My biggest gripe during the Chennai
rains was that Jagan was away for the most part of it. I would have loved to
see him unarmed, unplugged and unwired - without his phone, TV and laptop,
forced to turn around and talk to fellow humans. Result: He just doesn’t seem as
moved and emotional about the whole Chennai humanity outpouring situation.
Honestly, my feel-good quotient
is wearing out too and I think it’s time for people to get back to work. Muggings
of volunteers, harassment of women volunteers and looting of relief material
surely means everything’s back to normal. Too much of a good thing never is
good. I am a pathological cynic. That explains everything. “Feel-good’ers”, don’t
crucify me for this.Since we’ve all already imbibed the life lessons that the Chennai rains have taught us that ‘money doesn’t matter but people do’, and since I am a cynic, and since I am no good at feel-good, I’ll restrict myself to the small day-to-day lessons that I have learnt.
1. I
have been postponing composting at home because I haven’t found the right bin.
Un-pardonable, I know. I know I am responsible too for the garbage bags that
clog the dump yards. It’s time for me to start segregating the waste at home,
to compost. Here is a wonderful presentation on composting that my friend
Ashwin shared a while back. I am starting this week. You should give it a try too.
2. I
am going to carry my own water bottles everywhere. I just haven’t done this
consistently enough. Read the story of the bottled water here.
3. Choose
sustainable at every step. Choose wooden tops and handmade toys over battery powered
ones, use jute bags for your grocery shopping, take a cloth bag everywhere you
go – you never know when you’ll need to shop, walk more – drive less. I am no
undercover agent of United nations environment programme. I know nothing about
climate change. I am far from perfect. I just know we can make small changes in the everyday things we
do. And yes, they matter.
4. Wasting
food is criminal. Make smaller portions if unsure. Upcycle, get creative. I did
just that with this carrot beetroot chutney. Beetroot poriyal is hugely
infamous in our home and has never been finished in its history. So I roasted yesterday’s
beetroot poriyal along with some grated carrot and coconut, with channa dal for
added body and flavour and ground it into a pretty chutney for this morning’s
idlis. You could grind up your left over cabbage poriyal or carrot poriyal the
same way too. If you’re combing veggies just choose veggies that go well
together. Nobody guessed. And the chutney was gone.
You need advice to tackle
inquisitive questions about your upcycled chutney? Just don’t tell anyone if
you think people will fuss. Lie if you’re good at it. Or act like you didn’t
hear. Or ask them an uncomfortable question in return. With my kids, I ask if
they realized school re-opens on Monday, if they shouldn’t be revising their alphabet
and numbers. They scamper away. With the husband, I just start “Your mother.. “
and he’s gone too. With the mother-in-law, I am usually gone.
Prep time: 5 mins
Cooking time: 20 mins
Serves: 4
Ingredients - chutney
Carrot – 1 gratedBeetroot – ½ a medium sized one or 1 small grated
Coconut – ½ a coconut grated
Channa dal – 2 tbsp
Urad dal – 2 tbsp
Garlic – 2 big cloves peeled
Ginger – 1 inch piece peeled and chopped
Whole dry red chillies – 4-5 (4 if you like it medium hot, more if you’d like it hotter)
Coriander leaves with stem - a handful chopped
Salt to taste
Oil – 2 tbsp
Ingredients – Tadka
Oil – 1 tbspMustard seeds – ½ tsp
Urad dal – 1 tsp
Curry leaves – 4-5
Asafoetida – a pinch (optional)
Method
1. Heat
a pan. When hot, add 1 tbsp oil. Add urad dal, channa dal, garlic cloves,
ginger and whole dry red chillies. Fry for a minute or two. Squeeze out the
juices from the grated carrot and beetroot and add the squeezed veggies to the
pan. Sauté for 7-10 minutes on low to
medium flame till the vegetables are quite dry.
2. Add
the grated coconut and chopped coriander fry for a further 5 minutes on low to
medium flame stirring often to ensure the mixture doesn’t burn till the mixture
is nicely toasted. Add another tbsp of oil to help along the way.
3. Let
mixture cool down. Transfer to a mixie jar, add salt and grind without any
water till the mixture is coarsely ground. Add water little at a time and grind
to the desired consistency. I ground it to a slightly coarse structure. Pour
the ground chutney into a bowl.
4. For
the tadka, use the same pan. Heat oil. When hot add the mustard seeds and let
splutter. Then add the urad dal, curry leaves and asafoetida and switch off
when the dal turns golden and the curry leaves are nearly crisp. Pour the tadka
over the chutney, mix and serve alongside idli, dosai or upma.
love reading your posts....and yes
ReplyDeleteyour recipes too
thank you dolly!
Delete