Egg – potato curry
Ingredients
:
Egg – four
Potato –
four
Tomato –
one
Onion -
two
Ginger
– 10 grams
Garlic - - 10 grams (10 cloves)
Green
Chillies –
four pcs
Coriander
leaves –
ten grams
Red Chilly
powder –
two tea spoons
Coriander
power –
One and a half tea spoon
Tamarind
power –
half a tea spoon
Meat
Masala - half
a tea spoon
Vinegar - one tea spoon
Oil &
Salt as per requirement
Put eggs in
a Boiling pot for boiling. After sufficiently boiling put off the flame and let
it cool.
Peel and cut
potatoes vertically into four pcs, chop onions, ginger and garlic cloves into
small bits and tomato into small pcs. Peel off the boiled, cooled eggs and cut
them upside down into two pcs.each.
Flame the
stove and pour five to six tea spoon cooking oil into a pan and put potato pcs
till the potato becomes semi brown. Take out the fried potatoes to a plate.
Put the neatly
chopped onion, ginger and garlic bits into the pan and let it fry in medium
flame for three minutes.Add green chillies (split with one cut)
into the pan and stir slowly for a minute. Add tamarind, chilly, coriander powder and meet
masala with the mixture and stir for a minute until it smells. Do not forget to
add salt. Add pcs of tomato and stir well till the masala mix becomes brown. Pour
vinegar into the mixture and then add two cups of water and let it boil in low
flame till the gravy becomes thick. Put the fried potato pcs into the curry and
then slowly place the neatly peeled, horizontally cut eggs cut side up. Spread
the minutely cut coriander leaves over the curry. Keep the pan over stove for
half a minute more and douse the flame. Add half a cup milk and let it spread
all over.
Good for
rice and chappati – Why not try?
A thought for the day
On Sunday the 9th of November, 2014 I was on my
way to the Church for the usual Sunday Mass. My young friend, Joel who was my
cab company on our way to the NDTV “We the People” Show, met me at the church’s
gate and excitedly intro me to his Dad. Joel introduced me to his Dad as his
co-participant in the talk-show. I extended my right hand, calling out my name,
in good spirit expecting a warm hand-shake and a reciprocative self
introduction. The Gentleman took my hand of friendship with a pinch of
disinterest - a cold four finger touch
and a quick – I don’t care type- smirk
and then made a walk into the congregation of faithful, pretending as if he will be a
sinner if slightly late for the mass.
I wonder if he presumed that I am an LIC agent, who will
kill him to make a policy alive with my tongue lashing. No it may not be the
case. I am sure, He doesn’t take his son, a college graduate
pursuing law seriously enough or perhaps his attitude is reserved for all
Joel’s friends and I accidently happened to be one.
The Sunday sermon was based on the story of the ‘Good
Samaritan’ who spent his time, money and patience to look after a way-side
beggar suffering with pain and fever in the biting winter on the street of
Jerusalem. The beggar was passed by a priest, a merchant and many other
socially very important persons. But the’Samaritan’ who was a mere traveller
who never belonged to the town was the only person to take notice of the
suffering man and cared to nurse him.
With Jesus Christ’s famous parable, the celebrant Father was
educating the attendant believers that
mere attending the mass and not looking at a human being suffering on the way
side with pain and difficulties only make the ritual a farce.
Though the parable
has little to do with me and the embarrassed
young Joel, it calls for a rethinking on the pattern of our behaviour when a
person is introduced for the first time, even though the introducer is your own
child and the introduced is a stranger. It is important to exhibit basic
courtesy and good mannerism at all times for the sake of the honour of your
child.
I have cited this true incident to tell young parents to
take your child seriously enough. Appreciate his achievements and respect his
friends with basic courtesy and decency. Your son may still be your child, but
believe me, he is also an individual with varied qualities and multiple aquintances elsewhere.
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