My interest in making elaborate recipes has really waned. Everything involved in preparing these recipes (picking the recipe, grocery shopping, prep, cooking, cleaning) just sounds like a huge energy sucker when a good portion of my energy already goes to caring for E. I am too deep into toddlerhood to imagine a time when E will be more independent. But I hear it happens.
This recipe was R's initiative and his never-ending quest for vegetarian recipes.
Potato Vegetable Samosas
Dough
2 cups all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
¾ cup warm water
Filling
2 ½ cups peeled and diced Yukon
Gold potatoes, cut into ½-inch pieces
1 tablespoon fennel seed
1 tablespoon cumin seed
2 teaspoons coriander seed
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
½ cup finely diced onion
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 inch fresh ginger, peeled and
grated
1 package (1 lb), frozen chopped
spinach, thawed and excess juices squeezed out
½ cup frozen peas, thawed
salt and pepper
vegetable oil for frying
Dough
1. For
dough, combine flour and salt. Stir in oil, then stir in warm water. Turn dough
out onto a lightly floured worksurface and knead until dough is elastic, about
5 minutes.
2. Cover
and set aside while preparing filling.
Filling
1. Boil
potatoes uncovered in salted water until tender, then drain well and set aside.
2. In a
large sauté pan, toast fennel, cumin and coriander seeds for 2 minutes (until a
fragrance is noticeable). Add oil, then onion and sauté for 4 minutes, until
onion is translucent. Add garlic and ginger and sauté one minute more.
Stir in
spinach, peas and cooked potatoes, mashing lightly to combine and warm, then
season to taste. Let filling cool.
3. To
assemble samosas, divide dough into 12 equal portions and shape each portion into
a ball. On a lightly floured surface,roll out 1 ball into a 6-inch circle. Cut
circle in half. Fold 1 corner of semicircle up and over middle. Fold second
corner over to make triangle, and pinch corners of triangle to seal (leave
rounded side open). Hold triangle in your hand with open rounded side facing up
and let dough fall open to make cone. Fill cone with approximately 2
tablespoons potato mixture, then pinch along rounded side to seal.
4. Repeat
with remaining dough and filling. Cover and chill samosas until ready to cook.
5. Fill a
pot with 2-inches of oil (make sure oil fills pot not more than halfway) and
heat to 350 F. With tongs, place samosas in oil, leaving an inch between them,
and cook until golden brown, about 4 minutes. Turn over and cook other side
until brown, then remove onto a paper-towel lined plate to drain.
6. Samosas
can be served warm or at room temperature with mango chutney.
7. TIP:
Alternately, the samosa can be brushed with an eggwash and baked at 375 °F on a
parchment-lined baking tray for 30 minutes. (that's what we did)
Verdict: Just okay....My spices could have been fresher. Tonne of dishes. Good for freezing....though I haven't really felt like defrosting them.
2 comments:
I can't do elaborate meals anymore - so I've switched my efforts to desserts. But I kind of burned out on those this week too. Too many ingredients + too many steps = not enough patience on my part.
looks wonderful Giz kind regards
Post a Comment