This is one of those insanely good Indian recipes that I find irresistable. Malai means cream, Palak is spinach and this is a loosely adapted recipe from Vegan Richa. In her recipe, she uses soy curls to replace chicken, which are then cooked in a delectable creamy spicy sauce. I’m not even sure if you can buy soy curls in New Zealand and can’t imagine them being commonly available around the world, so it strikes me as a much better idea to use seitan. Seitan also produces a nice 'meaty' result.
In the
original, the soy curls are marinaded and then baked. I think
marinades are unseamanlike underway, as well as being wasteful.
Certainly, I don’t find it makes much difference to seitan and in fact you get infinitely better results from
incorporating the flavours into the seitan in the first place. This
is what I’ve done in this recipe. As for baking - I assume many small income voyagers stil lsail without ovens and even those who do, will probabaly avoid using them because of the cost - and the fact that they heat up the cabin.
I use ginger paste and garlic
paste in my ‛Indian’ cooking. If you prefer to use finely minced
ginger and garlic, go ahead. I'm not sure that this is really a Curry For Cooks, in spite the use of ingredients being pretty authentic: most boats would probably have them on board. The only exception is the methi and if you don't have it you can leave it out.
Serves 2
Ingredients
For the ‟marinaded chicken”
6
slightly rounded tbsp vital wheat gluten
2
tbsp gram flour
2
tsp nutritional yeast
1/2
tsp mushroom
stock powder
1/4
tsp salt
1/4
tsp onion powder
1/4 tsp garlic
granules
1/2
tsp ground coriander
1/2
tsp ground cumin
1/4
cup water
1
tbsp soya sauce
For
the sauce:
1
tsp oil
1 (Indian) bay leaf
1
whole clove
1
medium onion, chopped
1/2
tsp garlic paste
1/2
tsp ginger paste
1
small green chilli, diced
1/4
tsp salt
1/2
tsp ground coriander
1/2
tsp ground cumin
1/8
tsp cayenne OR 1/4 tsp Kashmiri chilli powder
pinch
ground cinnamon
1/8
tsp black pepper
*200
ml/7 oz ounce can of full fat coconut milk
2
tbsp vegan yoghurt
1/4
cup water or milk
125
g/4 oz spinach, washed and roughly chopped
1
tsp dried fenugreek leaves, kasuri methi
garam
masala
chilli
flakes
Method:
- In a small jug, mix the water and soya sauce and add them to the bowl.
- Mix into a soft dough, starting with a knife or spatula and ending with your hand. If the mix seems a little bit dry, add a little more water, a teaspoonful at a time. Use the dough to clean your bowl thoroughly, otherwise the dried seitan will need to be soaked off.
- Put the dough on a board and flatten down. You will be cutting it into bite-sized chunks, so it wants to be a suitable thickness.
- Put the trivet into your pressure cooker, along with 1/2 cup water. Place the seitan on the trivet, and bring up to pressure for 5 minutes. Let the pressure go down naturally.
- When you can take the lid off, take out the seitan and cut it up – or tear it for a more ‛authentic’ appearance.
For
the sauce:
- Heat a pan over medium high heat and add some oil.
- Now add the bay leaf, clove, onion, garlic paste, ginger paste, green chilli salt. Cook stirring occasionally until onion is golden.
- Turn down the heat and add coriander, ground cumin, cayenne or Kashmiri chilli, cinnamon and black pepper
- Throw in the seitan pieces and turn for a few minutes so that they are well mixed in and covered in the spices.
- Then add in the milk, yoghurt, water and spinach and mix in. Reduce heat to medium low, cover and cook for 12-15 mins, checking that it’s not drying out. Add some more water, if necessary.
- Add the kasuri methi, check salt and flavour and carry on cooking until you get a rich creamy sauce.
Garnish
with garam
masala
and chilli
pepper flakes
if you like, and serve with rice, roti
or even good quality bread.
Variations:
- Use two or three leaves of Swiss chard instead of spinach.
- Replace the seitan with half a cup of chickpeas or beans, cooked and drained, putting them in with the spinach
- Add some quartered mushrooms, with the onions, etc.
- If you don’t have yoghurt, use more milk/water. If you have a lot of coconut yoghurt, you can just thin that down to suit. You need around 300 ml liquid. You may need to simmer for more or less time to achieve the consistency you want.
Notes:
- * Coconut milk tends to come in an odd assortment of sizes. Just use a can closest to the size in the recipe. If you’re fortunate to find dried, genuine coconut milk, mix that according to the instructions on the container.
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