Thengai Sadam (Toasted Coconut
rice)…one of my favourite go to meals when home alone is to add different
tempering to rice (there is always, always cooked rice at home)…this one has
completely different flavor than the other Coconut Rice on the blog…dump in a
bowl, grab a book, and dig in J
Thengai Sadam (Toasted Coconut rice)
Ingredients:
- Cooked Rice, about 2 cups
- Coconut, fresh or frozen (thawed), finely grated/shredded, about ½ cup
For tempering:
- Black Mustard seeds, ½ tsp
- Urad dal/ Split black gram lentils OR Chana dal/ Split Bengal gram OR Both, 1 tsp
- Dried Whole Red Chilies, 1-2
- Green Chilies, slit, 1-2
- Ginger, finely chopped, about 1 tsp
- Curry leaves, a few
- Hing/Asafoetida, a big pinch (optional)
- Peanuts OR Cashews OR Both, 2-3 tbsp
- Salt, to taste
- Oil, 1 tbsp
Instructions:
In a pan/skillet/kadhai, toast the
coconut till it just begins to change colour. Remove and add to the rice with
salt. Mix everything well and keep aside.
In the same pan, heat the oil and
add mustard seeds. When the mustard seeds start spluttering, add in the dals.
Once the dals start changing colour,
add in the green chilies, ginger, curry leaves, hing, peanuts, cashews and
dried red chilies.
Stir well and fry everything on low
heat till the peanuts and cashews turn golden brown.
Add in the rice mix to the pan. Stir
well but gently to allow the tempering to mix well with the rice.
Switch off the heat once the rice is
all warmed up.
Tuck in!!
Tuck in!!
Notes:
- Traditionally coriander leaves are never added. I add them when I eat this rice on its own and omit when serving with a curry.
- Also, when serving with a curry, I reduce the amount of coconut to about ¼ cup.
- You can toast the coconut along with the tempering after the nuts turn golden and then add the rice. I find the flavor is better when coconut is toasted earlier and mixed with the rice first (plus the fact that I can toast the coconut in a big batch for a few things in one go)
- I also add onions to this at times (finely chopped and fried till it starts going soft with the tempering). I like the texture even though it’s never ever used traditionally.
- If not serving immediately, I prefer to also fry cashews/peanuts separately and keep aside. Top the rice with nuts only when serving or else they tend to go soft and lose that crunch factor.
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