Mud Pot Cooking, Forefathers’ Style!

The pot we cook our food in affects the quality of the food both taste and nutrition. Mud pots were used for storing water and cooking food since the dawn of civilization. They were an integral part of traditional cooking and one of the secrets to the delicious taste of dishes. Mud pot cooking is now on a comeback trail. Or so it seems from the sight of lambada women selling mud tavas these days in Hyderabad at every traffic signal.

Mud pot cooking has been popular across the country. Rasams and sambars simmered in an earthen pot taste much better than when cooked in a metal vessel. It gets an earthy flavor which every foodie will die for. Some of the best biryanis are made in mud pots, any Hyderabadi will tell you that. Matka biryani is a chef’s special in many restaurants. Punjabis love to slow cook their sarson da saag in a clay pot to get the authentic taste.

Why mud pots:

  • Clay is porous in nature and this permits air and moisture to circulate from the food into the pot. It is believed that the minerals present in the clay get a chance to permeate the food, thus improving the nutrient quality. Doctors say mud pots add calcium, phosphorous and magnesium to the food.
  • Clay is alkaline and it neutralizes the acidity of the food, making it more balanced for the body.
  • Clay takes longer to heat hence food is slow cooked. This retains the nutrients and native flavours in the food.
  • Cooking in clay pots takes medium heat which makes the micronutrients in the food available.
  • It requires less fat/oil to cook food in a clay pot making the food healthier.
  • The food stays warm for a long time as the clay pot retains heat for longer.
  • The flavour and taste of the food gets enhanced.
  • Clay pots are inexpensive and easily available.

Make sure you do not buy glazed pots as they may be coated with lead or mercury making it a hazardous proposition. Go for the simple unglazed red or black coloured mud pots that are available in the street market. Soak a new pot in water for a few hours and then start using it.

Treat your family to food with the flavor of the earth!

Sujata C

Pongal O Pongal!!

Pongal / Makar Sankranti is celebrated all over India in varied forms and festivities. This is an indicator of the Sun moving to the Makara, marking the end of Dakshinaayana and the start of Uttaraayana. The Sun moves from the Southernmost point to the Northernmost point. It also marks the beginning of the Harvest Season.People perform puja of the Sun God and offer many sweets and savouries, like Pongal, Vada, Kheer and many others.

In many parts of India, people celebrate this festival by flying kites.In the south, people offer Sweet Pongal during puja to Lord Surya. Here is a traditional Sweet Pongal Recipe for everyone to relish during Sankranti.

 

Ingredients:

1 cup Rice

1/4 cup Chana Dal

1-1/2 cup jaggery

2 cups Milk

2 cups Water

For Seasoning:

2 tbsps Ghee

Raisins

Cashews

Almonds

Cardamom

Preparation:

Roast the rice and chana dal separately just till they are hot, not brown. Now boil the milk and water. Once the milk starts bubbling, add the roasted rice and dal and let them cook. In a separate pan, melt the jaggery in half a cup of water till it reaches one string consistency. When the rice and dal are cooked to a porridge like consistency, add this jaggery mixture and switch off the stove. Do not light the stove and cook once you add the jaggery mixture, as the pongal will curdle. (Jaggery and milk when cooked, curdle). Mix all the contents in your vessel, till they blend. In a seasoning spoon, add ghee. Once it melts, add the cashews,almonds, raisins and elaichi. Add this seasoning to the prepared Pongal and serve.

We usually prepare the Pongal in a traditional pot called Vengala Paanai (Bronze Pot). And the fun part is, when the milk bubbles and overflows, everyone starts screaming “Pongal O Pongal”. Try shouting it out and enjoy your delicious Pongal on Sankranti!

Our very own stone chakki

Daana is now a proud owner of a mid size stone mill. What does that mean? We now have 100% control of the milling process to make our wheat and millet flours. Since we use a stone chakki, the grains are crushed into flour, unlike the blade based grinders which cut the grain. Makes a big difference in taste.
And the biggest difference?
We grind on demand: Which means the aata you receive has been ground within the last 24 hours. Talk of freshness now. Compare it to packets of atta sitting on the supermarket shelves for weeks on end. We at Daana have a meme now: The proof of the pudding is in the eating.

Try it out and tell us.

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Designed for the Dumpyard

We all have a whole lot of old electronic stuff stashed away in drawers and in the back of the cupboard – stuff that belongs to last century and no longer is useful to us anymore. How does this happen. You will be surprised to know – watch this video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sW_7i6T_H78

Bottled Water Scam

In the beginning of this decade, there was a fad for bottled water. Started by lobbies that ‘manufacture a demand’ and push stuff that we don’t really need and in the process also destroy what we need the most. Watch the story of the bottled water in this video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Se12y9hSOM0

Cosmetics or Toxins?

The cosmetics industry is all of a hundred years old, and is worth about 11 Lakh Crore Rupees annually.

People have used things to beautify themselves since ancient times, but not to the extent that we do now, with multiple products being used every day.

