oil. Throw in the fresh coriander leaves to the mixture and using a round ladle or your hand mash all the contents to a homogenous paste. You can put the mixture into a blender or a grinder, if you want, but do not grind it to a liquidy paste. Leave it in a mashy form.
6. Serve it with steamed rice or roti.