This recipe is very freely adapted
from one of Vegan Richa’s. For a ‘real’ curry, there are no
weird and wonderful spices and there aren’t too many of them,
either, which made me feel that the recipe might be tackled by a cook
who likes curry, but doesn’t want to faff around too much. It’s
a one-pot meal and Swiss chard, if bought very fresh and looked after
with loving care, will last for 4 or 5 days, which will take you well
into a thousand-mile passage. Spinach would also go very well in
this recipe.
Black-eyed peas are quite popular in
Indian cuisine and have the advantage that they don’t need soaking.
They also need the same time to cook as brown basmati rice, so make
a perfect match. This is a very pleasant curry, even following my
method rather than making it the ‘right way’, which involves a
blender and thus some awkward washing up.
Ingredients
1 tbsp of oil or ghee
1 medium onion, sliced
1 green chilli pepper,
chopped
1 tsp ginger paste or
chopped ginger
1 tsp garam masala
2 medium tomatoes,
chopped
3 or 4 large leaves of
Swiss chard
1/2 cup brown basmati
rice
salt
1/2 tsp kasuri methi/dried fenugreek leaves
- Cook until the onion is translucent.
- Now add the garam masala, cinnamon, and cardamom, lower the heat and cook until the spices smell fragrant.
- Stir in the chopped tomatoes and cook for several minutes until they become juicy. Loosely cover and add a tablespoon of water if the mix seems to be getting to dry: it very much depends on your tomatoes.
- In the meantime, dice the chard. Don’t worry that there won’t be any texture after it has been cooked: the original recipe calls for it to be blended.
- Now add the black-eyed peas to the pressure cooker, together with the rice and the water.
- Taste the mixture: you will probably need more salt. If it seems very wet, let it simmer over a low heat until some of the water evaporates. The amount of moisture will depend on both the tomatoes and the greens.
- Add the dried fenugreek, if you’re using it.
- Serve hot, maybe with roti if you’re really hungry!
Note:
- If you are using spinach, you would want ‘ bunch’. It is usually sold in an unspecified amount, but as it’s not filling and it shrinks away to nothing once you heat it, unless the bunch looks enormous you’re unlikely to have too much.
Variation:
- Try other greens, such as mustard greens or spring cabbage.
- Whole lentils would also work with this recipe, as would mung beans.
- Long grain brown rice should also cook satisfactorily in the same time as the black-eyed beans. If yours seems to take a very long time, I suggest adding it with the water and cooking it for a few minutes, letting the pressure reduce, then adding the beans and spinach to ensure that the rice is cooked through without cooking the beans to a mush.
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