Butter chicken, coconut/mango chutney & chapati

Total time: 2 hrs 15 mins Difficulty: Intermediate

Butter chicken, coconut/mango chutney & chapati

Butter chicken, also known as "murgh makhani," is found throughout northern India, particularly in the Punjab region. The dish is made in the 1950's by Kundan Lal Gujral, who owned the Moti Mahal restaurant in the city of Delhi. The recipe for butter chicken is world famous because of the marinated chicken in yoghurt that is cooked in a rich creamy tomato sauce with ghee, lots of peppers, onions, carrot, garlic, and several other spices like coriander, garam masala, cummin, cardemom.

Often, the meal is served with rice and chapati or naanbrood and herbs like parsley or fenegreek are incorporated. Just like tikka masala it is a beloved dish that is frequently prepared, especially during special occasions like holi festival or other holidays. DevilsColors is presenting the fresh version with white radice instead of carrot, coconut/mango chutney and a drizzle of lime or orange.

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Preparation time 1 hr Cooking time 1 hr Resting time 15 mins Total time 2 hrs 15 mins Difficulty: Intermediate Cooking Temp: 180  C Best season: Suitable throughout the year

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. 1. Preparing the cocnut/mango chutney: Peel the mango and open the coconut. Put the cocnut water in a cup and grate the cocnut meat. Chop 2 peppers and mango into small pieces, together with some coconut water and grated coconut in a pan. Add a drizzle of vinegar, lemon, 1 tsp. salt, 1 grinded cummin seeds, 1 coriander seeds, 1 black, 1 green cardemom, 1 garlic, 10 g ginger, 1 tbsp. sugar. Cook slow and stir till it becomes a paste. Let it cool down and the chutney is ready.

    2. Cut the chicken in big chunks. Add the yoghurt and all the left over grinded spices including the grated coconut, squize some lemon over it and let it marinate for an hour. Save the fenugreek and oil for the chapati's.

    3. In a sauce pan with some oil. Bake 2 chopped onions, 2 garlic, till onions are glazed. Add the marinated chicken tlll it turns white and add the white radice. Then add the coconut water, some lemon juice, add a can off peelde tomatoes and cook and stir for 20 mins. Then add the cream and the butter. Let it simmer for half an hour while preparing the chapati's.

    4. In a bowl, add the besan flour with a pinch of salt, the 5 g fenugreek, some ghee and some luke warm water. Kneed the dough till soft. Make 6-8 little balls. Roll them and make little round pancakes, bake on a hot plate or pan and butter them with ghee. Save them in a towel and serve your dish with the cocnut/mango chutney et voilร , bon appรฉtit your in culinary heaven!
Keywords: rice, butter, butter chicken, murgh makhani, garam masala, Indian, naan, chapati, chutney, mango chutney, fenegreek, lemon.

DEVILSCOLORS RECIPES

Welcome! This is our food & restaurant section wherein we want to share some of our own recipes and other inspiring food & restaurant topics. Here we provide inspiration for the use of basic ingrediรซnts for meal preparations. It is always fun to discover, to prepare and to try lots of different dishes with local vegetables, herbs and spices from various countries and cultures around the world. Every country has it's own regional dishes and delicacies due to local farming products. Also every region has there own favorite desserts, cakes, pies and even candies. In England they eat scones with clotted cream and jam, in France they love the croissant, in the USA they are nuts about donuts with al kind of sugared toppings and in Arabian cuisine they make filo pastry as a dessert called baklava out of nuts, syrup or honey. In the Netherlands during winter seasonal festivities they eat lots of pastry bars filled with sugared almond filling and ginger (speculaas) cookies or chocolate coated peppernuts made out of speculaas herbs. A mix of herbs from which the consistency varies from baker to baker.

Just like tea, the herbs were imported by the Dutch VOC company in the 17th century from all over the world, mostly Asian continents like Indonesia and Dutch India and were madly used in producing sweets and flavored cookies. Ginger, cloves, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg, mace, star anise, 5 spice granule and white pepper were mixed in spice blends to making these regional products during December festivities. There is a lot to talk about regional pastry. In the past few years the cupcake https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupcakefrenzy took over the whole world. Flour is one of the basic ingrediรซnts from wich bread, pizza, pasta, chapati, naan, dim sum, pie and noodles are made.

Grains like wheat often contain gluten. There are different varieties of wheat: durum, semolina, emmer, wheatberries, farina, farro, einkorn wheat, spelt. Pasta is made from semolina, finely ground durum wheat while Italians originally preffere 00-flour (finely ground soft wheat) with eggs. Bread is baked with various types and varieties of grains. There is a multitude of different kinds of bread. Every country has their regional recipes. Like the Italian 5 grain wheat which contains: cracked wheat, barley, oats, millet, flax and sunflower seeds or the nine grain wheat containing: wheat, rye ,barley, oats, millet, quinoa, teff, sorghum and amaranth. The last 3, corn and chickpea flour are gluten free. So it is important to understand how these products are produced from flour to dough to end product.

Cooking is closely intertwined with the culture of a country, it's spice trade, agricultural production and the recipes it's native inhabitants have developed over the years from these regional products. In some countries chopsticks are used instead of a knife and fork. Certain parts of an animal are not eaten in some wich in other countries the people happily consume. This could be out of religious consideration, tradition or organic awareness. Nevertheless cooking is a process of feeding people in a safe and tasteful way taking notice of quality control, "HACCP," safety, bouncer and hygiene regulations.

Organic farming contributes to maintaining biodiversity, ecological balance and water/soil sustainability. A yearly campaign to raise more awareness for the benefits of organic farming is the "organic september" movement. If you are a cititzen who would like to get involved in nature friendly farming at home, help save the enviroment, support local farmers or are you an organic bussines that's interested in joining the soil hub; feel free to continue your search to engage in the ultimate tastebud experience!

Recipes on our website can also be made vegetarian or vegan; just leave out the meat and use vegetable broth or replace it with the kind of nuts, peas, tofu or cheese you think would fit properly in that dish and be creative. As long as you make sure you are making a work of art out of your plate. Further on in this section we provide some hot links to other cool websites where you can find more information about external food topics and some other exciting and refreshing recipes. We are not affiliated with these website, but they do deserve our recommendations.

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