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Winter is coming: going beyond popular winter delicacies

Updated - December 14, 2017 08:38 pm IST

Published - December 14, 2017 03:46 pm IST

Go beyond popular winter picks and try little-known delicacies. How about some lilva kachori or ulavacharu this year?

Winters are a delight, giving us a much-needed breather from the searing heat. The season is a joy even if you live in the South and make do with a barely-there colder month or, if you get lucky, two. Irrespective of which region you live in and how intense your winter is, season-specific foods keep you warm and help boost immunity levels.

Consider sesame or til . The superfood morphs itself into a variety of treats. Markets in Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, New Delhi and a few other states burst with flavourful gajaks , and til laddoos are essentials in the South. In fact, til laddoos are a must in Sankranti celebrations in Telangana.

A tweak in the menu happens with the onset of winter that brings in fresh produce.

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Makki ki roti, sarson ka saag and

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gajar ka halwa may have popular recall value, but there’s a treasure trove of delicacies in each region. Spinach and fenugreek leaves, though available in other seasons, are winter greens. So are green garlic shoots, tender shoots of beets, turnips and red radishes, tender

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tuvar and green chickpeas. Add the greens to soups,

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saags , mix them into lentil, vegetable and meat preparations; roast the green

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tuvar and chickpeas for a snack, or add them to hearty curries — they all add to a rich, nutritious meal.

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Humble beginnings

The humble horse gram is used to make

kollu rasam in Tamil Nadu and
ulavacharu in the Telugu-speaking regions. Madhu Reddy, Hyderabad-based organic farmer who believes in slow food, emphasises the importance of fresh tamarind and horse gram. “Fresh tamarind is used to make
dappalam with winter vegetables; the stew is thickened with rice flour,” she says. The
dappalam goes with rice or
ragi sankati, with a generous helping of
ghee .

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Different combinations of winter vegetables, greens and lentils go into soups. Delhi-based writer and food consultant Sangeeta Khanna suggests a host of winter foods, including a tomato-turnip-green pea soup and a pineapple clear soup with galangal and lemongrass.

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Simpler remedies

North Indian winters are synonymous with piping hot parathas served with a dollop of butter. This wasn’t always the case, she points out. “Around 40 to 50 years ago, not everyone had access to LPG, and it took a while to get the coal angeethis to work. So gond ke laddoo, til laddoo and panjiri came in handy for a quick breakfast,” she says. Panjiri essentially contains wheat flour, edible gum, dry fruits and jaggery, and keeps good for a few days. Besides the regular parathas , Khanna suggests sattu ka paratha with a dash of ginger, ajwain and kalonji seeds. The winter thali includes two or three saags made with seasonal produce — methi matar ka saag and channa saag among others.

Winter is also the time for fermented foods, from amla in brine to mixed vegetable (cauliflower, tender beans, red and black carrots, boiled potatoes) pickle, spiced with mustard powder.

If date palm jaggery or nolen gur is the pride of Bengal’s winter, dates are sometimes laced with ghee and had in the morning in certain parts of Gujarat, especially in the farming community, as they gear up for a long day in the fields. Gujarati food is a lot more than dhokla, thepla and khandvi . Away from the sugar-laden dals in touristy Ahmedabad restaurants, one remembers savouring wheat and bajra rotlas with spiced jaggery, bajra khichdi , sautéed spinach and lilva (fresh tuvar ) kachoris . In winters, the undhiyu uses seasonal vegetables, like purple yam.

Winter greens

Food writer and photographer Sheetal Bhatt, who divides her time between Singapore and Ahmedabad, shares the story of a little-known special from Gujarat — the kachariyu, that gets its name from the Gujarati word kacharvu or ‘to grind’. “ Kachariyu is the residue that’s left after churning or grinding sesame to extract oil. The residual sesame pulp is nutritious and is eaten mixed with jaggery,” she says. Bhatt also makes kachariyu laddoos, mixing the sesame residue with shredded coconut and jaggery. Dates, ginger powder and almonds are other add-ons.

Winter drinks include a variety of masala chai , spiced apple tea, hibiscus tea and Kashmiri kahwa with almond slivers. Rajasthan and Gujarat have winter drinks called raab, prepared with makki, bajra or wheat.

Besides fresh tuvar and chickpeas, urad is consumed in Gujarat only during winters. “We make ghuto — a big pot of lentils and greens simmered and mashed, eaten with bajra rotlas ,” adds Bhatt.

Prefer something simpler? She suggests making hummus using green chickpeas.

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