Ingredient 28 – Kokum

This is another bit of a cheat on the theme for the month because I’ve used it before, but I realised when I got in that I had forgotten to soak the beans I’d planned to use today. Kokum was on my list of possibilities of ingredients to use this month though, because I’ve had it a very very long time and only used it twice that I can think of. I bought it in Kerala, where it’s mostly used to flavour coconutty fish curries, which is probably why I haven’t used it much.

There’s absolutely no need to worry that this had gone off, no matter how long I’ve had it. As soon as I unscrewed the jar I was met with a delightfully smoky sour pungent aroma. It’s sort of like a chipotle meets a lemon, but there’s no real heat to it.

I had printed out a dal recipe to use it in a very long time ago but unfortunately I don’t know where from. This recipe intrigued me because it uses urad dal as the main pulse, whereas I normally only use that for tempering. Here’s the recipe I used, with a few tweaks of my own: 

1 cup urad dal (cream-colored, split black lentils)
1/4 tsp turmeric
4 pieces of dried black kokum pieces
1 tbsp vegetable ghee or oil
2 tsp cumin seeds
4 fresh green Thai chillies, finely sliced
3 large cloves of garlic, finely minced
1 large tomato, finely chopped
1/4 cup shredded coconut (I always use frozen, thawed slightly and then MW for 20 secs. fluff with fork)
salt – to taste
fresh curry leaves – 10-12

 1. Place the lentils in a medium sized sauce pan, rinse & drain them thoroughly until the water is relatively clear. Add 3 cups of water and bring to a boil (uncovered) over medium heat. Skim off and discard any foam that forms on the surface. Stir in turmeric and kokum pieces, cover the pan and cook on a medium-low heat for about 30 mins, until the lentils are tender.

 2. Meanwhile, heat ghee or oil in a skillet, add cumin seeds, until they start to sizzle. (~ 10 seconds). Add in green chillies, garlic and saute until lightly browned. (~ 1 to 2 minutes). Mix in tomato pieces, shredded coconut, salt & curry leaves. Lower the heat and simmer uncovered, stirring occasionally until the tomatoes are completely mushy, but slightly chunky. (~ 3 to 4 minutes). 

3. Now, once the lentils are ready, add the sauce prepared in Step 2 and stir. Pour 1 cup of water into the pan to get those extra bits stuck at the bottom, (and pour the water back into the lentils. Cover the pan and simmer on medium heat until the sauce is thickened. (~ 10-12 minutes). 

4. Remove the kokum pieces and it is ready to serve. For an even more pronounced kokum flavour, let them cool a bit and give them a good squeeze over the dal.

I served mine with the green bean and potato curry from Vegan Indian Cooking, because I had some green beans ready to walk out of my fridge, and a chapati.

This dish reminded me of how much I love this spice and what a pity it is that it isn’t more widely known or used over here. Incidentally, in Sri Lanka it’s known as Goraka (or at least, the 2 things are extremely similar), and there’s a delicious cashew curry in Vegan Eats World that uses goraka, so if you happen to have kokum in you could use it instead.

Have you ever used kokum or goraka?

Ingredient 16 – Chana masala spice mix

This is the second spice blend I’ve featured this month, and I think that’s because I buy them for days when I’m short on time, but in reality I prefer to blend my own. There was an added reason to buy this one though – it included anardana powder (ground pomegranate powder), which I had read somewhere worked great in chana masala but I’d never seen anywhere. I’ve seen it since but not bought it, because I’m trying to mend my impulse ingredient buying. Day 16 – more than halfway through. Think I’m running out? No chance.

I used this in a recipe for chana masala from Vegan Indian Cooking. The author offers a recipe to blend your own spices, but today was a late work night so I used this blend in the same quantities. For speed, I also threw in some leftover chard, a bag of spinach and some garam masala tofu which I’d already made. I served in with bought naan bread for one of the speediest meals ever considering how incredibly tasty it was. Sometimes good quality spice blends do have their place.

Do you use bought spice blends?