Showing posts with label learn to cook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label learn to cook. Show all posts

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Chicken Keema with Soya Sauce and Chillies


Chicken has always been my favorite and the keema form , that is, the minced chicken is a hassle-free one when it comes to churning out quick dishes.

This recipe requires some chopping, slicing and dicing of the vegetables like carrot, tomato, capsicum and onion. You will need a heavy-bottomed non stick pan or a wok to fry in.
The preparation is pretty simple. Chop veggies, fry them, pour in the keema, add in spices, stir fry some more and you are done in as little as 30 mins.

You will need vegetables like:

Onion
Capsicum
Carrot
Beans (if you want to add in)

Spices:

6 Garlic cloves for 250gm keema
3 Green chilles slit from the middle
Half teaspoon Vinegar
Half teaspoon Soya Sauce
Half teaspoon Sugar
1 teaspoon Salt
Half teaspoons Tomato sauce (if required)

And of course:
500gm Chicken keema or minced meat.


You can start with:

1. Chop the vegetables in squares.
2. Slice 2 onions thinly
3. Dice garlic cloves

4. Wash and clean keema by rinsing it with water once or twice.

Now you are ready with the ingredients for cooking.

5. Heat up the wok or pan and ensure it is dry.

6. Pour as little as half teaspoon of vegetable oil and leave it for 1 minute to heat and sputter.

7. Slowly add the sliced onions into the heated pan.

8. Follow it up with other vegetables except the tomatoes and garlic.

9. Stir and leave alternately so that the veggies are fried uniformly.

10. Add in the diced garlic cloves and stir to mix.

11. When the onions get transparent and other veggies are a little soft, add in the keema for frying.

11. Stir and mix slowly and take care not to spill the ingredients out of the wok.

12. When the minced chicken or keema starts to turn little brown, add in few drops of vinegar and mix well. This is done to get rid of the smell of raw meat.

13. After a couple of minutes, add in half teaspoon of soya sauce, half teaspoon red chilli powder, sliced green chillies and chopped tomatoes.

14. Also add 1 teaspoon salt and half teaspoon sugar and stir vigorously to mix well.

15. Allow it to get cooked and for the flavors to be soaked in by covering the wok with a lid for 5 mins.

16. Take a teaspoon and try the taste of the dish. If its too sweet or salty, try adding a bit of water or few drops of lemon to nullify it.

17. Close the lid, turn off the gas and wait for a couple of mins before serving it hot with steamed rice.

Easy Food Preparations

Knowing how to feed oneself is the order of the day. Increasingly, the art of cooking can be the source of survival, a channel to earn fame, way to please your dear ones or simply to stop the hunger pangs.

Thankfully, today the directions to cook have become more simplified and even the 'freshers' can start feeling comfortable around the kitchen pretty soon.

One of the most fun thing about cooking is the experimentation. The knack is to know the flavors that you are familiar with and to use them in different recipes for new tastes. As one can guess, the experiments become more and more successful once you start getting more familiar with cooking. Cooking, is one of the most rewarding ways of experimentation as you get to know the results instantly... "the look on the faces of your guests!"

Another, helpful point for learners is that, the tongue plays an important role in deciding whether the quantity of the ingredients is correct or not. So starting with boiling up a cuppa tea... you should know that 1 teaspoon per person is fine, but 6-7 teaspoon is certainly not...unless you have a sweet tooth.

So read-on folks and get to try some of these very simple recipes in your kitchen.

Do let me know, how it tastes like!