Cosmetics are products that are chemical cocktails, with several of them known to be poisonous and harmful.

Watch this video to find out more:

Do leave us comments and tips on how you have moved away from chemical cosmetics, and what replacements you are using. We would love to hear from you. We will do a follow up article on this a month from now, and will include several of the tips we receive from our readers.

Know Your Oils

coldpressedoil

There is so much information about oils these days. Which oils are better, which ones are “healthier”, which ones to avoid etc etc. The hope of this article is to provide some simple clarity on oils.

What are oils? what sort of oils should we consume, and what should we avoid?

Oils are the fatty part of vegetables, seeds or nuts. Sunflower Oil, Sesame Oil, Coconut Oil, Olive Oil, Groundnut Oil etc. Oils are concentrated fat and hence must be used sparingly. Even if the plant source is extremely nutritious (eg: mustard), its oil must still be used sparingly.

Refined Oils: Ignore the use of words that make a product sound cool. Refined oils are hardly “suave and sophisticated”.

  • They are made by heating the seeds or nuts to very high temperatures to extract the oil. Oil molecules when heated to very high temperatures begin to break down into other compounds, some of which are carcinogenic in nature (ie cancer causing). High temperature extraction is used in the industry because it extracts a much higher percentage of oil from the base.
  • Commercial solvents such as hexane are used to extract more oils from the base. Exposure to hexane by inhalation is detrimental to health. This hexane isn’t affecting you directly, but it certainly does impact the workers who work in the oil refineries. Something to think about.
  • Commercial refined oils in the supermarket come with a combination of oils that aren’t listed in the ingredients. The most common of them being cottonseed oil. Cottonseed oil is a by product of the cotton industry. Remember, more than 90% of cotton grown in India is GMO cotton. You are essentially consuming GMO without your knowledge.
  • To keep the oil looking transparent and uniform and have a longer shelf life, a lot of other solvents and emulsifiers are used. More chemicals in your body that you don’t need.

Organic Cold Pressed Oils: The better and healthy oils. Why Organic? Simple. No toxic chemicals in our food, body, soils, groundwater and air. Healthy and safe for everyone. What is Cold Pressed?

  • The oil is extracted by placing it in a mortar, and ground by pressing it with a rotating pestle. This keeps the temperature of extraction low (under 49C) and the oil that comes out has never been heated before.
  • No solvents are used to extract more oil.
  • Cold pressing is done in “ghanis” in villages in India. The leftover base, called the oil cake is fed to cattle as fodder. It is a rural small scale industry that supplements farmers income from agriculture.
  • No emulsifiers or other chemicals are used to make it look pretty or increase its shelf life
  • Cold pressed oils have a lesser shelf life (about 3-4 months)
  • They are much more tasty because they have not been overheated, and the pressing method preserves taste and nutrients. Cold pressed groundnut oil has an amazing aroma and taste of groundnuts.

Other oil facts: There is no one oil that is better than another. Coconut, Sesame, Groundnut, Mustard, Safflower, all of them are just as good for cooking. In fact, optimal health is when there is variety. Use these oils in rotation, and don’t stick to just one oil alone.

New kids on the block: How about Rice Bran oil, Olive Oil, Soybean Oil etc? 10 years ago, these products weren’t even found in our supermarkets. Many of these are being “pushed” thanks to advertising, and demands are being “created”. If you eat unpolished/brown rice, you will get way more nutrition from rice bran, than you will by consuming rice bran oil, which is its concentrated fat extract. Olives are not native to India. Olive Oil is imported. It is expensive and isn’t of a singularly superlative health quality, that you should spend the money and effort trying to get it. Same with soybean oil. Simple rule: stick to oils that your grandmother used to get, and don’t worry about new “trends”.

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Women and the fight against poverty

Women and the fight against poverty

Barefoot College is an organization based in Rajasthan, India whose goal is to empower and equip rural illiterate women so that they may drive change and improvement in their families and societies.

Requirement to join Barefoot college is really simple:

  1. You need to be illiterate
  2. You need to take your learnings and skills back to your village and invest your time and energy there.

The premise is even simpler:

  1. Women are more invested in the long term in their neighborhoods, and are willing to put in work to see results much further down the line
  2. Men on the other hand, when they pick up skills, tend to want to move to better lifestyles which means that they tend to not invest their time and energy in their villages for long periods of time.

We are not being some sort of reverse sexists here. While outliers always exist, both the above statements are corroborated by data gathered from multiple communities in the world.

How does Barefoot achieve this? Watch the trailer of the movie “Solar Mamas”, made by TED prizewinning filmmaker Jehane Noujaim that documents the work and the impact of Barefoot College.

And then go watch the full movie here

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Birds and the Bees

Being an urban gardener is a reward in itself. In the midst of a concrete jungle, you get to experience nature, in all her poetry, song and dance.

I watched this wonderful video on how incredibly cool and cunning flowers are. I hope you enjoy it as well !!