Rushina Munshaw Ghildiyal is a gastronomy writer and “Chief Foodie” at A Perfect Bite Cook Studio – India’s premier state of the art ‘home kitchen’ style cooking studio. It is a dream kitchen designed by a home cook for other home cooks who fantasise about cooking up deliciousness.

 

 

Curry Leaf Potato Wedges

Ingredients
For the curry leaf seasoning salt
1 cup curry leaves, washed and air dried

5-6 dry red chillies

½ cup toasted sesame seeds

2 tbsp rock salt

For the potato wedges
1 kg potatoes, cooked in salted water and cooled

3 tbsp sesame oil

6-8 cloves garlic crushed

1 tbsp Amchur

Preparation
To Make the Seasoning Salt
Toast the curry leaves in a dry pan till the leaves curl up, turn olive green and become brittle and aromatic. Transfer them to a bowl to let them cool.
Now, toast the chillies until they darken in colour slightly and release their aroma.
Next, in a mortar and pestle (or blender) place the rock salt and the chillies and pound or grind them to a coarse powder.
Finally, add the curry leaves and pound again for a while. Stir in the sesame seeds and transfer the resulting mixture to an airtight container. Use as required.

To Make Potato Wedges
Preheat your oven to 200 °C/400 °F/Gas mark 6.
Cut the cooked potatoes into large wedges and place in a large mixing bowl. Reserve.
In a smaller bowl combine the seasoning salt garlic and Amchur. In a small pan heat sesame oil and pour over the mixture. Pour the resulting paste over the potato wedges and toss well.
Tip the potatoes onto a baking tray. Place in the oven and bake (about 30 minutes) until reddish goldenbrown, crisp outside and cooked inside. Serve hot from the oven.

The Magic of Curry Leaves:
Curry leaves are usually the first ingredient added to a tadka. The aroma of the leaves spluttering in hot oil fills Indian homes every time a dal is tempered. I love recipes that allow for the consumption of more curry leaves because they are rich in iron. They are also light on the body: 100 g of curry leaves have only 110 calories. Home remedies and Ayurveda also attribute to them a lot of medicinal values. They are a rich source of micro nutrients, antioxidants and carotene.

 

Volume 2 Issue 4

 

 

 

 

YouthIncMag

Recent Posts

MS Dhoni-Backed Garuda Aerospace Hosts Defence Officers at New Facility

Garuda Aerospace, a leading drone manufacturer in India, invited officers from the College of Defence…

6 days ago

UMA Bootcamp 2025: From Hundreds of Aspirants to the Final 30 – Young Indian Engineers Set to Train with RGB Racing in Spain

United Motorsports Academy (UMA), in association with RGB Racing Team, has taken a major step…

1 week ago

Term Plans for Women in India: Unique Features You Should Know

With more and more women gaining financial independence, protecting that hard-earned stability becomes essential. Women…

4 weeks ago

Fashion Career Paths That Don’t Require Formal Education

The fashion industry is not limited only to those with a costly degree from the…

4 weeks ago

16th Census of India Announced: What’s New and How It Will Be Conducted

The Union government has finally set the dates for the long-delayed Census 2027, symbolising a…

1 month ago

Labubu Burnings & Pazuzu: Ritual or Digital-Age Superstition?

The internet has a way of turning innocent collectables into objects of terror. The latest…

1 month ago